Sesa Goa has received a showcause notice from the Jharkhand government asking it why its prospective licence for iron ore mines in the state should not be cancelled. |
In the letter, the district mining officer of Chaibasa has said the company seemed more interested in keeping the 7 square km of mining area in its fold rather than developing it. |
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The notice, dated April 12, comes as the second jolt to the valuation of the company, which is in the final stages of being sold by its Japanese promoter Mitsui & Co. The company has been asked to reply to the showcause notice in a month's time. |
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Sesa's valuation received the first blow when the Centre imposed an export levy of Rs 300 a tonne on iron ore on February 28. The company exports one-tenth of its 9.6-million-tonne output to Japan and 58 per cent to China and Taiwan. |
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Sesa Goa Managing Director P K Mukherjee was not available in his office on Saturday. Sesa Goa received the prospective licence for the mines in Jharkhand's West Singhbhum district in early 2005. |
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Industry sources said the letter gains significance because the valuation of the country's second-largest iron ore exporter would be determined by its reported 150 million tonne of iron ore reserves in Orissa, Karnataka and Goa and the prospective mining licence in Jharkhand (government-owned MMTC is the country's largest iron ore exporter). |
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Three bidders "� the world's largest steel company, Arcelor Mittal, Anil Agarwal-controlled Vedanta Resources, and the Aditya Birla Group's closely-held Essel Mining & Industries "� have submitted bids for Mitsui's 51 per cent stake in Sesa Goa. |
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Despite expectations, Brazilian miner CVRD did not submit a bid. Two others to withdraw from the race were the world's second-largest mining and natural resources company, Anglo American, and Brazil's mining firm Rio Tinto. Morgan Stanley is the advisor to Mitsui. |
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The Sesa Goa stock gained 1.72 per cent to close at Rs 1,691.75 on Friday. Mitsui would have fetched a better premium for its controlling stake had there been no export duty on iron ore. In fact, the stock had touched its 52-week high on February 27, a day before the export duty was imposed. |
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The company posted a net income of Rs 1,697 crore and net profit of Rs 531 crore for the year ended March 31, 2006. |
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Analysts said the levy of tax on overseas iron ore sales would hit the company's earnings by 20-25 per cent next year. The levy will cut Sesa's 2008 earnings to Rs 161 a share, CLSA Asia Pacific Markets wrote in a note immediately after the Budget, which was 24 per cent below the brokerage's previous estimate. |
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