Deccan Chronicle

11 NPA resolution­s to provide `1tr

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New Delhi, May 20: Enthused by successful conclusion of Bhushan Steel case, the finance ministry expects banks to write back more than `1 lakh crore after the resolution of all 12 NPA cases referred to insolvency proceeding­s by the RBI it its first list.

Last week, Tata Group acquired controllin­g stake of 72.65 per cent in Bhushan Steel for around `36,000 crore will help in cleansing the banking system as well as boost lenders profitabil­ity.

The remaining 11 NPA cases which are in the pipeline will easily bring to the table over `1 lakh crore (`1 trillion) and the amount coming from resolution under Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC) will directly add to the bottomline and help in reduction of NPAs of the public sector banks, a senior finance ministry official told PTI.

Last year in June, RBI’s internal advisory committee (IAC) identified 12 accounts, each having more than `5,000 crore of outstandin­g loans and accounting for 25 per cent of total NPAs of banks.

Following the RBI’s advisory, banks referred Bhushan Steel, Bhushan Power & Steel, Essar Steel, Jaypee Infratech, Lanco Infratech, Monnet Ispat & Energy, Jyoti Structures, Electroste­el Steels, Amtek Auto, Era Infra Engineerin­g, Alok Industries and ABG Shipyard to NCLT.

These accounts together have total outstandin­g loan of `1.75 lakh crore. The Kolkata Bench of the NCLT has already approved Vedanta’s resolution plan for acquisitio­n of Electroste­el Steels last month. Besides, the NCLT last month also asked the lenders of Bhushan Power & Steel to consider the bid submitted by UK-based Liberty House for the debt-ridden company.

Bhushan Power and Steel owes close to `48,000 crore to banks and was referred to the NCLT by PNB in June last year.

Last week, Bamnipal Steel (BNPL), a whollyowne­d subsidiary of Tata Steel, has acquired 72.65 per cent stake in Bhushan Steel by paying around `36,400 crore, of which `35,200 crore will be paid to financial creditors.

The buy-out is expected to bring relief in the form of capital boost to PNB that was one of the leading lenders to the debt-ridden company, the bank said.

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