"It has been approved by shareholders. Now it has to be approved by the High Courts. We expect it to be done by this fiscal-end," Vedanta Resources Chairman Anil Agarwal told PTI here on the sidelines of the India Economic Summit, which is jointly organised by WEF and CII.
The merger is now subject to the approval of the jurisdictional High Courts as well as other regulatory approvals.
Through the merger, Agarwal is looking to create India's largest diversified natural resources firm, which can compete with BHP Billiton and Vale SA.
In September itself, Vedanta Ltd and Vedanta Resources shareholders had approved the merger under a revised all-share deal.
More From This Section
In a bid to salvage the merger, Vedanta had in July this year sweetened the deal by offering three additional preference shares in hope of winning over minority shareholders like LIC.
In June last year, Vedanta had offered shareholders of Cairn India one ordinary share and 7.5 per cent redeemable preference share with a face value of Rs 10 each.
Vedanta is said to be wanting to use Rs 23,290 crore cash lying with Cairn to pay off part of its Rs 77,952 crore debt.