Create a Sovereign Wealth Fund with Government stake in public sector enterprises to reform the disinvestment programme and save Indian equity markets from Corona madness
USE
PUBLIC SECTOR EQUITY TO SAVE EQUITY MARKETS
(meeting
the challenge of Corona virus induced earthquake in Indian markets)
Equity prices are falling like ninepins all over the world.
India cannot remain unaffected. Indian stock markets have lost over 35% of
their market capitalisation in last three weeks amounting to over Rs. 40 lakh
Crore, which incidentally is more than the entire budget of the Government of
India for 2020-21. COVID-19 has shaken confidence of investors in equity. Many
see it as the end of the world. They want to simply sell at whatever price equities
can be sold.
Foreign investors have sold over Rs. 30 thousand Crore of
stocks in last 15 days in India. They were owning over Rs. 30 lakh Crore of
stocks before the desperate sell-off started. There wealth is at least Rs. 10
lakh Crore lower to not more than Rs. 20 lakh Crore now. As most of these
foreign investors are from the western world (though deploying wealth of
non-resident Indians as well)- North America and Europe- and these parts of the
world are in still worse shape as far as the risk of COVID-19 is concerned, it
is quite likely that they would continue to desperately sell for some more time.
They would destroy their own value in the process and would destroy the market
capitalisation of Indian markets as well.
Current mania in the market is extra-ordinary madness. The Sellers
are not looking at all at the fundamentals- profitability, top line, product brand
etc- of the companies listed on the stock exchanges. Many simply want to run
with whatever price they could get. As buyers are few, the markets are in a free
fall.
There are companies, which continue to do well, even in the
current difficult circumstances. There are companies, which might actually
benefit from the current situation. Off course, there are companies, which
stand to lose massively from the devastation being caused by COVID-19. What is remarkable
is that no one is making a careful assessment to identify companies which are
fundamentally sound and are quite likely to ride through the turmoil caused and
buying those stocks at their current valuations. Such purchases are likely to turn
out to be massively cheap later.
This market turmoil has also put the Government’s
disinvestment programme in a complete disarray. The Government has deferred the
disinvestment of shares planned for March. There is no likelihood that the
disinvestment programme can begun in earnest for at least six months. Strategic
sale of BPCL and two other companies- CONCOR and SCI- is also likely to get
derailed for some time at least. It is unlikely that the Government would
commence sale of LIC anytime soon with financial companies getting routed the most.
It is impossible to sale Air India (survival of healthier airline companies appears
at stake) now. It would be difficult to even gift Air India, as was being
planned earlier, with more than 50 thousand Crore of debt being taken off the
books of Air-India.
The Government has two massive tasks before it. First,
preventing the madness which has overtaken the equity markets to preserve the
real businesses and values of Indian companies. Second, re-organise the
disinvestment programme taking into consideration the reality of the situation.
I think both these objectives can be served if the
Government of India were to create an Indian equities value preservation
Sovereign Wealth Fund (ISWF). This Fund can be created by transferring the
Government of India stake in all the listed companies and also some valuable
unlisted companies. There are 37 non-banking public sector entities like IOC,
GAIL, NTPC etc. and 18 public sector banks, a total of 55 entities listed on
the BSE. Their market capitalisation was over 10 lakh Crore until a short while
ago. The market capitalisation of unlisted entities would also be about the
same. Even if the combined market capitalisation of these entities together is
about 15 lakh Crore presently, the proposed sovereign wealth fund (SWF) would
have an enormous heft.
Capitalisation of SWF of such large capital will allow the
SWF to borrow from the market adequate amounts, in excess of 10 lakh crore,
easily. This war-chest can be used to buy equities of fundamentally strong
companies available less than their intrinsic values. A simple rule- generating
at least 10% of the net worth in profits in last three years- can be the first
criterion to identify fundamentally strong Indian companies. This criterion can
be supplemented by additional filters like minimum market capitalisation of Rs.
1000 crore as on 29th February 2020 or the price to book value being
less than 2. Such fundamentally strong but undervalued companies must be the
target of buying by this SWF. Equities to the extent of 5 to 10% in such
companies, whether public or private sector, can be purchased, by the SWF.
These investments can be expected to generate good returns for the SWF when the
tide turns. Given the total capitalisation of less than a lakh crore now, this
measure will also be a very strong reassuring signal to the market and the desperate
foreign institutional investors not to panic. It would also stop short sellers
from taking undue advantage of the situation.
Once the market stabilises, which it would definitely do- may
be in a month, or three months or six months, the SWF can sell the equities purchased
to pay back the debt taken. This operation would be a kind of Troubled Asset
Relief Programme (TARP) launched in the US in the wake of global financial crisis
in 2008.
The Government can also resume its divestment programme
soon. In fact, the Government would get an additional avenue to generate
disinvestment revenues. The Government can sell a part of its stake in the SWF.
Assuming that SWF will have valuation at least equal to the value of equities
transferred to the SWF, the valuation of SWF would be at least about Rs. 15
lakh Crore. By selling a 10% stake in the SWF, the Government can generate Rs. 1.5
lakh crore of disinvestment resources.
The SWF, although borne in the crisis situation, can
actually become the vehicle for a very professionally run public sector asset
management and divestment programme in India. For this to be a reality, the SWF
has to be entrusted to real investment professionals for management, something
on the lines of assets managed by professionally run SWFs like TAMASEC or Private
Equity firms like Blackstone. Of course, there can always be good political
oversight.
There will need to be some administrative re-alignment in
the Government of India to make this happen. The administrative control of the
Ministries and Departments over the public sector entities, including the
Department of Financial Services, would need to be ended. The Department of
Public Asset Management (DIPAM) would also not be required. All the listed
companies and even the unlisted ones like LIC today are not monopolies in their
space. These compete with private sector. There is no social or public purpose
being serviced by these companies being managed by the concerned administrative
Ministries. These companies need to be managed as efficient business entities.
The SWF would ensure that the management of these companies is also truly
professional. As and when the SWF determines that investment value in a particular
company is optimum for it to be sold, the company concerned could be fully
divested.
As all these public sector companies now compete with private
entities, there is need to give these companies and their executives a clear
level playing field. The oversight arrangements, like CAG audit, on account of
such entities being treated as a ‘State’ or Government Company and CBI jurisdiction
etc. by treating their executives as public servants should also be eliminated.
Present situation is quite difficult. We are at a critical
turning point. Inaction can lead to wholesale destruction of not only equity
values but also the underlying businesses. Such crises demand, not only big
policy reforms, but also use of a kind of business sense to turn the crisis
into an opportunity. As they say, let us not waste a crisis. Let us use this
occasion to reform the management of public sector enterprises and leverage the
value embedded in the 55 listed public sector entities and some unlisted entities
to create a Sovereign Wealth Fund of about $200 billion size to buy 5-10% equity
stake of about $150 billion in fundamentally strong Indian private and public
sector companies to protect and preserve equity markets of India which might
also turn out to be not only a saviour in a crisis but generate handsome return
for the Government.
SUBHASH CHANDRA GARG
NEW DELHI 18/03/2020
Too insightful with your ingenious ideas as ever before
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