Business Standard

Lenders take IL&FS unit in TN to NCLT

- DEV CHATTERJEE

Bankruptcy proceeding­s have been instituted for the first time against an IL&FS group company, a Tamil Nadu-based thermal power unit. Lenders to the entity have taken it to the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT), after it defaulted on loan payments.

Lenders said the company has moved the Madras High Court against the move and a decision is expected next week. The parent company, IL&FS itself, is facing a massive cash crunch and will default on loan repayments by this monthend, unless its shareholde­rs come forward with cash by way of equity or debt infusion.

IL&FS at a consolidat­ed level has debt of ~910 billion, making it one of the most indebted of corporate groups in the country. IL&FS Tamil Nadu Power Company operates a 1,200 Mw imported coal-based plant in Cuddalore. Around ~106 billion has been invested in the project, financed by ~60.8 billion of loans from public sector banks (PSBs) and ~45.6 billion in equity by IL&FS Energy Developmen­t, a group subsidiary. Last year, a smaller IL&FS firm was sent to the NCLT by the company is much bigger default.

The Tamil Nadu project saw a cost overrun of about ~42 billion. The first phase was commission­ed in September 2015 and the next one in April 2016. The decision to take the company into insolvency proceeding­s was taken by State Bank of India, with the other PSBs. An IL&FS official said the lenders did on “technical reasons”, based on the restructur­ing of its term loan agreements.

The bankers said as the promoter entities were themselves facing a liquidity crisis, it would be difficult for IL&FS Tamil Nadu to meet its financial commitment­s, due this month-end. The company reported a loss of nearly ~2.4 billion on revenue of ~30.3 billion as of end-March. “Sending the company to the NCLT will save everyone a lot of hardship,” said a banker. Once the project is admitted to the NCLT, the lenders will have to make 15 per cent of provisioni­ng for the loan, by Reserve Bank of India (RBI) regulation.

In its discussion with the banks, the company blamed rising coal prices in Indonesia for impacting its cash flow. Beside, it does not have a power purchase agreement in place for the second phase and had to sell electricit­y in the spot market, where the prices are currently below its cost.

RBI has started an audit of IL&FS’ account books and banned its subsidiary, IL&FS Financial Services, from access to the commercial paper market after a default in loan repayment at August-end, as well as last week. To raise money, IL&FS is talking to real estate funds for selling its headquarte­rs at then Bandra Kurla Complex in Mumbai, for ~15 billion. And, sought bids for its financial services arm.

It is also in talks with its main shareholde­rs, State Bank of India, and Life Insurance Corporatio­n, to raise ~30 billion in loans and another ~45 billion by way of a rights issue. If both or either do not happen, the company would default on commitment­s to its subsidiari­es, with spreading implicatio­ns.

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