Troubles of Indian tycoon Anil Agarwal's Vedanta mount as Foxconn
ditches JV
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[July 11, 2023] By
Tanvi Mehta
NEW DELHI (Reuters) - Taiwan's Foxconn has decided to withdraw from a
$19.5 billion semiconductor joint venture with Vedanta, the latest
business challenge for the Indian conglomerate led by Chairman Anil
Agarwal.
Here are some details on Vedanta and its recent challenges:
HOW VEDANTA STARTED
Anil Agarwal started his business in Mumbai as a scrap-metal dealer and
bought his first company, a cable manufacturer, in 1976. He then
expanded his empire across India, Zambia, Namibia, Ireland and South
Africa and later entered the oil and gas sector.
London-headquarted Vedanta Resources controls the India unit, Vedanta
Ltd. Agarwal took Vedanta Resources private in 2018. As of 2022, his net
worth was $2 billion, ranking him 97th among India's richest, according
to Forbes.
Vedanta diversified in 2017 when a unit bought a stake in Japan's LCD
glass substrate manufacturer AvanStrate. Agarwal's son-in-law Akarsh
Hebbar currently heads Vedanta's display and semiconductor business.
DEBT WOES
Vedanta Resources has been plagued by a rising debt pile. Credit ratings
agency Moody's downgraded its rating on the company, while others raised
concern about risks of a debt default.
Agarwal said in March there have been no debt defaults by the group.
Vedanta's gross debt stood at $6.8 billion as of April end, after the
company completed 75% of its debt reduction commitment.
FOXCONN JV
Vedanta-Foxconn had sought incentives from Prime Minister Narendra
Modi's government and several Indian states for its Foxconn JV to
manufacture semiconductors.
[to top of second column] |
Anil Agarwal, Chairman of Vedanta
Resources Ltd., poses after an interview with Reuters during the
World Economic Forum (WEF) in the Alpine resort of Davos,
Switzerland, May 25, 2022. REUTERS/Aditya Kalra
Foxconn pulled out of the JV on Monday, less than a year after it
was a signed. Concerns about incentive approval delays by India's
government aided Foxconn's decision to pull out of the venture, a
source familiar with the matter told Reuters.
Reuters reported in June that the JV was proceeding slowly as
Vedanta-Foxconn had got on board STMicroelectronics for licensing
technology, but India's government wanted the European chipmaker to
have a bigger role, like a stake in the partnership.
OTHER DISPUTES
Vedanta's copper smelter in Tamil Nadu was shut down after 13 people
died in 2018 when police fired on environmental protesters calling
for the closure of the plant. Vedanta has now offered to sell the
plant, having repeatedly denied allegations of the smelter being
polluting.
Activists and locals have for years blocked Vedanta's plans to mine
bauxite in the green, jungle-clad Niyamgiri hills in Odisha state in
eastern India which the tribe people consider sacred.
In Zambia, a long-running dispute over Vedanta's Konkola Copper
Mines (KCM) is close to being resolved, mines minister Paul Kabuswe
said earlier this month. Relations between Zambia and Vedanta broke
down several years ago and culminated in the state appointing a
liquidator for the KCM assets in May 2019.
(Reporting by Tanvi Mehta; Editing by Aditya Kalra and Sonali Paul)
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