NCLT orders liquidation of Siva Industries, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) Chennai has dismissed the C Sivasankaran application and ordered the liquidation of Siva Industries.

NCLT said that Sivasankaran application under section 12 (A) does not stand. NCLT has also dismissed the SBI application.

Siva Industries and Holdings Limited (Siva Industries) will go into liquidation after the NCLT rejected the application.

This is as per provisions of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code where 90 per cent of the lenders had not given approval.

Lenders of Siva Industries and Holdings Limited (Siva Industries), founded by C. Sivasankaran (the former promoter of Aircel) had filed application under Section 12A of Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code 2016 (IBC) in National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT), Chennai Bench for withdrawing the insolvency proceedings against Siva Industries.
Siva Industries and Holding owes Lenders approx Rs 5,000 crore.

The settlement

The lenders to Siva Industries had told the National Company Law Tribunal that they will get 26% of their dues after taking into account third-party guarantors. Operational creditors were to get part of their dues under the settlement plan.

The deal had raised eyebrows as such offers by promoters were rejected in the past.
On the reason why they approved the 12A petition of promoters banks had told the court that if a company is liquidated or in a resolution plan involving a third party, all operational creditors, including tax authorities, are wiped out.

Also, the IDBI Bank‘s claim of Rs 644 crore will be paid while Blackstone-backed International ARC will get an additional amount of Rs 510 crore via land sale, they had said.

Unusual deal

Bankruptcy experts had termed the settlement unusual, citing the rejection of such offers by promoters in the past.
The acceptance of Sivasankaran’s offer differed from the usual pattern of rejection by creditors of such deals proposed by promoters seeking to withdraw their companies from bankruptcy proceedings.

Atul Punj of Punj Lloyd, Videocon’s Venugopal Dhoot, Sanjay Singal of Bhushan Power and Steel, and the Ruias of Essar Steel had all made offers to creditors to persuade them to drop bankruptcy proceedings. All were rejected.
In DHFL’s case, the promoter Kapil Wadhawan had offered to repay the debt in full, but the lenders ruled in favour of Piramal.



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About 96% of Rs 2.45 lakh crore recovered under IBC resolutions came from top 100 accounts, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Amid the rising furore over huge haircuts taken by lenders in high-value resolutions under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, the government has said that financial creditors, including banks, realised Rs 2.45 lakh crore from approved resolution plans for 394 corporate insolvency resolution cases under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code as on June 30.

Of which Rs 2.37 lakh crore came through approved resolution plans of top 100 CIRPs, which is over 36 per cent of the admitted claims.

About 4,540 cases were admitted for the corporate insolvency resolution process under IBC until June 30, 2021.

About 240 companies liquidated till December 2020 had outstanding claims of Rs 33,086 crore, while their assets were valued at Rs 1,099 crore.
Overall, banks recovered Rs 14.18 lakh crore during the last three fiscals, raising the percentage of recovery to their gross NPA from 13.1 per cent in FY18 to 15.1 per cent in FY19. However, the recovery ratio has dropped 12.8 per cent in FY21 from 15.8 per cent in FY20 in the backdrop of the pandemic.

Recovery rate

The recovery rate of IBC has fallen to 39.3% as of March 2021 from 46% as of March 2020. Of the total outstanding amount of Rs 1.32 lakh crore, only around Rs 25,944 crore was recovered in fiscal 2021, or a rate of 19.7%.

There has been a delay in the liquidation of companies. As of December 2020, around 69% of the liquidations were going on for more than one year, while in the case of 26% of companies the process was on for more than two years.

Economic downturn

With huge capacity unutilised in the economy, companies are not looking to add more capacity, which is impacting the sale process at IBC. Barring sectors like steel where the product cycle has seen a turnaround, assets in other sectors such as textiles are not seeing much interest. While steel assets such as Essar Steel and Bhushan Steel were snapped up, those such as Alok Textiles were sold for much less.

The pandemic has increased operational challenges for the various parties involved in a CIRP, which resulted in limited cases yielding a resolution plan. The suspension of new proceedings under the IBC for the entire FY21 resulted in a sharp slowdown in the resolution process.

The slow judicial process in India allows the resolution processes to drag on, this was the same reason for slow recovery under SICA or RBBD.

Litigations by promoters not wanting to let the company out of their hands is also delaying the IBC process.

Lenders wanting to avoid delay in the recovery process and erosion of value are striking settlement deals with promoters, which defeats the purpose of the legislation.

Fiscal 2022 hopes

Financial creditors could realise about Rs 55,000 crore to Rs 60,000 crore in FY2022 through successful resolution plans from the IBC, estimates rating agency Icra. The higher realisation by the financial creditors would depend on the successful resolution of 8-9 big-ticket accounts, with more than 20% of estimated realisation for the year could be from these alone.



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Why IBC process has slowed down during pandemic, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC) is a vast improvement over the n the two earlier laws legislated to recover bad loans —the Sick Industrial Companies (Special Provisions) Act, 1985 (SICA) and the Recovery of Debts Due to Banks and Financial Institutions Act, 1993 (RDDB) and Sarfaesi.

Before IBC, resolution processes took an average of 4-6 years, after the enactment of IBC, they came down to 317 days.

However during the pandemic, the IBC process has been hit, with recovery rate dropping, and anxious lenders selling off assets at close to liquidation value or striking settlement deals with promoters.

Recovery rate

The recovery rate of IBC has fallen to 39.3% as of March 2021 from 46% as of March 2020. Of the total outstanding amount of Rs 1.32 lakh crore, only around Rs 25,944 crore was recovered in fiscal 2021, or a rate of 19.7%.

There has been a delay in the liquidation of companies. As of December 2020, around 69% of the liquidations were going on for more than one year, while in the case of 26% companies the process was on for more than two years.

Economic downturn

With huge capacity unutilised in the economy, companies are not looking to add more capacity, which is impacting the sale process at IBC. Barring sectors like steel where the product cycle has seen a turnaround, assets in other sectors such as textiles are not seeing much interest. While steel assets such as Essar Steel and Bhushan Steel were snapped up, those such as Alok Textiles were sold for much less.

The pandemic has increased operational challenges for the various parties involved in a CIRP, which resulted in limited cases yielding a resolution plan. The suspension of new proceedings under the IBC for the entire FY21 resulted in a sharp slowdown in the resolution process.

The slow judicial process in India allows the resolution processes to drag on, this was the same reason for slow recovery under SICA or RBBD.

Litigations by promoters not wanting to let the company out of their hands is also delaying the IBC process.

Lenders wanting to avoid delay in the recovery process and erosion of value are striking settlement deals with promoters, which defeats the purpose of the legislation.

Fiscal 2022 hopes

Financial creditors could realise about Rs 55,000 crore to Rs 60,000 crore in FY2022 through successful resolution plans from the IBC, estimates rating agency Icra. The higher realisation by the financial creditors would depend on the successful resolution of 8-9 big-ticket accounts, with more than 20% of estimated realisation for the year could be from these alone.



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It’s only been five years since IBC, everyone involved is learning new things, give it time, says former SBI Chairman Rajnish Kumar

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Tamanna Inamdar talks to Former SBI Chairman Rajnish Kumar about the IBC and its many plus points, while also bringing up the argument of big companies getting haircuts from banks, while the common man’s defaults are not written away. Kumar talks of giving the IBC time to flourish. Edited excerpts:

So, Harsh Goenka tweeted asking why businesses get 80-90% haircuts on their loans, but no banker will afford the common man the same cut on a home/personal loan. What are your thoughts on the matter?
I’ve not read what Harsh has said, but as far as the process is concerned, IBC was introduced in November 2016; before that, the remedies available to bankers with regards to sick industries and companies were BIFR – where the existing promoters continue to get a case on the matter for years and years with no outcome – or there was DRT SARFAESI, which was not a pleasant experience for bankers.

In any capitalist society, the exit mechanism for inefficient firms is only through bankruptcy; all countries have a form of this law and India bought this in only five years ago. These five years have been a learning experience — for resolution professionals, NCLT themselves, members, committee of creditors, lenders and borrowers.

So, when we talk about IBC, its success cannot be measured by what you recover. If success has to be determined on that basis, then the kind of paradigm shift it has brought in the debtor-creditor relationship should be the benchmark. Till this law came, the promoter or a defaulty promoter would tell the banker on their face that it is your NPA, your problem, you resolve it. But that’s not the case anymore.

Two, as far as recovery is concerned, it depends on the buyers. What value they see in the purchase; why did we see such a fierce fight for Binani Cement? Why did we see one recently, between Piramal and Oaktree for Devang Housing? Bidding started from Rs 12,000 odd crores it went as high as Rs 35,000 crore. In the service sector, what do you buy? In an airline, they don’t own aircraft, they don’t have slots in the airport, it is a service industry.

So, something is better than nothing? Earlier there was this evergreening going on and bad loans were piling up, at least this put a stop to that culture?
I’m not saying something is better than nothing, it is not the case when lenders lose money; they also feel bad, but the question is that for the buyers it is a transparent process. It is a bidding process, EoIs are invited, it is a fully governed process. If there is no buyer for any asset, what do you do? For example, take the global aviation sector, look at bankruptcies and what they get. Five cents against the dollar? So it’s very common.

In the services industry asset recovery/ resolution will be very difficult. If you have assets – like in a steel plant – the job becomes easier. There were very good plants, with identical debts — Essar Steel, Bhushan Power and Steel — but, recovery differed because the buyer saw more value in Essar, which was a port-based plant, rather than Bhushan Steel. And they saw more value in Bhushan Steel than Bhushan Power and Steel, so it is a process and I think we should not run down or decide on the process in this manner. It has only been five years; there are certain deficiencies in the process but the success of the law or the process cannot be determined by making it into a recovery efficiency question, it is not. It is a resolution mechanism and itd intent is to preserve the value of the enterprise and as far as promoters are concerned, if they’ve done something wrong,the agencies are there. The Enforcement Directorate has done a fantastic job in the three cases you were mentioning.

So, enterprise and promoters are different and that is recognised in the case of IBC lenders; creditors are concerned with preserving the value of the enterprise to any extent possible and if a promoter has done something wrong, there are enough laws to deal with it.

In financial terms, it is completely incorrect to compare a business loan to a personal loan and to other categories, but I think we must address this general perception that if a business fails then the liability and pain is much less and the bank can still walk away with 60-70% of a haircut and call it a success, but if there is an inability to return a loan — especially in the context of a pandemic — taken by an individual creditor, it becomes a whole different ballgame. Can you explain to us why you feel that that’s the wrong way to look at it?
See even in the case of retail creditors – like agriculture – how much loan has been paid back? Because it is not economically viabl, not because farmers don’t want to pay. Because they don’t have sufficient earnings to service debt, so it is the same situation, more or less. Periodically, governments come and provide relief, manage debt.

About housing loans you can say that because people put their house up as security or they put gold as security, lenders obviously like assets. If a company’s assets are mortgaged, then the haircut is not as high as what you’ve mentioned. When a haircut or the losses to lenders are more, then those assets lose their value. For example, take a power plant; today, if you want to setup a power plant, it will cost – for a thermal power plant – anywhere between Rs 7.5 to 8 crore. But, if the power plant is incomplete or if there are no coal linkages or if there are no PPAs or something happens and it goes through the NCLT process, then you cannot recover the same amount of money.

So, it is ultimately dependant on the the hard assets, the debt, the planted machinery; there are valuation methodologies so you cannot equate the two loans. A good bank gets a housing loan for 6.75% which is equal to a AAA so there is no discrimination in that sense, because it is presumed that the probability of default and enforcement action in case of a secured loan will be very low. Accordingly, it is priced also.

Banking is not such a simple thing, there is risk, there is a risk reward matrix; that’s why there are laws around the process and companies are managed so that comparison is absolutely invalid. If we set up a limited liability company, then there will be no company left in this country that also we should understand.



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Barring a few like Essar, banks have lost 80% dues in top NCLT resolutions, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The resolution of Videocon Industries close to the liquidation value has put the spotlight on realisations through the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code mechanism.

Bankers have lost over Rs 40,000 crore in the Videocon account, as Anil Agarwal’s Twin Star snapped the company for less than Rs 3,000 crore.

In over 363 major NCLT resolutions since 2017, banks have taken an average haircut of 80% over the past four years, the largest among them being Deccan Chronicle (95%), Lanco Infra (88%), Ushdev International (94%) and Zion Steel (99%).

While RBI has pointed to a recovery rate of 45% in IBC so far, barring the recovery rates in the top nine accounts, recoveries in other accounts average 24%. The top nine accounts were from the steel sector which led to good recoveries, while accounts in the power and infrastructure sectors struggle for buyers.

Lenders have been able eke out good recoveries in steel sector, with the highest being in the case of Essar Steel where lenders got 90% of their dues.

Fiscal 2021 drop

The realisation for financial creditors from IBC declined significantly in FY2021 with a total resolution amount of around Rs 26,000 crore, which is almost a quarter of the realisations in fiscal 2020.

The pandemic has increased operational challenges for the various parties involved in a CIRP, which resulted in limited cases yielding a resolution plan. The suspension of new proceedings under the IBC for the entire FY21 resulted in a sharp slowdown in the resolution process.

Out of the total 4,300 cases that have been admitted to bankruptcy courts since FY17, only 8% has been resolved and nearly 40% of the cases are still pending. About 30% of the cases have seen liquidation.

From its commencement in December 2016, 4,376 CIRPs have been admitted, of which 2,653 were closed till March 2021,

About 40% of the cases admitted by the NCLT were closed on appeal or settled or withdrawn under Section 12A which highlights that at least some promoters have been more willing to pay their dues to keep the IBC proceedings at bay. The extent of cases being referred to liquidation remains high at about 40% and only a quarter of such cases have seen the liquidation process come to a conclusion. The average realisation through liquidation has been a mere 3% of the claim amount.

Fiscal 2022 hopes

Although rating agency ICRA estimates that financial creditors could realise about Rs 55,000 crore to Rs 60,000 crore in FY2022 through successful resolution plans from the IBC. The higher realisation by the financial creditors would depend on the successful resolution of 8-9 big-ticket accounts, as more than 20% of ICRA’s estimated realisation for the year could be from these alone.



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