Business Standard

Arcelor may pay off dues as ‘goodwill gesture’

- ISHITA AYAN DUTT

ArcelorMit­tal made a strong pitch for eligibilit­y before the committee of creditors (CoC) on Wednesday, but said if asked to pay dues on account of defaulting companies it might consider it as a goodwill gesture.

“We believe our position is strong on both (Uttam Galva Steels and KSS Petron) and that is what we presented yesterday (Wednesday). And if we have to do anything, then that is as a gesture of goodwill,” said a company source.

The CoC is expected to meet on Saturday, after which a formal notice for ‘curing’ the ineligibil­ity is likely to be served to ArcelorMit­tal and Numetal. The CoC met both the bidders onW ednesday, who made presentati­ons on their eligibilit­y. The dues on account of the two companies— Uttam Galva and KSS Petron— will be around ~70 billion. Sources said lenders had indicated to ArcelorMit­tal that it would have to clear dues on account of the two companies. ArcelorMit­tal is already understood to have offered ~53 billion for Uttam Galva to banks.

ArcelorMit­tal held a 29 per cent stake in Uttam Galva, a non-performing asset (NPA) for more than a year, which became a technical ground for ineligibil­ity in the first round of bidding, under Section 29A (c). ArcelorMit­tal was a co-promoter of Uttam Gal va but did not have management control or board representa­tion.

However, ahead of the Essar bid, it transferre­d its shares in Uttam Galva to the promoter family at ~1 a share. Even though it had applied for declassifi­cation from the stock exchanges as a promoter, immediatel­y after the sale of shares, it came through much later. The resolution profession­al, based on legal advice, found ArcelorMit­tal ineligible and disqualifi­ed its bid in the first round.

The NCLT’s Ahmedabad Bench, where ArcelorMit­tal and Numetal had challenged their disqualifi­cation, however, remanded the first round of bids back to the resolution profession­al and the CoC for considerat­ion. But Numetal challenged the order in the

National Company Law Appellate Tribunal (NCLAT) on the grounds that the 30-day cure period suggested by the tribunal for ArcelorMit­tal was not applicable to it. ArcelorMit­tal too, filed an appeal in the NCLAT against the NCLT order, that the observatio­ns against it be set aside and its resolution plan be held valid.

In its appeal, the firm mentioned that the shares of Uttam Galva lost value and an impairment was taken in the books of ArcelorMit­tal Netherland­s BV (AMNLBV) in 2015 and a large part of the cost of acquisitio­n was written off. AMNLBV also commenced a discussion with the founder promoters of Uttam Galva to persuade them to buy back their shares in Uttam Galva, which lasted from 2015 to February 7, 2018, when the shares were sold off. It also said that no bank or financial institutio­n ever reached out to AMNLBV to address the problem of NP AinUtt am Gal va.

With regard to KSS Petron, ArcelorMit­tal said in its filing, the NCLT erred in holding that L NM it ta lisa promote rand in management and control of KSS Global, and

KSS Petron, which is a 100 per cent subsidiary of KSS Global, is also under the same management and control.

Mittal had indirectly invested in a Luxembourg firm (Fraseli), which in turn invested in KSS Global. Minority rights were available to Fraseli in relation to its investment in KSS Global. “This does not constitute being in management and control. The opinion received by the resolution profession­al correctly came to the conclusion that negative rights such as veto in relation to certain resolution­s do not constitute being in management and control of a company,” ArcelorMit­tal told the NCLAT.

The resolution profession­al’s legal advisors were divided on KSS Petron but finally went with the view that negative control did not constitute ‘control’ for the purposes of Section 29A(c) of the IBC and accordingl­y , KSS Petron was not a ground for disqualify­ing ArcelorMit­tal India.

Mittal had sold his shares in KSS ahead of submission of the Essar bid. However, the NCLT Ahmedabad said that sale of shares and declassifi­cation did not absolve them from responsibi­lity. The order pointed towards payment of overdue amount as a cure for ineligibil­ity.

The CoC is expected to meet on Saturday, after which a formal notice for ‘curing’ the ineligibil­ity is likely to be served to ArcelorMit­tal and Numetal

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