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Indian-origin businessman Sanjeev Gupta’s Liberty House group has confirmed that it will be submitting its bid for Tata Steel’s loss-making UK businesses by Tuesday, 3 May 2016, according to a media report.
The commodities trading firm, which emerged as an early front-runner for Wales-based Port Talbot steelworks, had said last week that its team was evaluating the bid.
Gupta is being advised by several former Tata Steel executives including Jon Bolton, who until last year was the head of Tata’s Long Products business in Europe, the report said.
Bolton joined Liberty House last month to run its steel business in Scotland, also bought over from Tata.
Deloitte and Grant Thornton are among other firms involved which, among other issues, will advise Liberty House on dealing with the nearly 500 million pound funding deficit in Tata’s pensions scheme, considered the biggest stumbling block in clinching the sale.
Gupta, a Punjab-born graduate in economics and management from Cambridge University, has in the last week completed the acquisition of Tata’s Scottish plants in a back to back transaction, which saw the Scottish government acquire the two plants of Dalzell and Clydebridge in Lanarkshire and immediately sell them to Liberty House.
Other bidders for the remaining Tata Steel UK assets include Albion Steel, a UK start-up business with industry veteran Tony Pedder on the board.
It is believed to be eyeing Tata’s speciality steels unit based in Sheffield, northern England.
A Tata management team buyout is seen as the other serious contender at this stage.
The firm has blamed structural disadvantages in the UK, such as extremely high energy costs, as the reason for the crisis in the steel industry.
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