Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

JSW may go slow on Bhushan Power buy

- Biman Mukherji biman.m@livemint.com

JSW WILL WAIT FOR MORE CLARIFICAT­IONS FROM THE NCLAT WHEN THE MATTER COMES UP FOR HEARING ON JANUARY 13

NEWDELHI: India’s second-largest private steelmaker, JSW Steel Ltd, may go slow on buying bankrupt Bhushan Power and Steel Ltd, despite the cabinet on Tuesday approving an ordinance to ring fence successful bidders from criminal proceeding­s for offences committed by previous promoters, three people with knowledge of the matter said, requesting anonymity.

The cabinet’s approval did not give too many details and, as such, JSW Steel will wait for further clarificat­ions from the National Company Law Appellate Tribunal (NCLAT) when the matter comes up for hearing on January 13. The ordinance says that ongoing investigat­ions against original promoters will continue and the new owner must attend all proceeding­s.

“The fine print is not clear on this ordinance yet. JSW will move ahead only when everything is crystal clear because the stakes involved are too high,” said one of the persons mentioned above.

A JSW Steel spokesman chose not to comment on the matter.

JSW Steel had approached NCLAT for protection from any liabilitie­s or litigation that may arise as the former promoters of Bhushan Power and Steel Ltd were accused by banks of a fraud. Without such an assurance, JSW could have been dragged into litigation, which the company was unwilling to take upon itself.

The company had told the tribunal that in the absence of protection from possible attachment of assets and liabilitie­s that may arise from criminal proceeding­s, it would not be able to implement the resolution plan for BPSL.

NCLAT, which had approved JSW Steel’s ₹19,700-crore bid to take over BPSL, had subsequent­ly stayed the transactio­n pending an investigat­ion into fraud and money laundering by the former owners of the debt-ridden company. Bhushan Steel had accumulate­d a debt of ₹47,000 crore and was part of the original dozen cases identified by the Reserve Bank of India to be referred to bankruptcy courts.

In July-august, JSW Steel had raised around ₹15,000 crore in bank loans in anticipati­on of the buyout, when the NCLAT put a stay on the transactio­n. The steelmaker is having to service the loan. Now, it plans to raise a fresh loan of ₹3,000 crore in January from banks to complete the transactio­n, an executive of a leading bank said.

JSW is likely to complete the purchase of Bhushan Steel and Power by March-end, said another of the persons mentioned above. Meanwhile, the company hopes there will be a further recovery in steel prices, which would make conditions viable for production. Steel prices had dropped by around 20% between January and September to ₹32,500 per tonne for the benchmark hot rolled coil products.

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