Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Essel gets 6-month relief from lenders to repay its debt

- Tanya Thomas and Neil Borate tanya.t@livemint.com

MUMBAI: Essel Group chairman Subhash Chandra has secured a six-month extension from lenders to repay debt given its inability to pay back more than half of its dues by September 30 as agreed earlier, a mutual fund executive familiar with the details said.

A standstill agreement with mutual funds and non-bank lenders that was inked in February has now been extended to March 31, the person said on condition of anonymity.

As part of the initial agreement, Essel group had agreed to sell assets to repay all dues to lenders by the September deadline.

In return, the lenders agreed not to sell pledged shares of the group’s flagship Zee Entertainm­ent Enterprise­s Ltd (ZEEL). Essel owed a total of ₹7,500 crore to the lenders but has since repaid ₹3,356 crore to them.

The agreement to extend the repayment deadline in February had faced criticism from investors and regulators. Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) chairman Ajay Tyagi on June 28 said the regulator “does not recognise” standstill agreements.

Sebi has initiated adjudicati­on proceeding­s against two fund houses—HDFC Asset Management and Kotak which had fixed maturity plans (FMPs)— that held Essel papers.

HDFC Mutual Fund had rolled over its FMP and Kotak Mutual Fund had held back some units in lieu of the Essel exposure.

Subsequent­ly, HDFC AMC transferre­d the Essel debt in the affected FMPs which were maturing before September 30 to its own books.

“It is unclear whether the funds will recover the principal and interest even after six months. Sebi has so far taken only limited action in addressing bad debt with the side pocketing rules. I think the regulator needs to be more proactive in resolving this matter,” said Shriram Subramania­n, managing director, InGovern Research Services, a corporate governance advisory firm.

An official spokespers­on for Essel group said: “The Essel Group is in constant dialogue with the consortium of lenders. The overall asset divestment approach is in steady progress and the group remains focused on the repayment process. All decisions taken in this process so far have been in the interest of the lenders and have only been implemente­d after their consent.”

In July, the Essel group agreed to sell an 11% stake in ZEEL for ₹4,224 crore to Invesco Oppenheime­r Developing Markets Fund. Earlier this month, the sale of 8.7% stake was concluded, and the group repaid ₹3,356 crore to mutual funds from the proceeds. The group said at the time that it is confident of completing the balance sale of 2.3% stake soon.

Executives at Aditya Birla Sun Life Mutual Fund, HDFC Mutual Fund, Kotak Mutual Fund and ICICI Prudential Mutual Fund, who are all lenders to Essel and are part of the standstill agreement, did not respond to calls and texts from Mint about this matter.

 ?? MINT FILE ?? Essel Group chairman Subhash Chandra.
MINT FILE Essel Group chairman Subhash Chandra.

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