Business Standard

Govt mulls suspending IBC process for 6 months

- RUCHIKA CHITRAVANS­HI New Delhi, 24 March

In a relief for small and medium enterprise­s facing the threat of insolvency because of the coronaviru­s crisis, the government on Tuesday raised the threshold for invoking insolvency to ~1 crore from the current ~1 lakh.

Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, while addressing the media through video conferenci­ng, also said if the situation continued to be difficult, the government would consider suspending the provisions for triggering insolvency for six months.

This means suspending Sections 7, 9 and 10 of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Act (IBC), which enable a financial creditor, operationa­l creditor and the promoter, respective­ly, to initiate insolvency proceeding­s against a company. The proposed move will “stop companies at large from being forced into insolvency proceeding­s in such force majeure causes of default”, said a government release.

“This will help companies to improve the situation once the economy improves. We hope the Centre will follow this up with an economic package, which will help and stimulate the demand and growth for India under the challengin­g circumstan­ces,” said K R Sekar, partner, Deloitte India.

The government has also pushed the implementa­tion of the Companies Audit Report Order 2020 by a year.

“Given the lockdown, industry, as well as audit profession­als, is keenly looking forward to accounting and auditing guidance for financial year ending March 31, 2020, since there are issues relating to physical verificati­on of inventory, fixed assets, balance confirmati­ons, fair value measuremen­ts, expected credit losses, going concern and impairment,” said Sanjeev Singhal, partner, S R Batliboi & Co.

The finance minister also announced a slew of measures to provide cushion to companies on compliance­s.

Newly incorporat­ed companies will get an additional six months to file the declaratio­n for commencing business. For a director in any company who has not fulfilled the requiremen­t of minimum residency of 182 days shall not be treated as a violation of law.

The government has also relaxed the mandatory requiremen­t of holding board meetings within prescribed interval by 60 days for the next two quarters. If independen­t directors have not attended a single board meeting in 2019-20, the same will not be seen as a violation for the financial year. The corporate affairs ministry has

also issued a moratorium on the MCA 21 registry from April 1 to September 30. Companies will not have to submit any additional fees for late filing during this period. The deadline for investing 15 per cent of debentures maturing in certified instrument­s and the requiremen­t of 20 per cent deposit reserve has been moved from April 30 to June 30.

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