Vedanta Demerger Enters Final Phase
One of India’s biggest corporate restructuring exercises has officially concluded as Vedanta Limited completed the listing of its four demerged businesses on June 15, 2026.
Vedanta shareholders now hold shares in five separate listed companies:
- Vedanta Ltd
- Vedanta Aluminium Metal Ltd
- Vedanta Oil & Gas Ltd
- Vedanta Power Ltd
- Vedanta Iron & Steel Ltd
The move transforms Vedanta from a diversified conglomerate into a group of independently traded sector-focused companies.
What Exactly Changed?
Before the demerger, investors received exposure to multiple commodity businesses through a single Vedanta stock.
Following the restructuring, each major business now trades separately, allowing investors and analysts to value each segment independently.
| Company | Business |
|---|---|
| Vedanta Ltd | Residual business including Hindustan Zinc exposure |
| Vedanta Aluminium Metal Ltd | Aluminium and value-added aluminium products |
| Vedanta Oil & Gas Ltd | Oil and gas exploration and production |
| Vedanta Power Ltd | Power generation assets |
| Vedanta Iron & Steel Ltd | Iron ore and steel operations |
What Shareholders Received
Vedanta shareholders were allotted:
✅ 1 share of each demerged company for every 1 Vedanta share held.
For example:
If an investor owned 100 Vedanta shares before the record date, they now own:
- 100 Vedanta Ltd shares
- 100 Vedanta Aluminium shares
- 100 Vedanta Oil & Gas shares
- 100 Vedanta Power shares
- 100 Vedanta Iron & Steel shares
This was a share distribution rather than a cash payout.
Vedanta Aluminium Steals the Spotlight
The biggest surprise on listing day was the remarkable performance of Vedanta Aluminium Metal Ltd.
| Company | Base Price | Listing Price | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Vedanta Aluminium | ₹121.03 | ₹522.00 | +331.30% |
| Vedanta Power | ₹121.03 | ₹41.80 | -65.46% |
| Vedanta Oil & Gas | ₹121.02 | ₹38.00 | -68.60% |
| Vedanta Iron & Steel | ₹121.02 | ₹20.00 | -83.47% |
The market clearly rewarded the aluminium business while taking a cautious stance on the other three businesses.
Why Investors Love Vedanta Aluminium
Analysts believe Vedanta Aluminium benefits from several long-term growth themes:
⚡ Power Infrastructure
🚗 Electric Vehicles
🔋 Renewable Energy
🏗 Construction Sector
📦 Packaging Industry
🏭 Manufacturing Expansion
Because of these structural demand drivers, investors appear to view aluminium as Vedanta’s strongest standalone growth story.
Why Other Companies Faced Selling Pressure
The weaker listing performance of the remaining businesses reflects market concerns about cyclical risks.
Vedanta Oil & Gas
- Dependent on crude oil prices
- Production growth uncertainty
- Regulatory risks
Vedanta Power
- Sensitive to fuel costs
- Tariff fluctuations
- Plant utilization rates
Vedanta Iron & Steel
- Steel price volatility
- Commodity cycles
- Infrastructure demand risks
The demerger has not eliminated these risks—it has simply made them easier for investors to evaluate separately.
Trade-to-Trade Restriction in Place
All four newly listed companies have been placed in the Trade-to-Trade (T2T) segment for the first ten trading sessions.
This means:
❌ No Intraday Trading
✅ Delivery-Based Trading Only
The restriction is intended to reduce speculative activity during the early price discovery phase.
Important Tax Update for Investors
Vedanta has also released the official cost allocation ratio for taxation purposes.
| Company | Cost Allocation |
|---|---|
| Vedanta Ltd | 52.34% |
| Vedanta Aluminium | 7.15% |
| Vedanta Power | 12.23% |
| Vedanta Oil & Gas | 21.49% |
| Vedanta Iron & Steel | 6.79% |
This allocation will be used to calculate future capital gains when investors sell any of the demerged shares.
What Investors Should Watch Next
The coming quarters will be crucial for determining whether the demerger truly unlocks shareholder value.
Key areas to monitor include:
📈 Aluminium demand and margins
🛢 Oil production growth
⚡ Power generation performance
⛏ Iron ore and steel profitability
💰 Vedanta Ltd debt reduction and dividend policy
The market’s initial verdict is clear: Vedanta Aluminium is currently the biggest winner of the demerger. However, the long-term success of the restructuring will depend on how each business performs as an independent listed company.









