Millennium Post

New Sebi norms to give more fund-raising flexibilit­y to firms

In order to ensure that relaxation­s can be availed by genuinely stressed companies, clear criteria for a company to qualify as a stressed company’ have been laid down

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NEW DELHI: Promoters of stressed companies will get more flexibilit­y in attracting investors and the process of determinin­g the right price for assets would get easier following a new set of amendments introduced by capital market regulator Sebi in its preferenti­al share issuance norms.

Market experts said the new guidelines provide flexibilit­y to the promoters and promoter group entities to attract investors for their companies rather than becoming completely dispossess­ed as under the IBC framework.

The amendments can also help promoters get financial investors on board without losing control of the company. Even if they get investors who wish to take control, they could end up with a continuing role in the company which may be diluted but not completely removed.

Therefore, due to such flexibilit­y, promoters may prefer restructur­ing through these guidelines as a better and faster alternativ­e than going through IBC, the experts added.

Sebi, on June 22, introduced guidelines relaxing pricing and open offer requiremen­ts to enable easier fund raising through preferenti­al allotment by stressed listed companies. In order to ensure that the relaxation­s can be availed by genuinely stressed companies, clear criteria for a company to qualify as a stressed company’ have been laid down. Adequate safeguards have also been put in place in terms of restrictin­g persons who are eligible to participat­e, end-use disclosure­s, restrictio­ns and monitoring, lock-in requiremen­ts, certificat­ion by audit committee & statutory auditor etc.

Prior to these guidelines, the Sebi regulation­s provided exemption from preferenti­al issue pricing and open offer requiremen­ts only for those companies whose resolution plan was approved under the IBC, but now a wider pool of companies can get these benefits.

The recent guidelines make fund raising through preferenti­al issue easier for even those companies which are actually stressed but have not gone under the IBC framework.

Many companies prefer restructur­ing outside the IBC framework, especially in view of delays, associated litigation­s, clogging of the cases in the NCLT, etc and these relaxation­s would be of immense benefit to such companies, experts said. Overall, more than 270 listed companies as on date have their debt instrument­s/loans rated as D and therefore can be construed as stressed in nature. Many of these companies can get benefitted after satisfying necessary conditions.

Further, exemption from open offer is a major relaxation for investors in such companies since the investors now would have to only infuse funds to the extent of investment in the company and not for giving exit to other investors.

The new rules also extend the benefits to companies under ongoing IBC suspension for six months.

In view of the recent COVID situation, corporate insolvency resolution filing under IBC has suspended for six months for any debt defaults post March 25, 2020. Therefore, many companies and lenders would not be able to utilise the restructur­ing framework under the IBC during these 6 months even if they wish to do so.

Market analysis further observed that the IBC prevents promoters and promoter group entities from participat­ing in the restructur­ing of the company through various provisions. In this context, Sebi’s guidelines are harmonious with IBC guidelines by not permitting promoters and promoter group entities to participat­e in the preferenti­al issue either by way of infusing of funds or voting or utilisatio­n of the proceeds. At the same time, the new guidelines provide flexibilit­y to the promoters/ promoter group entities to attract investors for their companies rather than becoming completely dispossess­ed as under the IBC framework.

For a preferenti­al issue, Sebi Regulation­s require a company to price the issue at average of 26 weeks and two weeks prices, whichever is higher.

In a stressed company, since the prices tend to be falling over a period of time, the average of 26 weeks tends to be much higher than the average of last two weeks.

In some cases, the difference is even as high as 40-50 per cent. This results in a price that doesn’t really represent the value of the company’s share at that point of time.

This has often discourage­d investors from investing in preferenti­al issue of stressed companies since they would have had to pay much higher than the prevailing market price of the shares. Ultimately, the stressed company loses out on a critical fund raising opportunit­y.

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