Business Standard

JP Power: 2 of 11 suitors put in final bids

Resurgent and Brookfield eye firm

- JYOTI MUKUL New Delhi, 30 October

Only two out of 11 suitors have put in their final bids for the beleaguere­d Jaiprakash Power Ventures. On the block, as part of strategic debt restructur­ing, the company has drawn non-binding bids from Resurgent Power Ventures Pte and Brookfield Asset Management, a person close to the developmen­t said. Tata Power had acquired 25 per cent equity in Resurgent Power. JYOTI MUKUL reports

Only 2 out of 11 suitors have put in final bids for the beleaguere­d Jaiprakash Power Ventures. On the block as part of strategic debt restructur­ing (SDR), the company has drawn non-binding bids from Resurgent Power Ventures Pte and Brookfield Asset Management, a person close to the developmen­t said.

Earlier, Adani Power and JSW Energy and Edelweiss Asset Reconstruc­tion Company were among those formally expressing interest in the company carrying a debt of ~12,440 crore as of March-end. Of the five companies that gave a presentati­on to the lenders’ consortium, only two put in bids. The person quoted above said both the bids implied banks going in for huge haircuts.

While two Jaypee group companies — Jaiprakash Infrastruc­ture and Jaiprakash Associates — are undergoing insolvency, Jaiprakash Power Ventures is undergoing SDR. A consortium of lenders, including IDBI Bank and State Bank of India, had taken over Jaiprakash Power last year, although the management remained with the Manoj Gaur-led group.

The company had earlier converted ~3,058 crore of its debts into equity upon invocation of SDR. The promoters were earlier in discussion­s with 23-member lending consortium for implementa­tion of a full resolution plan, which included flexible restructur­ing of project loans to Bina Thermal Power Plant under 5/25 scheme and rejig of balance loans. This, however, did not work out.

The total public shareholdi­ng of the company is 68.84 per cent, which includes 51 per cent equity with lenders whose debt was restructur­ed, the company said in a filing to BSE in January.

A senior bank executive said lenders have given priority treatment to those coming in as strategic investors promising a degree of active participat­ion. Edelweiss Asset Reconstruc­tion Company had given a bid along with an offer to issue securities receipts to lenders.

Both Gautam Adani and Sajjan Jindal-led groups have acquired power assets in the past. In 2015, JSW Energy bought two hydropower plants of Jaiprakash Power — the 300megawat­t (Mw) Himachal Baspa Power Company and 1,091-Mw Karcham Wangtoo unit — for an enterprise value of ~9,575 crore. Adani and Tata Power, however, find their Mundra mega power plants in distress. Tata Power had last year acquired 25 per cent equity in Resurgent Power, founded by a consortium of two sovereign funds, an overseas pension fund from Canada and private equity fund ICICI Ventures.

Jaiprakash Power recorded a loss of ~761 crore for the financial year ended March 31. The company has an installed power generation capacity of 4,200 Mw, of which 400 Mw is from Vishnupray­ag Hydropower Project, while the remaining is coal-based.

The company could not pay the outstandin­g debt to lenders. The lenders had formed a joint lenders’ forum (JLF) and formulated a corrective action plan (CAP) for the company in order to resolve its financial stress.

Public holding of the company is 68.84%, which includes 51% with lenders whose debt was restructur­ed, the firm said in a filing to BSE

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