Majority owners of offshore holding seek direct stake in Pakistan’s K-Electric

A view of the K-Electric head office, with solar panels at the parking area, in Karachi, Pakistan, on January 24, 2023. (REUTERS)
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Updated 12 July 2023
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Majority owners of offshore holding seek direct stake in Pakistan’s K-Electric

  • Utility’s holding structure widely considered an impediment to acquisition by China’s state-owned Shanghai Electric
  • Deal with Shanghai Electric has lingered for years due to regulatory and legal hurdles in Pakistan

KARACHI: The majority shareholders of an offshore holding company that owns most of Pakistani power company K-Electric said on Wednesday they have initiated legal proceedings to seek direct ownership of a stake in the utility.

The power utility’s holding structure has widely been considered an impediment to its acquisition by China’s state-owned Shanghai Electric, a deal that has lingered for years due to regulatory and legal hurdles in Pakistan.

Infrastructure and Growth Capital Fund SPV21 (IGCF), which has a 53.8 percent shareholding in Cayman Island-registered KES Power Limited (KESP), which in turn owns 66.4 percent of K-Electric, told Reuters it had filed for a Just & Equitable Winding Up of KESP in the Grand Court of Cayman Islands on Tuesday.

“By this action SPV 21 IGCF simply seeks to own its shares in KE directly instead of through a holding company in the form of KESP which has unfortunately outlived its original purpose due to the continued negative actions of KESP’s minority shareholders,” IGCF said in a statement to Reuters.

Sadia Dada, Chief Marketing and Communications Officer at K-Electric, said the utility was “neither privy to the contents of the petition nor in a position to comment.”

The remaining shareholders of KES Power Limited, Saudi-and Kuwait-based companies Al-Jomiah power limited and Denham Investment, did not respond to a Reuters request for comment.

K-Electric is the only electricity generator, transmitter, and distributor for Karachi, Pakistan’s largest city, and its adjoining areas, and the only listed electricity supplier in Pakistan. It was privatised in 2005, with a current market capitalization of 53 billion rupees ($195.03 million).

IGFC was previously owned by the now defunct Abraaj Group and changed hands in 2022 when AsiaPak Investments, a private investment firm with operational assets in Pakistan and Hong Kong, acquired it.

In October 2022, a high court in Pakistan’s Sindh province, of which Karachi is the capital, issued a stay order preventing any change in the present board of directors because of a lawsuit filed by minority shareholders in KESP. There are three vacant slots on the board of directors.

If KESP is dissolved, it may also support the ability of the acquirer to appoint directors through a direct shareholding in K-Electric, which would provide more clarity to the Shanghai Electric deal.

Shanghai Electric has been in talks to acquire a stake in KE for more than half a decade, delayed due to regulatory approval and liquidity constraints as a consequence of mounting circular debt plaguing the country’s power sector. The government of Pakistan owns a 24.4 percent stake in K-Electric.

In June, Shanghai Electric reiterated its commitment to the deal, which was worth approximately $1.77 billion in 2016 but may change.

“We are not repudiating the Shanghai contract or intending to do so by winding up KESP,” Darin Baur, a director of IGCF and one of the initial nominees for the vacant position on the KE board told Reuters.

($1 = 271.7500 Pakistani rupees)


Pakistan military says 12 militants killed in counter-terror operations in southwest

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Pakistan military says 12 militants killed in counter-terror operations in southwest

  • Pakistan military says “Indian-sponsored terrorists” were killed in southwestern Kalat district on Dec. 6
  • Development takes place day after military said it gunned down five militants in Balochistan’s Dera Bugti area

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani security forces killed 12 “Indian-sponsored terrorists” in the southwestern Balochistan province, the military’s media wing said on Sunday, vowing to purge “terrorism” from the country.

The security operation was carried out in Balochistan’s Kalat district on Dec. 6, the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), the military’s media wing, said in a statement. It said the militants belonged to Indian proxy “Fitna al Hindustan.”

The military uses this term to describe ethnic Baloch militant groups who demand independence from Pakistan. Islamabad accuses New Delhi of arming and funding these separatist groups, charges India has always denied. 

“Weapons, ammunition and explosives were also recovered from the terrorists, who remained actively involved in numerous terrorist activities in the area,” the ISPR said. 

The military said that it was carrying out sanitization operations in the area to eliminate other “terrorists,” vowing it will continue with its relentless counter-terror campaign to purge militancy. 

The development took place a day after the Pakistan military said it had gunned down 14 militants in the northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) and Balochistan provinces. 

Balochistan, Pakistan’s largest province by since yet its most backward by almost all social and economic indicators, has suffered from a bloody separatist insurgency for decades. 

The most ethnic Baloch militant group that has mounted attacks against law enforcement and civilians in the area is the Balochistan Liberation Army.

These militant outfits accuse the military and federal government of denying the local Baloch population a share in the province’s mineral wealth, charges Islamabad denies.