Saint-Gobain sees big sell-off post plans to merge Grindwell Norton
The merger, if successful, will also help SGSL comply with Sebi norms. The French parent owns 86% in SGSL and 51% in GNO.

Saint-Gobain (SGSL) shares hit the 5% lower circuit at Rs 24.75. There were more than 3 lakh shares without any buyers after the company announced that it was going to merge with Grindwell Norton at a value 42% lower than its current price.
The 338-year-old $23-billion French multinational holds majority stakes in both companies. Shareholders of SGSL will receive one share of GNO for every 17 shares of Saint-Gobain held by them, the proposed scheme of amalgamation said.
Monday’s closing price of Rs 24.75 values the 17 shares of SGSL atRs 420.75 versus GNO’s share price ofRs 245.80. The swap ratio values SGSL’s share price at Rs 14.
The proposed merger is a blow to shareholders of SGSL who had a chance to exit the company through a delisting offer at a floor price Rs 31 in June last year. Aggressive bidding increased the price of the offer to Rs 90 forcing the company to abandon the process.
“This is one way of forcing the delisting offer at much lower valuations,” said JN Gupta, the founder and managing director of Stakeholders Empowerment Services (SES). “Had the minority shareholders offered their shares at Rs 31 last year, the current situation would not have arisen.”
The merger, if successful, will also help SGSL comply with Sebi norms. The French parent owns 86% in SGSL and 51% in GNO. Market regulator the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) has asked all Indian and foreign companies to reduce the promoter holding to 75% by June 30 this year by selling more shares to the public.
Brokers and fund managers say that the SGSL shares could trend lower due to the swap ratio. “Ratios looks fair on fundamental grounds of both companies (SGSL and GNO), however the market has over-priced the SGSL shares which needs to the corrected,” said Mehul Savla, founder, Ripplewave Equity.
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Saint-Gobain was one of the victims of the delisting mania that boosted the shares of several multinational companies last year. But prices crashed after some multinationals decided against a delisting offer and focused instead on complying with Sebi norms by reducing their shareholding.
“A group of investors wanted a huge premium, which was unaffordable,” said a banker to one of the MNC deals which failed recently. Some experts are questioning the timing of the deal.
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