Kalyani Investment Company holds investments primarily in
the debt and equity of Kalyani Group companies – constituting over 90% of total
investments.
It relies mainly on dividend income and held over 1,400cr in
market value of quoted investments – the most notable of which is a stake in
Bharat Forge Limited, a group company, valued at over 1,000cr at current market
prices.
The primary risk pertaining to the value of the company
appears to be adverse developments in the Kalyani Group companies in which it
is invested in. Apart from this, it is
exposed to market value declines for whatever reason. In the same vein, it is unlikely to realise
capital gains in the event of market exuberance due to the long-term nature of
its holdings.
The company also holds several questionable looking unquoted
investments such as 0.1% non-cumulative preference shares (and equity
investment) in an entity that is a debt restructuring (CDR) candidate. Little information is provided on unquoted
investments.
Management don’t appear to be too shareholder-oriented – they
haven’t declared any dividends on the equity shares despite large liquid
assets. Interestingly, they declared
dividends on preference shares due to the ‘extent of distributable assets
available. Without losing their breath, they
refused dividends on equity shares in the very next sentence. One wonders why the dividend reasoning for
preference shares is inapplicable to equity shares.
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