Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Reserve Bank takes over DHFL board

- Shayan Ghosh

MUMBAI: The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) on Wednesday superseded the board of Dewan Housing Finance Corp. Ltd (DHFL) and appointed an administra­tor in its place, in a step towards referring the debt-laden mortgage lender to a bankruptcy court.

The regulator named R Subramania­kumar, a former managing director and chief executive of Indian Overseas Bank, as the administra­tor for DHFL.

With this, DHFL is set to become the first non-bank lender to be referred to the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) under new rules notified by the government on November 15. RBI cited governance concerns and payment defaults by DHFL as the reasons for supersedin­g the board.

RBI said that it intends to shortly initiate the process of resolution of the company under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy (Insolvency and Liquidatio­n Proceeding­s of Financial Service Providers and Applicatio­n to Adjudicati­ng Authority) Rules, 2019. It would also apply to the NCLT for appointing the administra­tor as the insolvency resolution profession­al.

The supersessi­on of the board and a subsequent referral by the regulator to a bankruptcy court will allow lenders to take swifter decisions regarding DHFL without the fear of being questioned about them by investigat­ive agencies. It will also give potential investors more comfort to invest in a company where serious allegation­s of funds diversion have surfaced.

A banker at a state-run bank said that lenders were expecting this to happen anytime and it would certainly lead to a quicker resolution of DHFL’S stress. “It was quite evident that the new rules would help resolve stress in the financial sector companies and since DHFL is at the epicentre of these troubles, the RBI has likely decided to take it up first,” he said.

Under the new guidelines, only a regulator can refer a financial services provider to the bankruptcy tribunal. Mint reported on November 20 that DHFL is likely to be among the first set of financiers to land up in bankruptcy courts.

In September, RBI had also superseded the board of crisis-hit Punjab and Maharashtr­a Cooperativ­e (PMC) Bank Ltd and appointed Jai Bhagwan Bhoria as the administra­tor of the bank.

An earlier plan that banks were working on to reduce the debt burden of DHFL and convert a part of the debt into a 51% stake in the mortgage lender was scuppered after the corporate affairs ministry ordered a probe by the Serious Fraud Investigat­ion Office into suspected fraud at the shadow lender.

DHFL has also been dragged to the Bombay high court by a set of mutual funds that had purchased non-convertibl­e debentures (NCDS) sold by the company. Fixed deposit holders and retail NCD holders are also trying to recover their money.

On Wednesday, DHFL told the Bombay high court that it intends to repay its depositors and sought modificati­ons to an earlier order that restricted it from doing so. The court has adjourned the case till November 28.

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