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Vedanta demerger: Four entities to start trading on Indian stock exchanges June 15
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Economic Times6/11/2026Business3 min readIndia

Vedanta demerger: Four entities to start trading on Indian stock exchanges June 15

Quick Look

  • Vedanta's demerger exercise concludes as four entities—Vedanta Aluminium Metal, Vedanta Oil & Gas, Vedanta Power, and Vedanta Iron & Steel—begin trading on Indian stock exchanges on June 15.
  • This move aims to unlock shareholder value and allow each business to pursue sector-specific opportunities with greater flexibility.

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Why It Matters

Vedanta has undergone a significant corporate restructuring by demerging its businesses into four new entities. This exercise aims to unlock value and provide greater flexibility for each business unit to pursue growth opportunities independently.

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Investors in Vedanta will finally get a price for the group's demerged businesses on June 15, when four newly created entities — Vedanta Aluminium Metal (VAML), Vedanta Oil & Gas (VOGL), Vedanta Power and Vedanta Iron & Steel (VISL) — begin trading on Indian stock exchanges.

The listings mark the end of Vedanta's long-awaited demerger exercise, one of the biggest corporate restructurings undertaken in India's metals, mining and natural resources sector.

According to exchange notices, Vedanta Oil & Gas, Vedanta Power, Vedanta Aluminium Metal and Vedanta Iron & Steel will be listed on Monday and initially placed in the Trade-to-Trade (T2T) segment, where every transaction results in compulsory delivery.

The demerger became effective earlier this year, with Vedanta fixing May 1 as the record date. Under the scheme, shareholders received one share each of Vedanta Aluminium Metal, Vedanta Power, Vedanta Oil & Gas and Vedanta Iron & Steel for every one share held in Vedanta.

While Vedanta shares have continued trading after the record date, investors have been unable to transact in the demerged entities until now. As a result, a part of shareholder value has remained locked in the absence of market-driven price discovery.

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The listing is expected to provide the first indication of how investors value each business individually and whether the demerger succeeds in unlocking value, a key objective highlighted by chairman Anil Agarwal.

The restructuring leaves the parent Vedanta with businesses such as Hindustan Zinc, copper operations and critical minerals, while creating four standalone companies focused on aluminium, oil and gas, power, and iron and steel.

Agarwal has repeatedly argued that each vertical has the scale and growth potential to thrive independently.

Vedanta Aluminium, India's largest aluminium producer, plans to double its capacity to 6 million tonnes and aims to strengthen its position as one of the world's lowest-cost producers.

Vedanta Oil & Gas, built around the group's Cairn assets, is targeting production of 300,000-500,000 barrels per day backed by a planned investment of $5 billion. The company is currently India's largest private-sector upstream oil and gas producer.

Vedanta Power enters the market with 4.2 GW of operational generation capacity and a 12 GW expansion pipeline. The company has also outlined plans to diversify into hydropower and nuclear energy alongside conventional thermal generation.

Vedanta Iron & Steel, meanwhile, is expected to focus on expanding green steel and specialty steel production, leveraging the group's raw material linkages and infrastructure assets.

The demerger comes as Vedanta pursues an aggressive growth strategy across businesses while simultaneously reducing leverage. The group has announced growth capital expenditure plans of around Rs 15,000 crore and says the new structure will allow each company to pursue sector-specific opportunities with greater flexibility.

What to Watch

AI outlook — possibilities, not facts

  • The listing will provide initial market valuations for the demerged entities.

    Very likely · Within days

  • Vedanta's stock price may see volatility as the market digests the demerger.

    Likely · Within weeks

Open Questions

  • How will the market price discovery reflect the true value of each demerged entity?
  • What will be the immediate impact on Vedanta's overall debt reduction strategy?
  • Will the individual entities be able to achieve their ambitious growth targets?
  • How will the parent Vedanta's strategic decisions be affected by the new structure?

Related Topics

This article was originally published by Economic Times.

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