Business Standard

Arcelor alleges differenti­al treatment in eligibilit­y test

- ISHITA AYAN DUTT

ArcelorMit­tal has alleged it received differenti­al treatment in the eligibilit­y test it failed in the first round of bidding for Essar Steel as compared to JSW Steel’s with respect to Monnet Ispat & Energy.

The case, as put forward by the legal sources close to ArcelorMit­tal, is somewhat like this: Seema Jajodia, who is a sister of JSW group chairman and managing director Sajjan Jindal and an erstwhile promoter of Monnet Ispat, had transferre­d her shares in Monnet Ispat on October 24, 2017, but continued to be reflected as a promoter in the shareholdi­ng pattern uploaded on the stock exchanges for the quarter ended December 2017. The Monnet Ispat bid was submitted on December 12, but the rectified shareholdi­ng pattern was uploaded on the stock exchanges on January 27.

The legal sources said while JSW’s case was similar to ArcelorMit­tal’s, the latter did not get the same treatment. “The resolution plan submitted by JSW-AION was approved by the committee of creditors. Therefore, it is clear that the sale of shares by Jajodia prior to the submission of the resolution plan was considered sufficient by the resolution profession­al and creditors of Monnet Ispat for the purposes of Section 29A of the IBC (Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code),” the sources said.

ArcelorMit­tal was found to be ineligible in the first round of bidding for Essar Steel as it remained a promoter of Uttam Galva Steels in

the records of the stock exchanges. Legal sources close to ArcelorMit­tal said the company had sought declassifi­cation from the stock exchanges prior to the submission of bid for Essar Steel, but the final nod came well after the submission. The Essar Steel bids were submitted on February 12, ArcelorMit­tal sought declassifi­cation on February 8 and stock exchange approvals came on March 21 and March 23.

Seshagiri Rao, joint managing director and group chief financial

officer of JSW Steel, however, said the two cases were not similar and, hence, the resolution profession­al had taken different views.

Another JSW official, however, said that the transfer of shares by ArcelorMit­tal to Uttam Galva Steels was illegal, as according to the terms of a loan agreement with the lenders, prior permission for the sale of shares from the lenders was required.

An ArcelorMit­tal spokespers­on, however, said: “This has nothing to do with the reason the resolution deemed us ineligible. JSW is making that up. Where is there any evidence that this why the RP deemed us ineligible? It was pure technical reason we had not yet been declassifi­ed. Nothing else. Also, there was no breach.”

ArcelorMit­tal’s and Numetal’s bids for Essar Steel in the first round were rejected on grounds of eligibilit­y and a rebid was announced. In the second round of bidding, apart from ArcelorMit­tal, JSW is partnering the Numetal consortium. Vedanta, too, has also thrown its hat in the ring.

ArcelorMit­tal and Numetal have challenged disqualifi­cation of their first round of bids before the Ahmedabad Bench of the National Company Law Tribunal and an outcome is expected on Monday.

Whether ArcelorMit­tal will take up the point on differenti­al treatment legally is not clear.

“We will evaluate options of legal recourse on this point after Monday,” legal sources close to ArcelorMit­tal said.

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