Is it still too early to judge the success of IBC?

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There is still a debate on whether the IBC has been a success. The view here is that it may be still too early to judge, but credit should be given to the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Board of India (IBBI) for having this system in place. And, more importantly, we need to have this structure, which could be fine-tuned, if required.

The path has not been smooth for sure as defaulters do not want to give up on their assets and believe that it is okay to not service loans. The RBI had to fight a battle here (the famous February 12, 2018 notification) with the government, and the courts had ruled that this could not be driven by the central bank.

Onus on banks

The RBI had to retreat and dilute its circular, and finally put the onus on banks to ensure that defaulters are taken to the IBC. Therefore, the modified rules now increase the provisions that must be made by banks in the absence of a resolution plan not being implemented in a timely manner. Recovery through the IBC has been higher in FY20, according to the RBI, at 46 per cent, compared with SARFAESI, DRTs or Lok Adalat.

This number came down in FY21 and, as of June 2021, was at 36 per cent, which was again expected, given that the government had provided relief for six months for companies, which was extended in September 2020 by another three months. The IBC was to have a benchmark of 180 days, with another extension of 90 days, to resolve the cases before insolvency proceedings were invoked. It is again not surprising that it has been pointed out that over 75 per cent of the ongoing cases are over 270 days, especially due to the pandemic, and the various measures taken for restructuring assets as well as moratorium provided last year.

The metric which can be used to measure the success of insolvency resolution is the recovery rate. In the past it was in the region of 20 per cent, which means that 40 per cent-plus according to the IBC is good. True, when the dirty dozen was sifted to begin with, the recovery rates were impressive at 70 per cent-plus, but this is exactly where the conundrum lies. As proceedings get delayed, the realisation will fall, especially if the plants are not operational to the full extent as the value comes down under such conditions.

Global recession

Further, markets have changed significantly due to the global recession last year, and the pandemic has altered the way of doing business. Again, a change in ideology, especially towards ESG, means that conventional power-generating companies are no longer attractive. The same holds for industries that contribute to a rise in emissions. This means that progressively buyers will get scarce leading to bigger haircuts. This will come in the way of further resolution of NPAs.

‘Bad bank’

The National Asset Reconstruction Company is now being formed and will soon be operational as a bad bank. The idea is not new as the asset reconstruction companies that were in operation were not able to do complete justice to the task, which led to the IBC. Now, with the NARC coming up, there will be diversion of proposals potentially from the IBC to NARC.

The issue is in the realm of game theory. All sellers of bad assets want the best realisation, while the buyer wants to pay the lowest amount. This leads to the bargaining game, which, so far, has been in favour of the buyer.

The IBC tries to change the dynamics by forcing such assets to be put on the table and, more importantly, keeping it time-bound. NARC being owned by the public sector should work as PSBs were always scared of selling assets to the asset reconstruction companies as audit at a later date could jeopardise their stance.

Owners of assets will always drag their feet and look for legal recourse, which was the case earlier. The point made by the defaulting companies is straight forward. If all NPAs are going to be auctioned after 270 days, then the incentive to invest will come down as will risk-taking ability. The fear of failure will come in the way of setting up new enterprises. Therefore, the banking system must be tolerant, especially when the failure of business is due to the economic environment and is not a ‘willful action’. The argument is strong, but given that banks deal with deposit holders’ money, there is a moral dilemma.

When the IBC came up with numbers like 180 days with an extension of 90 days, it was done after careful deliberation. Now, it is 330 days. In 2015, the World Bank Doing Business Indicators highlighted that it took 4.3 years for resolution of insolvency with a recovery of 25.7 per cent. For China, it was 1.7 years with recovery of 36 per cent.

Therefore, the progress made has been more than satisfactory over the years. All such processes, which involve legal issues as well as sentiment tend to run into the law of diminishing returns wherein once the low hanging fruits are plucked, it gets progressively difficult as one climbs up.

The IBBI has reported that of the 4,541 CIRPs admitted since June 2016, around 63 per cent have been closed, which is quite impressive, given the number that is involved. This is notwithstanding the various hiccups that have been encountered starting with the availability of professionals to companies seeking recourse to courts to protect their assets. The recovery rates could come down further with time, which can moderate to around 30-33 per cent. But having the IBC is essential to hold out a credible threat to companies.

Bond market

Also, as there is serious talk of growing the corporate bond market, the success of a resolution system is important. When there are NPAs the problem is for bankers who must make provisions and chase the borrowers.

However, when it comes to the bond market, there is no system of recourse except the legal system, and an individual bond holder will not know what to do in case of a default. Therefore, the country has to work hard to ensure that the resolution processes get stronger, including all institutions such as IBBI (IBC), DRT, ARCs, as the future growth of the economy has to come from the bond market, which cannot get out of the shell of being only a platform for AAA and AA-rated companies as 80 per cent of the corporates do not have such ratings.

(The writer is Chief Economist, CARE Ratings, and author of Hits & Misses: The Indian Banking Story. Views are personal)

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Jayant Sinha, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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As the Indian Bankruptcy Code (IBC), one of the crucial reforms that gives India Inc the ‘right to exit’ and start afresh, completed five years, ETCFO spoke with Jayant Sinha, former union minister and Chairman of the parliamentary standing committee on finance, to know if liquidation is a scam under IBC? And more.

“Liquidation should not be a benchmark. And that is why we have to think carefully about what should be the benchmarks and a resolution process particularly for secured financial creditors,” said Jayant Sinha.

Almost half of the closed cases by lenders under IBC in FY21 ended in liquidation, as per the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Board of India (IBBI), while only 13 per cent were resolved. In most of the cases under IBC, by the time they are resolved, their asset value depreciates leading to 90% haircuts, according to IBBI

Specifically from the secured creditors perspective, when they lend against collateral they expect 100 per cent value back instead of “salvage or the liquidation value”.

“If that was to be the case, the kind of loans a company would be able to get would be very modest, because everybody’s just lending against liquidation value. We can’t have that,” Sinha said, underscoring the importance of having benchmarks.

Liquidation can’t be a benchmark under Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code: Jayant SinhaThese benchmarks are for secured financial creditors as there should be a very high level of confidence that they’re going to get the vast part of their loan back, he said.

But the question is how to decide the benchmark?

Sinha points to global benchmarks, the major economies that we compete with like Germany, Japan, China, the US, the UK. What secured financial creditors typically get through the resolution process should be the benchmark, he said.

Benchmark the quantum of haircut

In one of the recommendations, the parliamentary standing committee in its report titled, ‘Implementation of Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code: Pitfalls and Solutions’ was to benchmark the quantum of haircuts to avoid a 90 per cent haircut situation.

As per IBBI, in the resolved cases, the haircut, or the loss to banks on their claims, rose to 60 per cent in FY 2021, from 55 per cent average in the previous years. While in the March 2021 quarter alone, haircuts rose to a whopping 74 per cent of the claims made by the lenders against the defaulters.

While it is a matter of concern, how will benchmarking haircuts work?

Benchmarking haircut is not a prescription. It’s not a number that you have to meet. But it is something that should guide the committee of creditors in terms of how and how quickly they should go through the resolution process..

He believes that the system needs to gear up to deliver better outcomes. He feels there are many reasons why 40% recovery is happening. He ascribed these low recoveries to companies close to liquidation coming to IBC, processes that dragged on for a long time eventually eroding the value of the assets, apart from other reasons.

“Going forward, 40% cannot be the benchmark. It is not good enough. Whereas 5% is not good enough either. We need to do better for secured financial creditors. And the changes that we are suggesting are in support of all of that,” he said.

Role of NCLT

As far as delays in the process are concerned, one aspect is counter litigation by promoters. This costs money and time to the whole system. How should IBC deal with such issues, especially when NCLT is facing the challenge of capacity?

Sinha suggested three steps to reduce litigation.

Firstly, fill the vacancies at NCLT as quickly as possible because then there is more time to adjudicate a case well and come up with a good resolution.

If judges don’t have enough time and rush through cases, they won’t give good judgments, and then things will end up in litigation. Therefore, adding capacity as soon as possible is one way in which we can deal with these endless litigation type issues.

Liquidation can’t be a benchmark under Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code: Jayant SinhaSecondly, improve the quality of NCLT members. The parliamentary committee has recommended that the NCLT should at least have high court judges so that we can benefit from their experience and their wisdom. That’s another way to prevent litigation.

The third way of preventing litigation is to ensure when people submit the resolution plan as per the deadline, they do not have an opportunity to come in with another resolution plan after that. Because not doing so, will again rest in litigation, and a lot of contentions back and forth.

“So these are three very concrete steps that we have suggested to reduce litigation as it is one of the reasons a lot of these timelines are being extended,” he said.

ALSO READ: RBI Governor and Jayant Sinha to discuss IBC



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A ₹2-lakh crore worth of debt looms over new bad bank

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A bad bank in India that’s expected to launch this month may help reduce one of the world’s worst bad-loan piles, but market participants say it’s a long path ahead.

The new institution, which is set to start operations by the end of June, is likely to handle stressed debt worth ₹2 lakh crore ($27 billion) over time, according to a BloombergQuint report. That would be about a quarter of the nation’s non-performing debt load. By housing bad loans of many lenders under one roof, the entity should help speed up decision-making and improve bargaining power when resolving these assets.

 

But for India to overcome its struggles with bad debt and stabilize the financial system of Asia’s third-largest economy, more fundamental problems with insolvency laws introduced in 2016 need to be addressed, investors say. Their confidence in the country’s bankruptcy reforms has been shaken as creditors’ recovery rates fall, delays in closing cases increase, and liquidations exceed resolutions in the insolvency courts.

Market participants will watch whether the bad bank focuses on resolving the assets rather than keeping them like a warehouse, and whether its team includes appropriate industry and turnaround experts.

 

“The proposed bad bank is useful as a one-time clean-up exercise of the bad loans that are pending resolution for years now,” said Raj Kumar Bansal, managing director at Edelweiss Asset Reconstruction Co. “But it’s not a long-term solution in dealing with the stressed assets,” he said, adding that bankruptcy reform is key.

Less than one in 10 companies admitted in the insolvency courts is getting resolved while a third are facing liquidation, data compiled by Insolvency and Bankruptcy Board of India show. The recoveries for financiers from the resolved cases have also dropped to 39 per cent of dues as of March from 46 per cent a year earlier. And if the top nine cases by recovery are excluded, lenders received just 24% of dues, according to Macquarie Capital.

Bankruptcy reforms

“India’s bankruptcy reforms started off well but they have slowed currently,” said Nikhil Shah, managing director at Alvarez & Marsal India. “Prolonged delays in resolutions, lengthy court battles, and uncertainty of recoveries post-approval of resolution plans are pushing many potential investors away” from the bankruptcy process, he said.

 

Shah expects the delays in resolutions to worsen further unless the government and judiciary address some of the primary issues, such as increasing the number of judges and investing in digital infrastructure to boost productivity.

Indian Banks’ Association, which is helping with plans for the proposed bad bank, and Insolvency and Bankruptcy Board of India, didn’t immediately respond to emails seeking comment.

For now, Indian banks will be happy to finally kick away some of the stressed loans to the proposed entity. The sector’s bad-loan ratio is set to almost double to 13.5 per cent of total advances by the end of September, India’s central bank said in a report published before the second wave of coronavirus infections hit the country.

“Stressed loans have taken far too much management time across the industry in the past couple of years,” Prashant Kumar, chief executive officer at Yes Bank Ltd., told Bloomberg. “This bad bank will help shift focus from resolving soured loans to improving credit growth.”

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IL&FS: Aggregate debt recovery target hiked to ₹61,000 crore

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About ₹43,000 crore of debt of bankrupt Infrastructure Leasing and Financial Services (IL&FS) has been addressed and the new board and management expects that this would increase to ₹50,000 crore by end of September this year.

“The group has also enhanced its estimates of aggregate debt recovery to ₹61,000 crore – an increase of ₹5,000 crore over its earlier estimate of ₹56,000 crore,” said Uday Kotak, Chairman of the board of IL&FS on Thursday.

The increased estimate represents resolution of nearly 62 per cent of overall fund based and non-fund based Group debt of about ₹99,000 crore, as of October 2018.

“The aggregate debt of ₹43,000 crore addressed till date represents nearly 71 per cent of the overall revised targeted recovery value of ₹61,000 crore and 44 per cent of the overall debt of over ₹99,000 crore (as of October 2018),” said a statement by IL&FS, adding that the recovery target is higher than the average recovery observed under IBC since its inception.

“The upgrade in potentially addressable debt by ₹5,000 crore (to ₹61,000 crore) has been largely on account of improved valuations, better operating performance and enhanced recoveries from non-group exposures,” it further said.

Of the total 347 entities under IL&FS Group (as of October 2018), a total of 186 entities stand resolved till date, while the remaining 161 entities are under various stages of resolution.

CS Rajan, MD, IL&FS, said that by September end, the number of entities would come down to double digits. This would be done by a combination of liquidation, closure of some entities and sale of some entities.

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