HomeLatestJSW Group Ties Up Rs 9,300 Crore to Acquire Akzo Nobel India...

JSW Group Ties Up Rs 9,300 Crore to Acquire Akzo Nobel India Operations

JSW Group has lined up a ₹9,300 crore financing package to back its ₹12,915 crore acquisition of Akzo Nobel India, aiming to emerge as the country’s fourth-largest paint company. The complex raising comprises three distinct tranches: ₹3,300 crore in operating company debt at JSW Paints level, ₹3,000 crore in convertible instruments at the holding company, and ₹3,000 crore in a loan secured against promoter-level shares.

The top-tier component—a ₹3,300 crore operating company loan—is being syndicated among global banks including SMBC, MUFG, Mizuho, Barclays, JPMorgan, and DBS, priced at approximately 10% plus withholding tax. At the promoter level, ₹3,000 crore has been secured through loan against shares from domestic mutual funds such as Kotak, paying around 8.5% interest. The remaining ₹3,000 crore comes through a convertible instrument at the group holding company level, raised from private credit funds. In June, JSW Paints struck a definitive agreement to acquire a 74.76% stake in Akzo Nobel India for ₹8,986 crore, valuing the company at around ₹12,000 crore—marking one of the largest paints-sector transactions in India. The deal will see Akzo Noble retain its industrial coatings and R&D arm, while JSW gains control of the decorative paint business, including the premium Dulux brand. Akzo Nobel India’s share price surged 11% on the announcement.

The multifaceted financing structure underscores JSW Group’s strategic approach: layering company-level debt for operational leverage, convertible notes for flexibility at the group level, and collateralised promoter funding. This structure maintains balance-sheet discipline while enabling the acquisition. Last month, a ₹1,210 crore stake sale by JSW Infrastructure’s promoter trust to meet Sebi’s minimum public shareholding norms further bolstered the group’s liquidity position. This timely capital infusion complements the broader financing strategy supporting the Akzo deal. The transaction aligns with broader industry consolidation trends. JSW Paints will rise to the fourth-largest position in India’s décor paint market, historically dominated by Asian Paints, Berger, and Kansai Nerolac. Analysts anticipate this could intensify competition, as JSW seeks to scale Dulux’s premium appeal and distribution strength .

From a macro standpoint, the funding arrangement is notable for its complexity and timeliness. With rising interest rates and valuation pressures in the sector—accentuated by volatile raw material costs and subdued urban consumer demand—JSW’s ability to marshal diverse capital sources signals robust financial health . Yet the success of integration, especially in merging brand portfolios and distribution networks, remains critical. The pared-down yet high-leverage structure also reflects JSW’s balancing act: preserving promoter equity while deploying external financing. Debt servicing costs, convertible dilution, and promoter loan costs will directly influence internal return-on-investment benchmarks.

Beyond financial engineering, the deal resonates with broader ESG and sustainability aspirations. The paints industry is evolving towards low-VOC products, green building compliance, and circular packaging—a shift that JSW intends to leverage via Akzo’s existing R&D resources . This aligns neatly with sustainability trends and the company’s corporate responsibility commitments. Looking ahead, JSW expects regulatory clearances—including approvals from the Competition Commission of India and the conclusion of a mandatory open offer—to complete by late 2025 Following the close, success will be judged on market share gains, integration efficiencies, and financial metrics such as earnings accretion and return ratios.

Ultimately, the ₹9,300 crore funding plan exemplifies JSW Group’s calculated entry into a new industry, combining debt, equity, and strategic promoter involvement to back a watershed acquisition. With competitive pressures mounting and India’s paint market poised for sustainable growth, JSW Paints is well-placed to capitalise—provided execution meets the financial ambition.

JSW Group Ties Up Rs 9,300 Crore to Acquire Akzo Nobel India Operations
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