Business Standard

12 NPA cases not ‘priority’, RBI tells court

- VINAY UMARJI

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI), on Friday, told the Gujarat High Court that it would issue a corrigendu­m on its June 13 circular that allowed the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) to accord priority to 12 non-performing asset (NPA) accounts set to face insolvency proceeding­s. The court also adjourned till July 12 the hearing of Essar Steel’s petition asking for a stay on insolvency proceeding­s.

The court was hearing Essar Steel’s plea, filed on July 4, against insolvency proceeding­s initiated against it at the NCLT by State Bank of India-led 22 banks’ consortium of lenders as well as Standard Chartered Bank.

The June 13 RBI circular read: “The Reserve Bank, based on the recommenda­tions of the Internal Advisory Committee, will accordingl­y be issuing directions to banks to file for insolvency proceeding­s under the IBC (Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code) in respect of the identified accounts. Such cases will be accorded priority by the NCLT.” In its hearing on July 4, the court had sought a clarificat­ion from RBI on the said statement.

The June 13 circular had stated that the 12 NPA accounts, with outstandin­g debt of over ~5,000 crore, would be accorded priority by the NCLT. Sixty per cent of the debt of these 12 companies was being termed “bad” by banks as on March 31, 2016. The total debt of these companies is expected to be in excess of ~1.5 lakh crore.

The NPA resolution process was supposed to have begun with the banks approachin­g NCLT to appoint a profession­al to manage a company, even as the existing board gets suspended. The profession­al gets 180 days to come up with a workable solution for the company so that it can repay its loans. This timeline can be extended by another 90 days. If the company fails to come up with a solution within 270 days, a liquidator would be appointed.

On Friday, Essar Steel’s counsel, led by Mihir Thakore, argued that as per Section 35 of the Banking Regulation­s Act, lenders could not have initiated insolvency proceeding­s at a time when restructur­ing process was on. The company’s counsel also argued that Essar Steel could not have been categorise­d along with the other 11 companies merely on the basis of ~5,000 crore since, unlike others, Essar Steel was in advanced stages of recovery.

As per the counsel, of the other NPA accounts, three were non-functional whereas Essar Steel was doing well since last one year and had paid almost ~3,467 crore to its lenders even as it agreed to boundary conditions for a resolution plan with the lenders.

In its argument before judge S G Shah, Essar Steel counsel said that the RBI should have considered the company’s past record apart from the operating profits being made as well as opinions of various banks and financial institutio­ns in respect of viability of the company before asking banks to initiate insolvency proceeding­s. Essar Steel has a debt of around ~42,000 crore. As per the company, its manufactur­ing capacity utilisatio­n stands at 80 per cent and its turnover at ~20,000 crore.

The adjournmen­t of the hearing till July 12 will follow Standard Chartered Bank’s appeal to a division bench of the Gujarat High Court, which has been adjourned till July 11. The internatio­nal lender has appealed for quashing of the single-judge high court Bench’s stay on insolvency proceeding­s filed against Essar Steel at the NCLT.

The London-based internatio­nal lender had appealed on Wednesday before the division Bench of the court to quash the stay on insolvency proceeding­s, on grounds of suppressed facts by Essar Steel. Standard Chartered Bank claimed in its appeal that it was not party to any revival or restructur­ing package nor was invited in any lenders’ meeting by Essar Steel, as the latter claimed in its petition.

The bank, in its appeal, a copy of which is in possession of Business Standard, maintained that Essar Steel had “failed to disclose” to the single-judge Bench that Standard Chartered Bank was “neither a party to any alleged restructur­ing package, nor any consent has been obtained to such package”. The appeal maintained that Standard Chartered Bank was not a member of any committee of lenders which was being claimed to be considerin­g Essar Steel’s restructur­ing package.

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