Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Panel suggests easing listing obligation­s, disclosure rules for firms facing insolvency

- Jayshree P Upadhyay jayshree.p@livemint.com

MUMBAI: A panel setup to ease listing, compliance and disclosure regulation­s for companies in the process of insolvency resolution has submitted its recommenda­tions to market regulator Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi), two people with direct knowledge of the matter said.

The panel comprising members from Sebi and the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Board of India (IBBI) was formed considerin­g that 11 of the 12 large stressed accounts currently under insolvency proceeding­s, including Bhushan Steel Ltd, Alok Industries Ltd, Amtek Auto Ltd, L an co Infra tech Ltd, Electroste­el Steel s Ltd and Era Infra Engineerin­g, are listed.

“The committee was formed to ease listing, compliance and processes for companies that are currently undergoing insolvency proceeding­s. Major recommenda­tions include easing the listing obligation and disclosure requiremen­ts( LO DR ), and de listing andre listing if these area part of there solution plan ,” said one of the two persons cited above, who declined to be named.

“Recommenda­tions were submitted to the market regulator earlier this week for amending Sebi regulation­s. These recommenda­tions could beconsider­ed in a meeting of Sebi’s board next month( December ),” said the second person mentioned above, also on condition of anonymity.

This is the second time this year that Sebi is considerin­g changes in regulation­s to ease the resolution of stressed assets in banks’ balance sheets.

On June 21, the Se bi board had exempted buyers of shares ind is- tressed firms from the requiremen­t of making an open offer even if the purchase triggers such an event under the take over code.

An email sent to Se bi on Thursday regarding the new proposals was not answered immediatel­y.

“A pragmatic way of dealing with such companies will be to facilitate their revival and therefore various compliance­s that are otherwise required tobe done by a listed company on a continuous basis under the listing regulation­s should be relaxed for companies referred tothe insolvency board,” said Yogesh Chande, partner, Shardul Amarchand Mangaldas, a law firm.

Once a firm is admitted for insolvency by the National Company Law Tribunal, its board is no longer in control and the decisions to keep the firm as a going concern is taken by the Insolvency Resolution Profession­al (IRP).

“There was a proposal from the I RP st os us pend the compliance requiremen­ts for the insolvent companies. But the commit- tee felt that certain minimum LO DR requiremen­ts would need to be met by the IRP. The IRP would be assisted by exchanges in generating alerts for the required disclosure­s,” said the second person cited above.

The panel has recommende­d that trading in a company’s shares should not be suspended, another demand from lawyers and IRPs, the person added.

The other key recommenda­tion is to ease the de listing regulation­s. Under Sebi regulation­s if an acquisitio­n is done with an intention to delist, the buyer has to first make an open offer.

If, after the open offer, its shareholdi­ng crosses 90% (the delisting threshold), it has to make another offer to acquire the majority of the remaining minority shareholdi­ng. If that doesn’t happen, then the buyer has to scale back its ownership to 75%.

The erstwhile Sick Industrial Companies Act, or SICA, which was repealed on December 1, 2016, had a specific provision for delisting sick companies.

 ?? MINT/FILE ?? Sebi chairman Ajay Tyagi
MINT/FILE Sebi chairman Ajay Tyagi

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India