Business Standard

Lavasa gets ~25-cr upfront offer

Banks may send realty firm into liquidatio­n

- DEV CHATTERJEE & RAGHU MOHAN Mumbai, 12 September

Lavasa Corporatio­n, India’s first privately built smart city near Pune, has received two bids — both offering ~25 crore to Indian lenders as upfront money on dues worth close to ~8,000 crore.

Of the two bidders, Dhir Hotels and Resorts has offered to pay ~700 crore — to be paid from the third year until the seventh year of the effective date of approval from lenders, and in non-convertibl­e debentures to be issued to banks.

The other bidder, Darwin Platform Infrastruc­ture, too, has offered an upfront amount of ~25 crore, and another ~600 crore as deferred payment from the third year after receiving National Company Law Tribunal go-ahead.

According to lenders, despite a prolonged bankruptcy process, such dismal offers have come in and they do not have any other option but to send the company into liquidatio­n.

The deferred payment offers made by bidders, along with a relatively small upfront amount, mean the banks will have to take more than a 90 per cent haircut on their dues with no certainty on the realisatio­n of the deferred payments, said a banking source.

One of the bidders said the project has become unviable due to the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic on the real estate sector. “There were too many government­related permission issues and litigation risks in the project. That’s why we withdrew from the race,” said an executive of a company that had earlier evinced an interest in the project.

Lavasa, a subsidiary of Hindustan Constructi­on Company (HCC), was sent for bankruptcy in 2018. Resolution deadlines have been missed several times so far.

Axis Bank has made the highest claim of ~1,266 crore against the company. Among other key lenders is State Bank of India.

Originally set up in 2000, Lavasa was developed by HCC as a picturesqu­e hill station near Pune. Lavasa defaulted on bank loans after the environmen­t ministry issued a stop-work order on the project in 2010. HCC itself is facing a severe liquidity crisis and has defaulted on bank loans.

A few hotels in Lavasa city have shut shop since the outbreak of the pandemic; the weekend footfall in the township, too, has dropped to near-zero, turning it into a ghost town. In the current round, lenders have received better upfront amounts; earlier few bidders had offered only ~5 crore as upfront payment.

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WHAT’S ON OFFER?

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