Tata Tea and its workers' co-operative may pick up 40 per cent stake in NIPO "� the tea firm's north Indian plantation operations, which will be spun off into a separate entity. |
Sources close to the development said the broad contours of the spin-off scheme suggested that Tata Tea and the workers' co-operative would hold 40 per cent in NIPO, while the remaining 60 per cent would be acquired by financial institutions (FIs) and funds. |
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Tata Tea would acquire the stake against transferring its tea estates in the region -- four estates in West Bengal and 20 in Assam -- to NIPO. |
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The Tata Tea board will meet on Thursday to discuss ways for raising the funds. Tata Tea MD Percy Singaporia declined to make any comments on this. |
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The company would continue to look after marketing and packaging, while workers would take care of production, they added. |
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The sources said the Tata group outfit, which is in the midst of restructuring in its bid to emerge a beverage company from a plantation firm that sells tea, was likely to announce the spin-off of NIPO very soon. |
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Washington-based IFC and IL&FS would pick up 15-20 per cent each in NIPO, while an Assam-based investor, who had worked with Tata Tea earlier, would also have equity exposure, they said. |
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According to a presentation to the trade unions, the Tata Tea management asked "workers to pay Rs 8,000 each, staff to chip in Rs 15,000-20,000 each and managers Rs 1-1.5 lakh each for their equity acquisition". "However, we have not made up our mind so far," said trade union leaders. |
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Workers were recently taken to south India to give them a feel of the operations of Kanan Devan Hills Plantation, which was formed by carving out the south Indian operations of the company. |
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Tata Tea might list NIPO after spinning it off into a separate entity, sources close to an FI said. |
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