Hindustan Times (Patiala)

KOTAKLED BOARD TO PROPOSE OUTRIGHT SALE OF DEBTRIDDEN IL&FS

Other options include splitting businesses and disposing them off to several buyers

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India is examining options including an outright sale of Infrastruc­ture Leasing & Financial Services Ltd (IL&FS), a person with knowledge of the matter said, as the government tries to stem defaults at the lender with $12.6 billion of debt.

A plan to be presented to a bankruptcy court Wednesday by the state-appointed board of the lender includes selling the entire stake to a financiall­y strong investor and ensure business continuity, the person said, asking not to be identified as the matter is private.

Other options include splitting businesses according to verticals and disposing them off to several buyers or injecting liquidity at group level to avoid an outright sale.

The beleaguere­d financier hasn’t stopped missing payments even after the government sacked the lender’s board and pledged to stem defaults. Fixing the cash flow crisis at the company is vital to revive confidence in India’s credit markets at a time when Asia’s third-largest economy grapples with rising oil prices and a plunging currency.

The Serious Fraud Investigat­ion Office this month started an investigat­ion into IL&FS.

The plan finalized by the new board led by Asia’s richest banker, Uday Kotak will be put up before the National Company Law Tribunal on October 31.

A person familiar with the matter, who did not want to be named ahead of a submission of the proposals to the National Company Law Tribunal on Wednesday, said it could take six to nine months to fully address the problems at IL&FS. “We will be able to gauge buyers’ interest only when we hit the market,” the source said.

The court had approved the government’s move to take over the lender and accepted the plea that the move was crucial to protect the financial markets.

Finance ministry spokesman D.S. Malik declined to comment.

The lender’s borrowing from banks and financial institutio­ns is ₹63,000 crore on a consolidat­ed basis, according to the balance sheet for the year ended March 2018, the official said. Exposure of the banking sector to IL&FS is pegged at around ₹53,000 crore, about 16% of all lending to nonbanking finance companies. While the matter is being heard in the court, the board could look at selling assets, both core and non-core, for infusing liquidity and ensuring timely loan repayments, the official said. The troubles at IL&FS had been intensifyi­ng since July, when company founder Ravi Parthasara­thy stepped down, citing health reasons.

Defaults from August within the group rattled India’s money markets, added to the pressure on corporate bond yields and sparked a sell-off in the stock market. The IL&FS Group is a bewilderin­gly complex conglomera­te, with 348 direct and indirect subsidiari­es.

Its investors include Life Insurance Corporatio­n, India’s largest life insurer; State Bank of India, its largest bank; and Housing Developmen­t Finance Corp, its largest mortgage lender. Japan’s Orix Corp. is the company’s second-largest shareholde­r. IL&FS, which is a major infrastruc­ture financing and developmen­t company, has defaulted on some debt it owes banks in recent weeks, and its credit rating has been downgraded to junk from investment grade by ratings agencies.

THE PLAN FINALIZED BY THE NEW BOARD WILL BE PUT UP BEFORE THE NATIONAL COMPANY LAW TRIBUNAL ON OCTOBER 31

 ?? ANIRUDDHA CHOWDHURY/MINT ?? The lender’s borrowing from banks and financial institutio­ns is ₹63,000 crore on a consolidat­ed basis, according to the balance sheet for the year ended March 2018.
ANIRUDDHA CHOWDHURY/MINT The lender’s borrowing from banks and financial institutio­ns is ₹63,000 crore on a consolidat­ed basis, according to the balance sheet for the year ended March 2018.

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