Business Standard

Delhi HC asks Spicejet to deposit ~243 crore

To be transferre­d in six weeks; low on cash balance, airline may find it tough to comply with order

- ARINDAM MAJUMDER

Spicejet was dealt a blow by the Delhi High Court on Monday after it ordered the airline to deposit an additional ~243 crore within six weeks, in relation to the share transfer dispute with former promoter Kalanithi Maran. If the amount is not deposited within the deadline, Maran can seek the status quo on Spicejet’s shareholdi­ng.

Cash-strapped Spicejet was dealt a blow by the Delhi High Court on Monday after it ordered the airline to deposit an additional ~243 crore within six weeks, in relation to the share transfer dispute with former promoter Kalanithi Maran, owner of the Sun group.

If the amount is not deposited within the deadline, Maran has the right to seek status-quo on Spicejet’s shareholdi­ng, meaning the company will not be able raise capital from the market by issuing fresh shares or through a stake sale.

“Judgement Debtor (in this case Spicejet and promoter Ajay Singh) is directed to deposit ~242.93 crore as postaward interest sum within a period of six weeks. If the amount is not deposited, the decree holder (in this case Kalanithi Maran and KAL Airways) shall be at liberty to seek directions to maintain status quo with respect to shareholdi­ng of Spicejet and Ajay Singh,” the order read.

The amount is the interest payable on the ~579 crore that the court asked Spicejet to deposit in 2017 as part of the dispute. The airline had deposited the entire amount through a bank guarantee of ~329 crore and a deposit of ~250 crore.

With the pandemic challengin­g revenue flow, Spicejet will find it tough to comply with the order. Its net worth at the end of March stood at ~1,580 crore and cash balance was a mere ~42 crore, while liabilitie­s like lease rentals, payment to suppliers are accumulati­ng. The company’s stock fell by 2.52 per cent on the BSE Sensex on Monday.

A Spicejet spokespers­on said the firm was reviewing the order while a second executive said they will seek more time for depositing the amount.

The dispute arose over non-issuance of warrants in favour of Maran, after ownership was transferre­d to Singh, the current controllin­g shareholde­r of Spicejet. Maran sold his entire 58.46 per cent stake, amounting to 350.4 million shares for a nominal price of ~2 in 2015, after a financial crunch crippled its operations.

The two sides have been locked in litigation ever since with Maran accusing Spicejet and Singh of breach of agreement for not issuing him 189 million share warrants and preference shares, despite his ~579 crore infusion. He claimed ~1,300 crore from Spicejet and Singh. The warrants, if converted into equity, would have given Maran and his KAL Airways a 24 per cent stake.

Spicejet said these could not be issued as it did not get the exchange’s approval. In July 2018, an arbitratio­n tribunal ruled in Spicejet’s favour, rejecting Maran’s claim. However, the tribunal had said Maran will be entitled to a refund of ~579 crore.

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