Business Standard

Formula on cards to distribute insolvency funds, says Centre

- RUCHIKA CHITRAVANS­HI & SOMESH JHA

The government will devise a formula for distributi­on of funds between financial and operationa­l creditors after the approval of a resolution plan to resolve the ongoing dispute between the two parties, said Corporate Affairs Secretary Injeti Srinivas on Monday.

It may look at increasing the minimum threshold set for triggering the insolvency process from the current level of ~1 lakh, according to an executive of a public sector bank (PSB) who was present at a review meeting chaired by Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman with PSBS on Monday. Srinivas said the “only problem” between financial and operationa­l creditors during the litigation process in bankruptcy cases remains the amount of recovery that the creditors get. The government is mulling an elaborate formulabas­ed distributi­on of funds, he added. In the meeting, banks discussed issues related to the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code

(IBC), among other matters. Sources said the government might also nudge banks to take up only big cases, in terms of outstandin­g dues, to the IBC.

Srinivas said it was not a “happy situation when a good functionin­g company” was dragged to the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) by class borrowers such as homebuyers or debenture holders.

“The whole issue of the system getting overheated and the NCLT Benches being clogged is real,” Injeti said.

Smaller cases, he said, could be settled better outside the purview of the IBC, as the process was rigorous and supervised by courts. In the past three years since the IBC was introduced, 21,000 cases have come for resolution, of which 10,000 have been settled according to government data. Financial creditors can trigger insolvency under Section 7 of the IBC, if the company has defaulted a minimum of ~1 lakh.

The IBC, through various amendments, has resolved many issues related to Section 29A, which deals with the ineligibil­ity of promoters and related parties from taking part in the resolution process. But certain other pressing issues remain.

While the Ministry of Corporate Affairs recently amended the Code to clarify that secured financial creditors are superior to operationa­l ones and unsecured lenders, the issue of distributi­on of funds between different classes of creditors is a matter under litigation in the Supreme Court.

Operationa­l creditors of Essar Steel have raised objection to the amount allocated to them after the resolution process. “Who gets how much is an issue which still needs to be resolved,” Srinivas added.

The MCA is also planning to take steps for making the entire process of the resolution transparen­t and less litigation-prone. The ministry is examining the possibilit­y where the eligibilit­y of bidders is determined as per the non-financial considerat­ions and thereafter in the second stage those shortliste­d are only allowed to bid on an auction platform. A threshold is also likely to be introduced for IBC cases, where a single class of creditors such as homebuyers or debenture holders can trigger insolvency.

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