Business Standard

Lenders prefer sectoral guidelines for choosing buyers in insolvency sales

- SURAJEET DAS GUPTA & VEENA MANI

Banks that are part of the consortium of lenders for companies referred to the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) have come to a consensus that there should be sectoral guidelines for selection of bidders among those who show an interest in acquiring any of the stressed assets put up for sale.

Bankers, who held meetings on this issue a few days ago, looked at three alternativ­e evaluation matrices — whether the evaluation criteria should be different from company to company; whether these should be common across all companies, irrespecti­ve of the industry; or the third option of their being pegged to a particular sector. So, for instance, the criteria for choosing bidders for all steel companies will be the same, but these will differ from the criteria for automobile component companies.

Those involved in the discussion­s say the guidelines for selection need to be transparen­t, otherwise anyone who loses out could take legal recourse leading to wastage of time and derailing the whole process. They point out that the draft guidelines for making a non-binding bid for Monnet Ispat, which has a deadline till November 16, have already been circulated for discussion­s. Those who have placed expression­s of interest will bid based on the criteria set out by this document.

Some bankers Business Standard spoke to said they preferred sector-specific rules. They also want to set a proper formula to determine the reserve price. A representa­tion to this effect has been sent to the ministry of corporate affairs.

Banks feel that there should be stringent and specific guidelines as it is not just their dues but also the fact they have been asked to maintain high provisioni­ng for these companies. Bankers feel that if a company is sold at less than half its valuation it will be unfair for creditors.

Experts say that the final decision on who wins the bid will be based on a five-step process, which involves recommenda­tions from both the merchant banker as well as the insolvency profession­al. Their recommenda­tions will be discussed by a management committee comprising the top five lenders to the company. The recommenda­tions of this small group will then be put up to the committee of creditors, which is represente­d by the entire consortium of banks that has provided the company its loan. Here it will be put to vote, based on a proportion­ate system pegged to the amount of exposure, and must secure 75 per cent of the votes after which it will be referred to the NCLT, which will take the final decision.

The insolvency and bankruptcy code allows the resolution profession­al to open the bidding for a company in an attempt to restructur­e it. If there is no buyer for the company, then a resolution plan is prepared by the resolution profession­al which is then placed before the committee of creditors for approval. After this, the NCLT looks at the plan. The NCLT has taken up 12 big-ticket cases referred by the Reserve Bank of India that constitute about 25 per cent of the total bank nonperform­ing assets. These include large steel companies like Essar Steel, Bhushan Steel, Bhushan Steel and Power, Electroste­el and Monnet Ispat; automobile components company Amtek Auto; and real estate and constructi­on giant Jaypee Infratech.Under the rules, banks must undertake 50 per cent provisioni­ng of their debt.

Various companies which include leading PE funds like TPG, Blackstone, SSG and AION apart from Tata Steel, JSW and Arcelormit­tal have expressed interest in acquiring these companies. Also PE funds have tied up with corporates to bid together, like AION and JSW for Monnet Ispat.

Those bidding say that the enterprise value of companies like Essar Steel and Bhushan Steel should not be more than $5 billion. They argue that with debts of $7-8 billion on their books and a provisioni­ng of 50 per cent they will be willing to take over the smaller debt ($4 billion) of the company and pay $1 billion as cash upfront for the sale. With a partner, this means PE funds will have to write a cheque of $300-500 million as they will also receive mezzanine credit for financing the payment. Banks, of course, have the option to convert part of the debt into equity.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India