Vedanta Demerger Explained: What Investors Should Know?

Vedanta Ltd’s long-awaited restructuring plan has taken a major step forward. The National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) has approved the company’s demerger proposal, allowing Vedanta to split its Indian businesses into separate listed companies.
This approval comes despite objections from the Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas and removes the biggest regulatory hurdle in the process. For investors, the decision brings clarity — though some legal risks still remain.
What Did NCLT Approve?
The NCLT has cleared Vedanta’s plan to demerge its diversified businesses into independent companies. With this approval, Vedanta can now move ahead with formal steps such as regulatory filings, record dates, and asset separation.
The tribunal’s decision means the restructuring is legally valid under company law, even though certain government concerns are still unresolved.
Why Did the Government Object?
The Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas opposed the demerger mainly due to financial and legal risks.
Weak financials of Malco Energy
One of the entities emerging after the demerger, Malco Energy, has been running losses:
- Negative net worth of ₹94 crore
- Cash losses of ₹85.6 crore in FY24 and ₹244 crore in FY23
The ministry warned that if Malco faces financial trouble in the future, it could become difficult for the government to recover any dues.
Rajasthan oil & gas dispute
The government has a claim of around ₹5,600 crore linked to Vedanta’s Rajasthan oil and gas block.
- The matter is currently pending in the Delhi High Court
- The ministry argued that these liabilities were not clearly addressed in the demerger plan
Concern over recovery of public dues
The broader worry was that splitting Vedanta into multiple companies could weaken the government’s ability to recover money owed to it.
Vedanta’s Stand
Vedanta rejected the objections and defended the demerger on legal grounds. The company argued that:
- The scheme already has SEBI approval
- The petroleum ministry is a sector regulator, not a creditor or shareholder
- As a result, the ministry does not have the authority to block a corporate restructuring under company law
The NCLT accepted this argument and ruled in favour of Vedanta.
What Will Vedanta Split Into?
Under the approved plan, Vedanta will be divided into five listed companies:
- Vedanta Aluminium
- Vedanta Oil & Gas
- Vedanta Power
- Vedanta Iron & Steel
- Vedanta Ltd (restructured), which will hold zinc and silver assets through Hindustan Zinc
Existing shareholders will receive shares in each of these companies.
Why Is Vedanta Doing This?
The demerger aims to simplify Vedanta’s complex structure and improve transparency. The key goals are:
- Reducing overall debt
- Allowing each business to focus on its core operations
- Making financial performance easier for investors to track
- Unlocking shareholder value by removing the “conglomerate discount”
Brokerage estimates suggest the restructuring could unlock around ₹84 per share in value over time.
What’s Next for Investors?
Markets reacted positively to the NCLT order, with Vedanta shares rising about 2.5% after the announcement.
However, some uncertainty remains:
- The ₹5,600 crore government claim is still under court review
- Any negative outcome could impact Vedanta Oil & Gas
If there are no major setbacks, the demerger is expected to be completed by March 2026.
Bottom Line
The NCLT’s approval brings Vedanta’s demerger much closer to reality. While legal risks haven’t fully disappeared, the biggest regulatory hurdle is now behind the company.
For investors, the focus will now shift to execution, debt reduction, and how each new business performs as a standalone company.



