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srp Says:
June 27th, 2011
Posted at: 10:13 pm
HI kartik, can i purchase sona koyo around 15.60???
Anivesh Says:
June 27th, 2011
Posted at: 10:30 pm
ONGC may file papers for FPO after Cairn verdict
Press Trust of India, June 24, 2011, (New Delhi)
State-owned Oil and Natural Gas Corp (ONGC) is likely to file papers for a Rs. 11,500-crore share sale after the government gives its verdict on its dispute with Cairn India.
ONGC is in dispute with Cairn India over royalty payments on the later's showpiece Rajasthan oilfields and the government is expected to give its verdict when Cabinet decides on UK's Cairn Energy selling stake in its Indian unit to London-listed mining group Vedanta Resources.
Sources said ONGC has to mention about its dispute with Cairn in the red herring prospectus (RHP) it will file for sale of 5 per cent, or 427.77 million shares, through a follow-on public offer. It will add the government stand along with the dispute in the RHP, likely to be filed next month.
The Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs (CCEA) may decide on the $9.4 billion Cairn-Vedanta deal next week. ONGC owns 30 per cent interest in the Rajasthan oilfields, but has to pay royalty at the rate of 20 per cent of the crude oil price realised on all of the 2,40,000 barrels per day of peak output expected from the fields.
It had cited provisions in the Production Sharing Contract (PSC) in July last year, more than a month before the Cairn-Vedanta deal was announced, to demand that royalty like other taxes and levies should be deducted (recovered) from the sale proceeds of oil before the profits were split between partners and the government.
Cairn as well as Vedanta have opposed ONGC's demand. Sources said a Group of Ministers headed by Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee has backed ONGC's claims and has suggested to the CCEA that approval to the deal be given only if Cairn or its successor agrees to cost recovery of royalty.
ONGC is likely to file RHP after the June 30 meeting of the CCEA, which is expected to consider the Cairn-Vedanta deal. At $70 per barrel oil price, ONGC will pay Rs. 12,600 crore in royalties on Cairn India's 70 per cent share in the oilfield, making India's largest onland fields a losing proposition for it.
Sources said Cairn has also disputed its liability to pay oil cess at the rate of Rs. 2,500 per tonne on its 70 per cent share in the Rajasthan fields, saying ONGC is also liable to pay cess on its behalf, like in the case of royalty.
The government has rejected this position as the PSC imposes the royalty liability on ONGC, but is silent on cess, meaning partners have to pay in proportion to their share. Cairn has disputed this and initiated arbitration.
The GoM has recommended that Cairn withdraw the cess arbitration and agree to pay its share of cess as the second pre-condition for Cabinet approval.
In the two-part deal, Vedanta is to buy 40 per cent stake in Cairn India from its Edinburgh-based parent firm at Rs. 405 per share, including a non-compete fee of Rs. 50 per share.
In the second part, its subsidiary Sesa Goa was to make an open offer to buy as much as 20 per cent from minority shareholders of Cairn India at Rs. 355 per share (offer price minus the non-compete fee).
Sesa Goa in April got only 8.1 per cent in the open offer and separately acquired a 10.4 per cent stake from Malaysia's Petronas. Cairn Energy currently owns 62.1 per cent in Cairn India. Sources said besides royalty, Cairn had also contested its liability to pay Rs. 2,500 per tonne cess on its 70 per cent share in Rajasthan oilfields.
But unlike royalty, it is treating cess as a cost-recoverable item after paying it under protest. All cost-recoverable items like capital and operating expenditure are first deducted from revenues earned from the sale of oil before profits are shared between stakeholders, including the government.
Earlier this week, the government appointed former RBI Deputy Governor Usha Thorat, former Finance Secretary Arun Ramanathan and Deepak Nayyar, ex-Vice Chancellor of the Delhi University, as part-time or independent directors ONGC Board.
This enabled ONGC to meet market regulator Sebi's listing requirement of having equal number of executive and non-executive directors, paving the way for the FPO.
The government plans to sell its 5 per cent interest in ONGC through the FPO which has been pushed back thrice because of the company not meeting Sebi's listing norm. The share sale was originally planned to happen in 2010-11 but was deferred to April 5. It was then deferred to July 5 and even this timeline is not likely to be met.
ONGC has six functional directors, besides the chairman. It also has two government-appointed nominee directors, taking the total strength of functional/promoter directors to nine. In comparison, it has five independent directors and needs four more to meet the Sebi's listing norm.
But since the company does not have a full-time chairman and director (human resources), appointment of three directors would help ONGC meet Sebi norm, sources said.
Post-FPO, the government's stake in ONGC would come down to 69.14 per cent from existing 74.14 per cent.
ONGC in February had received the report of independent auditors, who certified the company's oil and gas reserves, a mandatory requirement for explorers making public offers.
Bank of America Corp, Nomura Holdings, HSBC Holdings Plc, JM Financial Services, Citigroup Inc and
Anivesh Says:
June 27th, 2011
Posted at: 10:35 pm
CB,
This is the news i was talking about. And today evening CAIRN-VEDANTA have confirmed their deal @ 355 per share against 405 earlier. Now may be this is for settling ROYALTY issue(abovementuioned) in FAVOR OF ONGC? Pl tell me what to do tomorrow....SHOULD I EXIT ONGC SHORT AND TAKE A LONG POSITION INSTEAD?
Kartik Says:
June 27th, 2011
Posted at: 10:37 pm
Hi Anivesh, the stock seems to have already reacted to the news, if it continues to trade strong tomorrow (above 288), enter a couple of CE's to hedge
Hi srp, no, its a average bet fundamentally
Hi shyam, no, can be a risky bet
Mushtaq Says:
June 27th, 2011
Posted at: 10:44 pm
what about Uflex
santos Says:
June 27th, 2011
Posted at: 10:47 pm
Hi CB, Can i enter tomorrow dish tv or time techno for short term give me target and sl
AYAN Says:
June 27th, 2011
Posted at: 10:50 pm
Tomorrow can i enter DISHTV ? If yes then can you please give me a stop loss and target goodnight
Asif Says:
June 27th, 2011
Posted at: 10:53 pm
Hi CB/Kartik. How should the markets open Tomorrow? In short term what should be the exit target for Tata Motors?
Anivesh Says:
June 27th, 2011
Posted at: 10:54 pm
Dear Kartik,
1. That means the meeting of CCEA on JUNE 30 will clear the deal and the "Royalty will be cost recoverable from RAjasthan JV" of ONGC-Cairn .
Do you think this news is already factored in or it can have a more positive impact on ONGC?
2..Also pl tell me what to do of NIFTY shorts? world markets are in green and experts are talking about 5700-5800 levels?
nishant Says:
June 27th, 2011
Posted at: 11:02 pm
Hi Anivesh, send me ur e mail...may help u to cover ut losses
shiva Says:
June 27th, 2011
Posted at: 11:03 pm
can i buy LITL for long term?
shiva Says:
June 27th, 2011
Posted at: 11:09 pm
some news flashing in idea cellular...someinvestigation in 10% stake sale...cross share holding
pritesh Says:
June 27th, 2011
Posted at: 11:19 pm
do the bees and etfs are same or different . what is the difference.
Anivesh Says:
June 27th, 2011
Posted at: 11:40 pm
Kartik,
What do i do if NIFTY opens up-30-40 points higher? and ONGC around 290?
Keep on holding to my shorts?
oR
exit shorts and enter LONGS
OR Buy call option of ONGC and exit NIFTY?