Business Standard

ARCIL eyes ROA of 10% in next 3 years

- ABHIJIT LELE

With a gradual improvemen­t in the environmen­t for recoveries, asset reconstruc­tion firm ARCIL is working to increase its return on assets to over 10 per cent over the next two-three years, from 6.7 per cent in FY19.

The firm has also started purchasing some assets with Avenue Capital as a coinvestor. Us-based Avenue is now the single-largest investor in ARCIL, with about 25 per cent stake. Banks like SBI, IDBI and PNB are key stakeholde­rs in the firm.

In FY19, Avenue India Resurgence (part of Avenue Capital Group, a global investment firm focused on distressed and undervalue­d debt and equity opportunit­ies) acquired a stake in ARCIL through a secondary sale.

Rating agency India Ratings, in a commentary on ARCIL, said a strong investor tie-up will ensure funding support for acquisitio­ns.

Following the Reserve Bank of India’s revision in rules, selling banks have to sell non-performing assets (NPAS) to ARCS for higher cash considerat­ion (at least 90 per cent from April 2018) than required previously. This is to avoid increased NPA provisioni­ng in their books.

There was a structural shift across the entire industry in FY19, along with a substantia­l increase in the share of cash in the acquisitio­n cost. In case of ARCIL too, cash investment increased to 83 per cent in FY19, from 36 per cent in FY18.

ARCIL has started purchasing some assets with Avenue Capital as co-investor in FY20, where its own investment in security receipts (SRS) remains at 15 per cent.

However, this tie-up remains a non-exclusive one. ARCIL may also look at other third-party investors to coinvest in the future.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India