The Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs (CCEA), led by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, on Wednesday approved the disinvestment department’s plan to sell stakes in Indian Oil and NTPC as part of the Centre’s Rs 41,000-crore divestment target for public sector undertakings. At current share prices, a planned 10 per cent stake sale in oil marketing company Indian Oil could fetch Rs 8,120 crore, while a five per cent stake sale in power producer NTPC could get the exchequer Rs 5,689 crore.
The Centre had last divested part of its stake in Indian Oil in March last year and in NTPC in February 2013.
NTPC fell almost three per cent to close at Rs 138 a share on Wednesday on the BSE exchange. The Indian Oil scrip, trading at Rs 334.60 a share in the morning session, fell three per cent after the Cabinet approval to an intraday low of Rs 324.50 a share before recovering to close at Rs 334.45 on BSE.
The Centre had last divested part of its stake in Indian Oil in March last year and in NTPC in February 2013.
NTPC fell almost three per cent to close at Rs 138 a share on Wednesday on the BSE exchange. The Indian Oil scrip, trading at Rs 334.60 a share in the morning session, fell three per cent after the Cabinet approval to an intraday low of Rs 324.50 a share before recovering to close at Rs 334.45 on BSE.
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In a post-Budget interview with Business Standard in March, Disinvestment Secretary Aradhana Johri had said the stake-sale pipeline being prepared was for stakes totalling Rs 30,000 crore. Sources said among the two companies for which Cabinet approvals were granted on Wednesday, NTPC might be sold first, perhaps in a month. Since global oil prices were low, officials said the disinvestment department would wait for a few months before selling the government’s stake in Indian Oil and Oil and Natural Gas Corporation (ONGC), also a part of this year’s road map.
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Prospects of a stake sale in ONGC increased considerably when the Centre decided last month to scrap the subsidy-sharing mechanism with upstream companies for this year and bear the entire cost of subsidies for cooking gas and kerosene. The Centre’s fuel subsidy burden is expected to rise to Rs 40,000 crore from the Rs 30,000 crore budgeted for this year.
The department already has the Cabinet’s approval for sale of five per cent stake each in ONGC and BHEL and 10 per cent each in Nalco and NMDC.
Apart from targeting Rs 41,000 crore from minority stake sales in state-owned companies, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley has also budgeted for proceeds of Rs 28,500 crore from strategic sale in loss-making public sector enterprises this financial year, making the combined target of Rs 69,500 crore one of the most ambitious divestment targets ever.