MUMBAI — In a major consolidation within India’s public sector financial landscape, the Boards of Directors of Power Finance Corporation (PFC) and REC Limited have officially greenlit a definitive scheme of merger.
The transaction, structured under Sections 230 to 232 of the Companies Act, 2013, will see REC absorbed into its parent entity, PFC. The union creates India’s largest state-backed infrastructure financing titan with a combined loan book scaling past ₹11 lakh crore.
Technical Terms: The 88:100 Share Swap
Following a comprehensive joint valuation, the boards locked in the formal share exchange ratio for the transaction. Upon the scheme becoming legally effective, the share distribution will follow a strict equity math:
For every 100 fully paid-up equity shares held in REC Limited, investors will receive 88 fully paid-up equity shares of PFC.
The specific record date to calculate shareholder allocations remains to be determined by the boards. Until the full regulatory lifecycle is complete—with an anticipated effective implementation target of April 1, 2027—both NBFCs will continue their separate market listings and independent daily operations. Concurrently, REC’s board has cleared a standalone enabling resolution to raise up to ₹1.40 lakh crore via non-convertible bonds to back ongoing operations during the transition phase.
Power Sector Reforms and Balance Sheet Synergy
The structural combination follows specific direction from the Ministry of Power and a prior push in the Union Budget to streamline public sector financing. By transitioning from a holding-subsidiary model into a unified balance sheet, the single entity expects to achieve significant corporate leverage:
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Sovereign Scale: Functions as the Central Government’s primary vehicle to anchor state electricity board distributions, national grid transmissions, and clean energy mandates.
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Borrowing Power: A stronger unified capital base reduces structural funding costs across international debt markets.
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Operational Streamlining: Removes overlapping resource allocation, optimizes asset management frameworks, and cuts administrative duplication.
Regulatory Pathway and Ownership Guardrails
To ensure the combined entity retains its critical state-backed identity, the scheme features a non-negotiable legal covenant: the merged financial institution must continuously qualify as a “Government Company,” with the Government of India directly maintaining majority ownership, voting rights, and administrative control.
The completion of the merger is now dependent on a sequential series of statutory clearances, moving from SEBI and stock exchange no-objection letters to shareholder and creditor voting majorities, before reaching the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) for final sanction.
To orchestrate the compliance, valuation, and legal structuring of the deal, a panel of marquee advisory firms has been assigned. Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu India LLP is serving as the transaction and tax advisor, while Cyril Amarchand Mangaldas handles the apex legal counsel. Valuation mandates are split between RBSA Valuation Advisors (for PFC) and Ernst & Young Merchant Banking Services (for REC), with fairness opinions provided by SBI Capital Markets and Nuvama Wealth Management respectively.

