Deccan Chronicle

IL&FS won’t be allowed to collapse, says LIC

LIC chief says all options are being looked at for the firm

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New Delhi, Sept. 25: State-run insurer LIC on Tuesday said it will not allow debt-ridden IL&FS to collapse and explore options to revive it.

The Life Insurance Corporatio­n (LIC) has the largest shareholdi­ng in IL&FS.

IL&FS Financial Services, a group company of IL&FS defaulted on one of its commercial paper (CP) issuances due for repayment on Monday. This was the third default by the company.

LIC chairman V.K. Sharma, after a meeting at the finance ministry, assured that efforts are being made to keep IL&FS afloat.

“We will ensure IL&FS does not collapse. We will not allow contagion to spread from IL&FS... All options are open (including raising stake in the company),” he said.

The infrastruc­ture developmen­t and finance group has been facing liquidity issues for some time and had defaulted on a `1,000-crore debt from Sidbi earlier this month. On September 14, it had again defaulted on a repayment of `105 crore CPs and the next day, it had defaulted on `80-crore inter-corporate deposits (ICDs).

Meanwhile, the finance ministry has maintained that IL&FS Group is independen­t of the government and the company needs to resolve its issues.

Although the government has no holding in the company, some of the state-owned financial firms, including LIC and SBI, are shareholde­rs of the non-banking financial company (NBFC).

“IL&FS is independen­t of the government. It has independen­t board and shareholde­rs. So, IL&FS needs to resolve its issues on its own and I think it is capable of doing it,” economic affairs secretary Subhash Chandra Garg had told PTI.

“It has assets, it has liabilitie­s to take care. There might be some temporary mismatch, so it is IL&FS, which will deal with the problem. The government is not involved directly,” Garg had said.

IL&FS, which is credited for building the longest tunnel in the country,

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