The shares of Vedanta jumped nearly 2% to a fresh record high on Friday morning, after the metals major said that it has secured its highest domestic credit rating in more than a decade.
Vedanta shares hit a fresh 52-week high of Rs 360.70 apiece on BSE on Friday. This comes after ratings agency ICRA on Wednesday removed the company from watch with developing implications after greater clarity on the allocation of assets and liabilities under the ongoing demerger scheme .
ICRA upgrades Vedanta's rating
Post-demerger, ICRA expects the relatively stronger cash-generating entities within the Vedanta group to support the dividend requirements, with the flexibility to fund the same from other group entities as well. ICRA also expects that the intra-group support among entities in the conglomerate will continue if required.
"The Stable outlook on the long-term rating reflects ICRA’s expectations of a continued healthy operating performance, backed by a favourable outlook on base metal prices in the near to medium term, leading to strong profits and cash accruals. The Group’s credit profile will be supported by the healthy cash flow generation from diversified businesses, strong financial flexibility and execution capabilities. In addition, the Group's commitment to undertake any large debt-funded capex in a calibrated manner while maintaining its debt metrics at prudent levels also supports the Stable outlook,” it further said.
Also read: How the mega Vedanta demerger will impact payout for 21 lakh shareholders?
Vedanta took to X to share the ratings upgrade, adding that this is the highest domestic credit rating in over a decade. “The upgrade marks the Group’s highest domestic credit rating since 2014, reflecting stronger profitability driven by robust operational performance, along with sustained progress in deleveraging and refinancing. Together, these milestones further strengthen Vedanta’s position among India’s leading diversified natural resources companies,” it wrote.