No immediate impact on credit ratings of Adani Group: Fitch Ratings

Global credit rating agency Fitch Ratings, said there is no immediate impact on its ratings of Adani Group entities and their securities.

Chennai:  Global credit rating agency Fitch Ratings on Friday said there is no immediate impact on its ratings of Adani Group entities and their securities following a “short-seller report” alleging malpractices.

Fitch Ratings also said it expects no material changes to its forecast cash flow.

“There are also no near-term significant offshore bond maturities – earliest in June 2024 for Adani Ports and Special Economic Zone Limited (APSEZ, BBB-/Stable); December 2024 for Adani Green Energy Limited Restricted Group 1 (AGEL RG1, BB+/Stable); and 2026 or beyond for all other entities – reducing refinancing risks and near-term liquidity risks,” Fitch Ratings said.

The credit rating agency also said its ongoing monitoring will be looking closely at any major changes to the rated entities’ access to financing or cost of financing on a long-term basis, unfavourable regulatory/legal developments or ESG-related matters that could affect credit profiles.

Short seller Hindenburg Research published a report on 24 January 2023, alleging various purported malpractices leading to a downfall in the share and bond prices of various group entities despite the group publishing its response on January 30.

Fitch currently has ratings on eight entities/restricted groups within the Adani group – Adani Transmission Limited (ATL, BBB-/Stable); Adani Electricity Mumbai Limited (AEML, senior secured US dollar notes rated at ‘BBB-‘); APSEZ; Adani International Container Terminal Private Limited (AICTPL, senior secured US dollar notes rated at ‘BBB-‘/Stable); Adani Transmission Restricted Group 1 (ATL RG1, BBB-/Stable); Adani Green Energy Restricted Group 2 (AGEL RG2, senior secured US dollar notes ‘BBB-‘/Stable); AGEL RG1 and Mumbai International Airport Limited (MIAL, senior secured US dollar notes ‘BB+’/Stable)

ATL RG1 restricted group includes six co-issuers – Barmer Power Transmission Service Limited, Chhattisgarh-WR Transmission Limited, Hadoti Power Transmission Service Limited, Raipur-Rajnandgaon-Warora Transmission Limited, Sipat Transmission Limited and Thar Power Transmission Service Limited – and one non-issuing SPV, Adani Transmission (Rajasthan) Ltd (ATRL), Fitch Ratings said.

The rated businesses are separately listed (directly or effectively), operate in utility or infrastructure businesses, and with relatively stable cash flow.

According to Fitch Ratings, the founding shareholders of Adani Group effectively own the majority of shares. Some of the rated businesses (AEML and AGEL RG1) have strategic investors with board representation. Furthermore, the offshore bonds of all rated entities except APSEZ incorporate a cash flow waterfall mechanism and covenants which restrict cash upstreaming to shareholders and limit indebtedness.

Related-party transactions at these entities outside of the normal course of business are also limited.

Some of these businesses, such as ATL and AEML, had received loans from related parties which have been repaid over time with investment proceeds from the Qatar Investment Authority and Abu Dhabi based Investment Holding Company. The credit profiles of other entities with meaningful related-party loans – such as AGEL RG1, AGEL RG2 and MIAL – benefit from deep contractual subordination of these loans through both a cash flow waterfall mechanism and security.

The credit ratings at ‘BBB-‘ for APSEZ, AICTPL, ATL RG1 and AGEL RG2 are constrained by India’s Country Ceiling (BBB-). Barring this constraint, the entities’ credit profiles would be commensurate with a ‘BBB’ rating, Fitch Ratings said.

 
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