Business Standard

Debt recovery data under IBC does not add up

Numbers released by IBBI for fifth quarter erroneous

- VEENA MANI & NITIN SETHI

The Insolvency and Bankruptcy Board of India (IBBI) released data for how the insolvency code has worked in the fifth quarter of its operations (January-March 2018). The data shows that the resolution was completed for another 12 cases. The unpaid debts to financial creditors in these 12 cases added up to ~44.05 billion. The board said 96.70 per cent of the money, or ~30.7 billion, was recovered through the resolution­s. This is much better than the recovery rate of 33.57 per cent that the board recorded in the nine cases resolved over the first four quarters of its operations.

But the numbers for the fifth quarter released by the board are erroneous.

Of the ~44.05 billion unpaid debt of 12 companies, more than half was locked in just one Mumbai-based real estate company, Kohinoor CTNL Infrastruc­ture. Its dues to financial creditors totalled ~25.28 billion, the board’s report said. Of this, 89 per cent, or ~22.46 billion, was recovered, the report added. These reported numbers are wrong.

Business Standard reviewed the resolution plan for the company that was accepted by the lenders and approved by the National Company Law Tribunal. The total unpaid debt and repayable advances of the company to all creditors and customers added up to ~27.06 billion. Of this, the company owed financial creditors ~9.92 billion. The accepted resolution plan carries forward only ~5.5 billion into the books of the company as ‘sustainabl­e’ debt.

Of this ~5.5 billion, only ~600 million will be repaid to the financial creditors as upfront payment within six months of the resolution. The rest would be repaid with 11 per cent interest after a two-year moratorium on interest repayment.

The lenders were offered and they accepted that the ~2.75 billion worth of unpaid debts would be converted into optionally convertibl­e debentures at an interest rate of 0.01 per cent. These debentures would be redeemable after five and a half years. Another ~2.17 billion worth of unpaid dues have been converted into optionally convertibl­e preference shares which the lenders can redeem after 25 years.

Accounting for these staggered payments, the resolution agreement says, “The percentage of recovery based on the sustainabl­e debt for the secured financial creditors has been identified as 56 per cent of their outstandin­g as on June 16, 2017, (when the company went into the insolvency process).”

This contradict­s the IBBI’s report which claims that financial creditors were owed ~22.58 billion and recovered ~22.46 billion at a rate of 89 per cent.

It is standard practice to calculate the net present value after discountin­g the money that shall be paid over time. The IBBI in its report does not account for the discounted value of the deal or the swap of debt into debentures and equity. The IBBI did not respond to emailed queries by Business Standard.

Nilesh Sharma, senior partner at Dhir & Dhir Associates, says, “There are not too many cases where the resolution plan is staggered over 25 years. Such cases are very rare, but they do come. Courts are also very cautious while hearing such plans, especially the National Company Law Appellate Tribunal.”

Sources at the IBBI said the numbers in the resolution plan and the board’s report may vary because the board included the claims of the homebuyers. But the resolution happened before the recent Ordinance which brings homebuyers on a par with financial creditors.

Kohinoor CTNL, a real estate company, owed ~12.39 billion to customers who had booked homes against advances. The resolution plan shows they have been promised that they shall get their booked homes once they have been built by the new owners of the company. Therefore, the IBBI could not have reflected the sum owed to homebuyers as recovery.

If one was to relook at the fifth-quarter resolution­s under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code between January-March 2018 in light of these revelation­s, the recovery rates and total recovered unpaid dues would reduce.

Additional­ly, in this case the main financial creditor was Edelweiss Asset Reconstruc­tion Company (ARC). The ARC had itself bought over the loans of Kohinoor CTNL from a set of public sector banks. The haircut these banks took in assigning their unpaid loans to Edelweiss is not known. It is also not accounted for while calculatin­g the recovery of unpaid dues during the insolvency process.

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