The reason: The recent surge in their balance sheet means these restrictions will have little impact on them.
Reliance Industries, for instance, can still go ahead and do a $30-billion acquisition without having to seek RBI’s approval, while Tata Motors can close a $6-billion deal without visiting Mint Road.
Investment bankers agree. “The 100 per cent cap is more than sufficient for large companies, as they have greatly enlarged their balance sheets in recent years.
“The limit might pinch smaller companies.
“But they were anyway not looking to grow outside India,” says Motilal Oswal Investment CEO Ashutosh Maheshwari.
Over the past three years, the combined net worth of BSE-200 firms (excluding banking and financial ones) has risen at a compound annual growth rate of 14.6 per cent.
As at the end of FY13, it had reached $316 billion, giving these companies sufficient firepower to pursue selective overseas merger & acquisition opportunities.
Three years ago, the total figure was $210 billion (based on exchange rate of Rs 60 a dollar).
At the end of FY13, half the BSE-200 firms (74 out of 156; ex-banking & financials) had a net worth of Rs 5,000 crore (Rs 50 billion) or more, compared with a third (53) three years ago.
Many fast-growing companies have reported even faster rate of growth in their net worth during the period.
Over a third (60 out of 156) of the BSE-200 companies reported 20 per cent CAGR in their net worth since FY10.
This provides these companies -- in the FMCG, consumer durables, cement, pharmaceuticals and IT sectors -- enough muscle to pursue their global dreams, without worrying about RBI approval.
For example, Tata Motors’ net worth has quadrupled since FY10, rising at a CAGR of 66 per cent, while Havells India’s net worth has risen 3.6 times during the period. Other high performers include Godrej Consumer (net worth up 3.5 times ) and UltraTech Cement (up 3.3 times).
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