Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

India Inc’s wheel of debt turns full circle

- Aman Sethi aman.sethi@htlive.com

LOAN RAIDER Bhushan Steel’s spiralling journey from an expanding steel mill to one of India’s biggest loan defaulters reveals how risky corporate gambles have hobbled the banks

In May 2008, Neeraj Singal, managing director of Bhushan Steel Ltd, threw a birthday party. It had been a good year; company profits were up, world steel prices at a record high and order books bulging.

Tabloids splashed photograph­s of the party attended by industrial­ists and film stars Saif Ali Khan and Kareena Kapoor who took the stage in a black sequinned bodice and danced to pulsating Bollywood music.

The celebratio­ns mirrored the playful arrogance among big businesses in India, enriched by the opening up of mining, power and infrastruc­ture sectors. Meanwhile, the western world was about to plunge into a crippling credit crisis triggered in the United States.

For the Singals, one of India’s largest steel producers, this was a time of frenetic expansion of their steel plant in Odisha, while their quest for coal and ore took them as far as Australia.

The golden run ended in July this year in a bankruptcy courtroom where a lawyer for State Bank of India (SBI) said Bhushan Steel had failed to repay loans worth thousands of crores. The company’s total debts stand at Rs. 46,062 crore; about the same as India’s budgetary outlay on school education in 2017.According to media reports, the company is under investigat­ion from the Serious Fraud Investigat­ion Office (SFIO).

“The banks need to get their money back,” the SBI lawyer said. “Is the company able to pay the debt or not pay the debt?”

Bhushan Steel is part of the “NPA crisis”, shorthand for Rs 8-lakh crore worth of loan defaults or Non-Performing Assets, that have choked India’s banking system and pushed lending, the lifeblood of the economy, to its lowest point in 20 years.

Company promoters blame these defaults on a global recession, poor regulation and sheer bad luck. But the dramatic rise and fall of Bhushan Steel reveals the NPA crisis is equally about public sector banks backing risky bets of promoters accustomed to growing their businesses on borrowed money.

And when these businesses floundered, banks threw good money after bad, often through third-party transactio­ns. In the on-going court case of Bhushan Steel and Syndicate Bank, the Central Bureau of Investigat­ion alleges in a First Informatio­n Report (No. RC AC1 2014A0004, August 1 2014), a bank official purportedl­y demanded bribes to ignore defaults.

Nittin Johari, Director Finance at Bhushan Steel, declined to comment on any ongoing investigat­ions, but said the company had not broken any laws.

In 1987, Brij Bhushan Singal and his sons - Neeraj and Sanjay - acquired an ailing steel factory in Sahibabad, at a time when steel was dominated by state- owned companies.

The group grew quickly by importing sophistica­ted Japa- nese machinery to make steel for India’s nascent automobile industry.

But “Bhushan Steel’s control over availabili­ty, quality and cost of input steel was very limited,” Neeraj Singal explained in the company’s 2009-10 annual report.

So in 2003, they decided to build an integrated steel plant in Odisha.

This was a time of great optimism for the steel sector. Banks were eager to lend to a company with an impressive order book of clients like Maruti Suzuki, Mahindra and Mahindra, and Tata Motors.

“Banks were getting into project finance for the first time,” a lender seeking anonymity to speak freely. “If anyone questioned a project’s viability, bosses would say - India will always need cars, or there are millions of Indians who still don’t have electricit­y.”

Plant constructi­on in Odisha began in 2005, and the company was promised a ready supply of iron-ore and coal needed to make steel. The first phase of constructi­on was complete by 2009-10.

Next year, elder brother Sanjay, broke away from the family business, but Bhushan Steel’s prospects were bright. But steel is a cyclical business, and as Chinese demand tapered after the 2008 Olympics, prices plummeted as fast as they had once peaked.

For Bhushan Steel, it was a gust of headwind.

“The whole house of cards came tumbling down,” said a financier seeking anonymity to speak freely.

“In a slowdown, steel demand in India doesn’t drop. Prices do,” said the lender to Bhushan Steel. “With debt you grow big fast, but when bad times come, the debt suddenly becomes a massive burden.”

By 2010, Bhushan Steel was already shoulderin­g loans worth Rs 11,404 crore. Still, the company went on a borrowing spree to finance the next phase of constructi­on.

By 2012, the steel industry was slipping behind on interest payments as steel prices fell to $300/tonne that December from a 2008 peak of $1265/tonne.

“It was obvious Annual report: Bhushan announces completion of first phase of steel plant that companies were borrowing from one bank to pay off another,” the lender said.

Banks were conflicted: pull the loans and book a loss, or keep lending and hope the sector revived. Bhushan’s lenders pinned their hopes on the Odisha plant reaching full capacity.

It never did.

In November 2013, the new plant’s furnace exploded during testing, three workers were killed and 29 injured. The accident was widely covered in the press. By March 2014, it was clear the company was in trouble. Profit had shrunk to a mere Rs 62 crore, while the company was spending more than Rs 1,600 crore a year in interest payments alone, according to Bhushan’s 2014 annual report. The banks doubled down. “Despite these challenges, your company’s bankers have demonstrat­ed continued confidence on the company,” the annual report stated, noting that banks had extended almost Rs18,000 crore in fresh loans and working capital.

“Many loans were secured against the company’s stock,” said the financier, noting that the Singals owned 70% of the stock.

This allowed lenders to pretend that their loans were sufficient­ly collateral­ised.

Then on August 1 2014, the Centre Bureau of Investigat­ion, acting on a tip-off from a bank insider, said Company posts record profit of ~1,023 crores Bhushan Steel allegedly defaulted on a Rs.100 crore loan repayment to Syndicate Bank and allegedly bribed the bank chairman, S.K. Jain for a credit extension.

“Fresh credit was extended to M/s BSL by Syndicate Bank and as a token an illegal gratificat­ion of Rs 10 lakhs was paid to Shri Sudhir Kumar Jain,” said the CBI’s FIR.

When Neeraj was arrested on August 7 2014, Bhushan stock, trading at Rs 380, went into free fall.

Both men are out on bail, and the matter is sub-judice. HT reached out to S.K. Jain through his lawyer, but he did not respond.

India’s banks have portrayed themselves as hapless victims of canny promoters. Yet, banks played along through a systemic failure of project monitoring, and inadequate due-diligence.

HT sent SBI, Bhushan Steel’s lead banker with a total exposure of over Rs. 10,000 crore, a detailed email - through their media agency - to understand why banks continued to give fresh loans to the company when it had trouble paying back old debts.

“SBI does not comment on individual accounts,” the media agency replied.

Industry sources said much of the lending was loan “ever-greening”: an industry practice in which banks flip old loans into new ones, rather than acknowledg­e a potential default.

When Bhushan Steel was on the brink Profits drop sharply to ~62 crore on rising interest costs, falling margins

On June 7 2017, a business daily reported the SFIO was investigat­ing if Bhushan Steel’s management had diverted bank loans.

An SFIO official involved in the investigat­ion told HT they had collated financial data from the company’s bankers. The official sought anonymity to speak freely.

The SFIO, the official said, is also following up on an August 2016 SEBI order that alleges the Singals bought cheap shares in a company called First Financial. First Financial’s share price rose 5000% in one year, allowing the Singals to exit with a tax-free profit of Rs. 12 crore, the SEBI report said.

The Singals, SEBI alleged, “misused securities market system

for making illegal gains and to convert ill-gotten gains, into genuine ones.”

A Bhushan spokespers­on said a forensic audit of their books had found no wrongdoing.

Deloitte - the firm that conducted the forensic audit - has now been appointed the insolvency profession­al agency to run Bhushan Steel for six months while banks figure out how to recover their money.

This will cost Bhushan Steel in fee and expenses to Deloitte, money that the banks will extend as a fresh loan, technicall­y called “interim finance”.

“From the moment a company takes a loan to the time it fails, everyone makes money,” said a restructur­ing profession­al. “It’s just different people at each step.”

RBI press release directing banks to take 12 big defaulters to bankruptcy court. They are Bhushan Steel, Bhushan Power and Steel, Electroste­el Steels, Essar Steel, Monnet Ispat & Energy, Jyoti Structures, Alok Industries, Lanco Infratech, Jaypee Infratech, ABG Shipyard, Amtek Auto and Era Infra Engineerin­g Company reports first loss: ~1,254 cr March 31, 2017: Company net worth turns negative March 31, 2016: Company reports loss of ~2,839cr July 26, 2017: National Company Law Tribunal admits Bhushan

Steel into bankruptcy court

 ??  ?? The quest to build an integrated steel factory to control inputs and improve profit margins proved to be Bhushan Steel’s undoing.
The quest to build an integrated steel factory to control inputs and improve profit margins proved to be Bhushan Steel’s undoing.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India