Mukesh Ambani, Asia’s richest man and chairman of Reliance Industries, has launched a record £10bn rights issue, the largest in Indian corporate history. The news sent ripples through London trading floors this morning, where gilt yields edged higher on nervousness about global capital flows. City analysts are split: is this a bold vote of confidence in Reliance’s retail and telecom pivot, or a signal that even the mighty Ambani needs to shore up his balance sheet?
The rights issue, structured as a mix of equity and convertible bonds, comes at a time when Reliance’s debt pile has swelled to over £30bn. Ambani has been on a spending spree, from 5G spectrum auctions to building out his Jio telecom empire. But the market is asking the hard question: can he deliver returns fast enough to justify this dilution?
London’s institutional investors are watching closely. The FTSE 100 was flat in early trading, but the sterling bond market showed signs of stress. “This is a massive cheque for the market to write,” said a senior fund manager at a Mayfair asset manager. “If it goes well, it’s a signal that Asia’s credit story is still strong. If it stumbles, we could see capital flight from emerging markets back to treasuries.”
The Bank of England will be monitoring the fallout. A failed Ambani issue could trigger a risk-off move, pushing up gilt yields and complicating the MPC’s fight against inflation. But if it succeeds, it might encourage other Asian corporates to tap London liquidity, a development that Threadneedle Street would view with mixed feelings.
Reliance’s stock has already dropped 5% on the news, a classic signal that the market fears dilution more than it believes in the growth story. Ambani’s track record is formidable, but even the best can misjudge the moment. With UK inflation still above 6% and the Bank rate at 5.25%, the cost of capital is rising. This rights issue will be a litmus test for whether the ‘India premium’ is still worth the price.
For now, the City is holding its breath. If Ambani pulls this off, he will cement his status as a global titan. If not, the cracks in the Asian credit story will widen. Either way, the bottom line is clear: this is a high-stakes gamble, and London is the casino floor.











