The deal has earned the private equity player a return of 2.4 times on its investment of Rs 500 crore that it made in September 2010.
"Dalmia Bharat Ltd (DBL) signed a definitive agreement with KKR, under which it will acquire KKR's 15 per cent stake in DCBL in return of KKR getting 8.5 per cent stake in DBL as well as Rs 600 crore in cash," Dalmia Bharat Group Managing Director Punit Dalmia told PTI.
According to a regulatory filing by DBL, the firm will make a preferential issue of 7.5 million shares to KKR at Rs 825 a share and pay KKR Rs 600 crore (USD 89 million) in cash for its around 15 per cent stake (about 3.79 crore shares) in DCBL. The DBL board also approved the deal.
Reacting to the announcement, shares of DBL fell by 4.8 per cent at the BSE during the day. Later, the stock pared some of losses to close down by 0.94 per cent at Rs 780.70.
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After KKR's investment, the firm did four acquisitions, greenfield expansions among others. DBL now has presence in South, East, North-East and Western India, he added.
When asked if DBL purchased the stake in its cement arm eying the opportunities arising from the proposed amendment to the MMDR Act, Dalmia said the firm will concentrate on ramping up volumes and cost optmisation in the short term.
KKR India CEO Sanjay Nayar said: "We believe that Indian macroeconomic growth and infrastructure story is poised for a significant uptick in coming years and the consolidation in cement industry is likely to happen."
Post the agreement, KKR will be the largest institutional shareholder in DBL.
This is the first major deal in the cement sector after the government last week sought views from public on amending the Mines and Minerals (Development & Regulation) Act, 2015 to include provisions allowing transfer of captive mines granted through procedures other than auction.