Reliance, Aramco talks on refinery stake sale stall

Reliance’s shares closed 0.5 per cent lower at Rs 1,273.55 in Mumbai after falling as much as 1.6 per cent earlier.

Update: 2019-07-23 20:29 GMT

Mukesh Ambani’s Reliance Industries Ltd’s talks to sell a minority stake in its refinery business to Saudi Arabian Oil Co. have stalled on differences over the deal’s structure, people with knowledge of the matter said.

Aramco is concerned about Reliance’s proposal to shift some debt of the wider group to its refinery business ahead of the transaction, said the people, who asked not to be identified as the discussions are private.

The Indian company is working on alternatives and negotiations could still resume and lead to a compromise in the coming months, the people said.

Reliance’s shares closed 0.5 per cent lower at Rs 1,273.55 in Mumbai after falling as much as 1.6 per cent earlier. A representative for Aramco declined to comment, while a representative for Reliance didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment.

Ambani has been selling assets—from mobile-phone towers to energy assets—to pare debt. His Mumbai-based company is looking to sell as much as 25 per cent of its refinery and petrochemicals business in the deal that could fetch at least $10 billion, Bloomberg News reported in April. The sale would help pare the conglomerate’s obligations that have risen to about $42 billion, as it poured money into new sectors such as telecommunications.

Both sides have completed due diligence for the potential deal, the people said. Aramco has asked its financial adviser to update the due diligence report every quarter, one of the people said.

Reliance’s debt increased 20 per cent over the past year as it spent $36 billion to disrupt India’s wireless market with cheap data and free calls, forcing rivals to combine or exit.

Brookfield Asset Mana-gement Inc last week agreed to spend $3.7 billion to acquire a stake in an investment trust that will manage the mobile-phone tower business of Reliance. That transaction was the Canadian alternative asset manager’s second deal with Reliance.

Earlier this year, Brookfield agreed to buy a pipeline from Ambani for $1.9 billion.

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