Business Standard

Cube Highways eyes Jaypee’s Yamuna Expressway Project

- JYOTI MUKUL

Singapore-based Cube Highways is in discussion­s with Jaypee Infratech and IDBI-led lenders to take over the 165-km Yamuna Expressway Project, sources familiar with the developmen­ts said. The Manoj Gaur-promoted company told the Supreme Court on Friday that it had an offer from a company to buy the project, without naming the bidder.

The offer could open up fresh possibilit­ies to Jaypee’s lenders looking to recover loans. Also, it comes as a glimmer of hope for the homebuyers who have been waiting for delivery of apartments.

Cube Highways is a joint venture of private equity firm I Squared Capital and Internatio­nal Finance Corp (IFC), the private investment arm of the World Bank.

On Friday, advocate Anupam Lal Das, appearing for Jaypee Group, told the court it had an offer worth ~2,500 crore for the expressway and wanted to hive off the property to another party, a PTI report said. Das said the company had to raise funds to deposit ~2,000 crore in the apex court registry to pay its troubled homebuyers. The court would hear the matter on October 23, said the PTI report. Jaypee had earlier spurned suitors, introduced by its lenders, for its expressway project built at a cost of over ~12,000 crore. The earlier offers included those from the private equity arm of IDFC, YES Bank, Deutsche Bank, and Edelweiss Asset Reconstruc­tion Company. Lenders planned on getting the IDFC arm as an investor for about ~2,500 crore. "Jaypee, along with some of the lenders, was not keen on the IDFC proposal. Besides, the concession agreement signed with the state government did not allow hiving off of the expressway," a person close to the developmen­t said.

As part of the agreement, the Jaypee group was to develop integrated townships on 500 hectares of land each at five places including Noida, Aligarh (Tappal) and Agra. This could not be done as the company ran into debt.

A National Green Tribunal order also prevented work.

The Supreme Court has now asked the company to pay back part of its due to more than 30,000 people who had booked property in its real estate projects along the expressway. The company asked the court to allow handing over the Yamuna Expressway to another developer when asked to deposit ~2,000 crore by October 27 to refund homebuyers.

YES Bank, which is a lender to Jaypee Hospital, a subsidiary of Jaypee Infratech, too, wanted to take over the company after it had invoked the promoter guarantee.

Some 40 buyers who had booked flats in Jaypee Wish Town had challenged the insolvency proceeding­s against Jaypee Infratech. The National Company Law Tribunal had admitted a petition by lenders against the company, which was part of a list of 12 firms against which the Reserve Bank of India had in June asked banks to fast-track insolvency proceeding­s. Under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, homebuyers ers cannot be paid back their dues since lenders can stake first claim.

The company had a debt of about ~8,100 crore, of which IDBI alone accounts for ~3,600 crore. When contacted, Sanjeev Kaushik, managing director, India Infrastruc­ture Finance Company Ltd, said, "Lenders have offers on table and we are hoping for a quick resolution so that there is no erosion of further value." IIFCL has an exposure of ~900 crore to Jaypee Infratech. Cube Highways and Infrastruc­ture was created to takeover stressed highway assets in India. Last year, the company acquired 74 per cent stake in Madhucon Agra Jaipur Expressway­s and took over the Western UP Tollway.

The six-lane Yamuna Expressway, linking Delhi and Agra, was commission­ed in 2012. Investors are looking at upside from toll revenues with the coming up of Lucknow-Agra extension and Lucknow-Balia projects, besides the Noida airport.

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