[One only ardently wishes that a PIL is filed to block such atrocious
misuse of public money to favour the most favoured one.]

http://firstbiz.firstpost.com/economy/sbis-1-billion-loan-adani-doesnt-make-sense-108668.html

 Economy Nov 18, 2014
Why SBI's $1 billion loan to Adani doesn't make sense
By Vivek Kaul

    12

The State Bank of India(SBI) has decided to lend up to $1 billion to
Adani Mining, the Australian subsidiary of Adani Enterprises for the
Carmichael mine in Queensland, Australia. The mine has massive blocks
of untapped coal reserves. The company aims to build the project by
end of 2017.

"The MOU with SBI is a significant milestone in the development of our
Carmichael mine," Adani said in a statement released yesterday.
strike-sbi-lock-reuters

The State Bank of India(SBI) has decided to lend up to $1 billion to
Adani Mining.

The loan as and when it is extended would be one of the largest given
out by an Indian bank for a foreign project. The question is should
SBI be giving out a loan of up to $1 billion to a company which
already has a huge amount of debt.

Let's take a look at how the numbers look. As on September 30, 2014,
the long term debt of the company stood at Rs 55,364.94 crore. The
short term debt stood at Rs 17,267.43 crore. Hence, the total debt of
the company stood at Rs 72,632.37 crore.

As on March 31, 2014, the total debt of the company stood at Rs
64,979.04 crore. Hence, the total debt of the company has shot up by
Rs 7653.33 crore in a matter of six months.

The question we are trying to answer here is how good is the ability
of the company to service all the debt that it has managed to
accumulate. For that we use results of the last four quarters and
calculate the interest coverage ratio. Interest coverage ratio is
essentially the earnings before interest, taxes and exceptional items
(or what is often termed as operating profit) of a company divided by
its interest expense. It tells us whether the company is making enough
money to pay the interest on its outstanding debt.

The total operating profit of the company over the last four quarters
comes at Rs 8999.92 crore. The interest that the company has paid on
its debt in the last four quarters amounts to Rs 5,733.77 crore. This
means an interest coverage ratio of around 1.57.

As www.investopedia.com points out "The lower the ratio, the more the
company is burdened by debt expense. When a company's interest
coverage ratio is 1.5 or lower, its ability to meet interest expenses
may be questionable."

While Adani Enterprises' interest coverage ratio is not lower than 1.5
it is clearly getting there. In fact, things get even more interesting
once we start calculating the interest coverage ratio on the basis of
quarterly data. The interesting coverage ratio for the period of three
months ending March 31, 2014, stood at 2.67. It stood at 1.58, for the
period of three months ending June 30, 2014. And for the period of
three months ending September 30, 2014, it stood at 1.12.

As we can see, the ability of the company to keep paying the interest
that it needs to pay on its debt has come down dramatically during the
course of this financial year. As www.investopedia.com points out "An
interest coverage ratio below 1 indicates the company is not
generating sufficient revenues to satisfy interest expenses." Adani
Enterprises is clearly moving towards this situation. Further, in a
May 2014 report, Bank of America Merrill Lynch had estimated that the
company would have an interest coverage ratio of 1.2 during the course
of this financial year.

What all this clearly tells us is that Adani Enterprises is in an
over-leveraged situation and is getting to a situation where it will
find it difficult to keep paying the interest on its debt. The thing
with debt is that it can work both ways. When a company takes on a
higher amount of debt it gives itself an opportunity to generate
higher earnings vis a vis a situation where it hadn't taken on that
debt at all.
If this happens, then these increased earnings are spread among the
same number of shareholders. But at the same time the company runs the
risk of getting into a situation where the projected earnings simply
don't come along and it finds it difficult to keep paying the interest
on all the debt that it has taken on.

Adani Enterprises runs the risk of getting precisely into this
situation. Further as a Reuters news-report points out "Much bigger
coal rivals, like BHP Billiton and Glencore, have also shelved coal
developments in Queensland at a time when a third of Australia's coal
output is making losses."

Also, coal prices have fallen over the last few years. As a recent
report in The Hindu points out "Globally, coal prices have been on a
downtrend in the last three years and are at the lowest levels since
2009. Prices of steam coal, a slightly lower grade that is used in
power generation, have halved since 2011 to $62 per tonne now."

This fall in prices has happened because of the supply not shrinking
along with demand. "For instance, demand from China -- the largest
consumer of coal accounting for half of the total global demand -- has
been slow. After growing at over 10 per cent annually during
2001-2011, the country's demand has fallen -- imports were down to 150
million tonnes (mt) in 2013, from 182 mt in 2011. And given the
pollution-related issues, it is expected that the country may look at
cleaner sources more actively, holding down demand. Goldman Sachs
estimates that imports will fall to 75 mt by 2018," The Hindu points
out.

Goldman Sachs expects the demand growth to be 15 million tonnes per
year during 2013-2018, against 60 million tonnes per year it was at
during 2008-2012. The supply of coal isn't likely to come down. In
case of Australia the miners have entered into long term "take or pay"
contracts which requires them to pay $20 per tonne of transport costs,
irrespective of the fact whether or not they ship coal. Hence,
Australian miners are likely to continue to ship coal.

What this tells us is that coal is not the best business to be in
right now. Despite these reasons SBI has gone ahead and given a loan
of up to $1 billion to Adani Enterprises. This is not a logical
decision which takes into account the facts as they prevail. The only
possible explanation for this decision is the "so called" closeness of
Gautam Adani, chairman of Adani Enterprises to Narendra Modi, the
prime minister of India.

(Vivek Kaul is the author of the Easy Money trilogy. He tweets @kaul_vivek)
by Vivek Kaul

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Peace Is Doable

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