IL&FS emergency board meet today
Directors might reduce premium on rights issue, discuss repayment defaults by subsidiary
The board of Infrastructure Leasing & Financial Services (IL&FS) has called an emergency meeting in Mumbai on Friday to take a call on fundraising, sale of assets, including road projects, and default by its subsidiary IL&FS Financial Services (IFIN) on commercial paper. The board might even look at reducing the premium on shares because some shareholders were not happy with high premium, said a source close to the development.
The infrastructure financial institution is facing a strain on liquidity and debt overhang. On August 30, the IL&FS board had slashed the dividend payout for 2017-18 from ~6 a share to ~1 a share.
The IL&FS board comprises representatives of key shareholders such as Life Insurance Corporation (LIC), Orix Corporation of Japan, the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority, Central Bank of India, and State Bank of India.
The board plans to raise ~45 billion through a rights issue and up to ~50 billion through a public issue of non-convertible debentures. But some shareholders, including HDFC, were not keen to bail out IL&FS, and said they would not subscribe to the rights issue.
A source said that while LIC was willing to participate in the rights issue, it would require the insurance regulator’s approval if its stake was to go beyond the 25.34 per cent it held at the end of 201718. Another source said the board might look at reducing the premium on shares, given the recent decline in the share prices of the listed companies of the group. He also said a lower premium could make some of the reluctant investors subscribe to the issue.
“Besides fundraising, the board meeting will also discuss asset monetisation,” said one of the persons cited above. IL&FS has around 200 subsidiaries, some of which are completed infrastructure projects, which could be divested. “We have identified turnaround experts too,” he added. An email sent to IL&FS on Thursday did not elicit any response.
The group has defaulted on repayments, one being on a loan to the Small Industries Development Bank of India (Sidbi) and another on commercial paper (CP) of IFIN. The subsidiary firm could not meet the repayment obligations on due dates August 28 and August 30, but settled the dues on August 31. As a result of this default, IFIN will be barred from tapping the CP market till the end of February 2019, according to the Reserve Bank of India rules. “The board will discuss all these issues on Friday,” said a source.
The official concerned in the risk management department at Sidbi was asked to go on leave on the issue of proper assessment of risk on this exposure.
The IL&FS group plans to shed its overall debt by ~300 billion by divesting sale of 25 projects over 12-18 months.
Meanwhile, CARE Ratings cut the rating for another group entity IL&FS Energy Development Company’s loans and debentures from ‘A+’ to ‘BB-’ owing to deterioration in its liquidity profile. The company has delayed repaying term loans, according to the rating agency.