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Coal India: Inside the behemoth
6 December, 2010
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Euromoney, December 2010

$34 doesn’t go as far as it used to in Mumbai. It might get you a modest platter at the famed Peshawri restaurant, or a small round of drinks at one of the top new bars like Wink or Aer, but it certainly won’t cover a hotel car to the airport.

It will, however, buy you all six bookrunners on the largest IPO in Indian history.

Bookrunners on the Coal India deal received an eye-watering 0.000001% of the US$3.46 billion proceeds on this landmark deal – between them. And the extraordinary thing is, that’s not because it’s what the government offered; it’s what the banks pitched. Or, to be precise, one did and the rest were obliged to match it.

This is part of a broader article on Coal India: https://www.chriswrightmedia.com/coal-india-inside-the-behemoth/

“It has never been our intention to get banks to bid zero fees or near zero fees,” says Sumit Bose, Secretary of the Department of Disinvestment in India’s Ministry of Finance in New Delhi. “That’s their choice.” And what’s even more remarkable is that this was supposed to be a deal that ended the self-defeating low-balling of investment banking fees in Indian stock market deals.

Pitches for government share sales used to go like this. The government would put out a request for proposals (RFP), and then the banks would provide both a technical pitch – outlining things like their knowledge of the company and the sector, and their track record on execution – and a financial one, covering the proposed fees. The government would assess the technical pitches, and shortlist typically 10 banks that met the grade. The financial bids of those 10, hitherto sealed, were then opened, with the one with the lowest fee pitch declared the lead bank. Then the government would work down the rest of the list in order of fees and invite them to match the winning low bid, until however many banks were needed as bookrunners had agreed to the terms.

This has long led to absurdly low fee pitches, since under this system, your technical excellence only gets you onto the shortlist, not the deal. So with Coal India, a decision was made to do things differently: this time, a weighting was applied both to the technical pitch and the financial, with 70% of the weighting going to technical achievement. In other words, out of 100 marks available, the low level of your fee could only win you a maximum of 30.

But there was a flaw in this plan: the scoring given to the financial bid. The lowest fee bid would get all 30 points, and then the others would get marks in proportion to how their bid compared. So if the lowest bid is 0.5% and you have bid 1%, you get 15 points; if your bid was 1.5%, you’d get 10 points.

Following this through to its natural conclusion, banks realized that something odd would happen with particularly low bids. The difference between 0.001% and 0.0001% in cash terms is not that significant for an investment bank. But in the scoring system, one would get 10 times as many marks as the other: 30 marks versus 3 marks, plenty enough to knock you out of the running.

“So then,” one bookrunner notes, “it became a question of who could put in the most zeroes.”

Citi eventually wedged five of them after the decimal point, equating to about $34.60 – and the system remained that everyone else who wanted to come into the deal, including those who led the technical assessment, was obliged to match it.

After two days of pitching in the Department of Disinvestment offices in New Delhi in early May, the bookrunners found out their points on the second night, and also discovered what the fees would be. Some, who did not get on to the deal, were stunned. “My recollection is one of utter disbelief,” says a banker. “We went in with what I personally through was an absurdly low pitch. We didn’t even get close.”

Another, who did get on the deal, recalls: “We didn’t bid very fancy fees, but we bid at a level where we at least thought we would not be out of pocket. We may not make money, but we won’t lose money.” Doing so made it so much more expensive than the lower bids that the bank almost missed out on the deal completely.

But the other bookrunners are surprisingly magnanimous about it today. “We were angry for a day, maybe a week,” says one. “But, you know, these deals aren’t really about the fees.” Another adds: “It’s Citi one deal, it’s somebody else in another deal. I can’t blame Citi only. Everybody is part of this madness.”

So why do it? Citi’s managing director and head of global banking for India, Ravi Kapoor, declines to comment specifically on the fee structure but has no regrets. “It’s a path-breaking and landmark deal, India’s largest IPO from the world’s largest coal mining company,” he says. “How can you not be a part of the largest IPO in the history of the Indian capital markets? It was important to be part of such a historic offering, and it was a resounding success.” He adds: “You have to play by the rule book, which is transparently laid out for everyone.”

In fact, the situation for bankers was even worse than it looks, because part of the terms of the deal required them to take on many of the expenses, such as regulatory processing fees, stock exchange fees and even printing of forms. Based purely on the IPO itself, everyone lost money on it.

However, it’s easier for a bank like Citi to pitch a near-zero fee than some others, because they have many other ways of making money from the deal. Of the bookrunners, both Deutsche and Citi have extensive foreign exchange and custody capability: both very important in this deal. This was one of the first instances of SEBI requiring institutional investors to provide full margin coverage, which means they had to commit all of the money they were bidding for no matter how much allocation they expected to get. That created a need for foreign exchange and hedging capability, from which Citi and Deutsche benefited, while local bookrunners with big brokerage operations were able to recoup their money in the first week of trading.

But one didn’t actually have to be in the deal to do any of those things. As one bookrunner observes: “The people who probably made the most out of this deal were HSBC and Standard Chartered, the biggest custodians. And they weren’t even in the deal.” Merrill and Morgan Stanley, without major forex or custodian operations, must have had a harder time recouping the costs.

Still, none of the bookrunners talk of the deal with anything other than enormous pride, and believe it was absolutely worthwhile to be in there – not just for league table credit but prestige on being on such a landmark deal. And nobody is under any illusions that this is simply how deals tend to go in India.

“Lead managers have only themselves to blame for it and nobody else,” says Saurabh Sonthalia, managing director and head of capital markets at DSP Merrill Lynch. “It’s inexplicable. It’s the internal competition, and everybody talks about it: everybody agrees that this is something that we must desist from doing. And then we continue doing it, deal after deal. I can’t explain it.”

Another banker says that some years ago an agreement was reached that there was a point below which no banks would pitch. “And then somebody broke the consensus and bid zero. So we stopped trusting each other again.”

“The reality is, it’s the banks who are spoiling this,” he continues. “But nobody looks at fees in bidding for these transactions. There are a lot of franchises you want to be associated with, but not many can give you a cheque for $600 million of league table credit in one hit.”

From the government’s perspective, this wasn’t quite what they had in mind when they shifted to the 70-30 structure. Sumit Bose in the finance ministry argues that shifting to the new system meant that “at least two bankers” who, in the previous system, would have made it onto the deal on the basis of a lowball bid over technical ability, did not do so; the corollary is that two banks with technical strength but not a low bid, did get on the deal whereas they wouldn’t have before. (Bose won’t name them but it is understood one was Bank of America Merrill Lynch – which, in the end, had to match Citi’s bid anyway.) But it didn’t stop the low-ball bids? “No, it did not stop that, but it actually worked, to the extent that two banks came in on the basis of this new mix,” Bose says.

Local banks look on with some disbelief at the whole process, particularly when they find their own fees brought low as a consequence. “It was the international banks who skewed the fee to such low levels this time around,” says S Subramanian, managing director of investment banking at Enam Securities. “We were surprised at that number.” Still, Enam could have said no; but decided it needed to be on the deal.

In theory, this is all going to change. When the RFPs came out for the next big deal, for Indian Oil Corporation, the government had set a floor of Rp600,000 for the minimum fees. That’s still not much, particularly seeing as it will be split six ways, and it’s already blindingly obvious to everyone that nobody will pitch above the minimum.

“As long as the government puts fees as part of the criteria for selection of the banks, there will be one or two who are so keen to do the trade that the fee levels are not going to change,” says Sanjay Sharma, head of equity capital markets for India at Deutsche. “However, if a bank has made the call that it’s important to do a particular trade, you’re not going to put less effort on it because it pays no fees.”

Chris Wright
Chris Wright
Chris is a journalist specialising in business and financial journalism across Asia, Australia and the Middle East. He is Asia editor for Euromoney magazine and has written for publications including the Financial Times, Institutional Investor, Forbes, Asiamoney, the Australian Financial Review, Discovery Channel Magazine, Qantas: The Australian Way and BRW. He is the author of No More Worlds to Conquer, published by HarperCollins.

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