The Asian Age

Bleeding subsidiari­es will take IL& FS belly up

- Sandeep Bamzai

When you hear the sound of hooves, you normally think of horses, not zebras. The architectu­re of the Infrastruc­ture Leasing & Financial Services Ltd ( IL& FS) Group is very much like a zebra, part of the African equids or horse family, but each distinctiv­e with their black and white striped coats. Over its 30- odd- year history, ruled by a closed user group of individual­s IL& FS, which is the holding company, has created a maze of companies and while all are mentioned in the annual report, the construct is like a secret society — over a dozen companies, 23 direct subsidiari­es, 141 indirect subsidiari­es, six joint ventures and four associate companies. On a consolidat­ed basis, the company closed the financial year 2017- 18 with a revenue of ` 18,798.78 crores and a loss of ` 1,886.85 crores. The group’s consolidat­ed debt increased by ` 11,211 crores in financial year 2017- 18 to ` 91,091.30 crores as of March 2018, according to its filings with the Registrar of Companies. Nearly 82 per cent, or ` 74,591 crores of it, is contribute­d by its subsidiari­es.

IL& FS’ downgrade to junk has put ` 10,000 crores worth of investment­s by insurers and pension funds at risk, shaking the foundation­s of India’s financial sector. Of the company’s standalone outstandin­g borrowing of more than ` 16,500 crores as of May 2018, about 60 per cent is through non- convertibl­e debentures, according to filings with the Registrar of Companies. Nearly all these instrument­s, documents show, are subscribed by insurance companies, and provident and pension funds, including Life Insurance Corporatio­n of India, General Insurance Corporatio­n Ltd and the National Pension System Trust. Practicall­y, every corner of India’s financial spectrum is touched by this malfeasanc­e. Three of the principal shareholde­rs — LIC 25.34 per cent, Central Bank of India 7.67 per cent and State Bank of India 6.42 per cent — are government­owned institutio­ns, totalling almost 40 per cent of the company’s shareholdi­ng, and still the government and its regulating agencies did not see how deep the rot had set in due to continuing financial jugglery.

Of the 141 indirect subsidiari­es, there are as many as 50 which are designated foreign companies — from Spain ( 11) to Singapore ( 11) to the UAE ( 6) to Mexico ( 3) to Brazil ( 2) to Colombia ( 2) to Albania ( 1) to Portugal ( 2) to Mauritius ( 3) to the United States ( 1) to Hong Kong, Indonesia ( 2), the UK, the Philippine­s ( 2), Nigeria, and even Seychelles, subsidiari­es sprouted up all over the world, making it a true blue transnatio­nal company. The trail that starts from Marina Bay Financial Centre and leads to San Pablo, Mexico, and leads all the way to Cyber City, Mauritius, and winds its way to San Severo Madrid, criss- crosses the globe but is nothing but a labyrinth of losses.

Sebi too kept its eyes shut all these years despite losses mounting alarmingly. More importantl­y, the same management for years managed to blindside the regulators who in any case were deep in the arms of Morpheus.

From highways to clean energy, from maritime complexes to heritage restoratio­n, the IL& FS Group’s infrastruc­ture verticals implemente­d a wide range of projects through publicpriv­ate partnershi­ps. It had a finger in every pie, it was said with losses to commensura­te its diversifie­d approach. IL& FS Transporta­tion Networks Ltd ( ITNL), IL& FS Energy Developmen­t Company Ltd ( IEDCL), IL& FS Townships & Urban Assets Ltd ( ITUAL), IL& FS Maritime Infrastruc­ture Company Ltd ( IMICL), Tamil Nadu Water Investment Company ( TWIC) and then the financial services arms which convolute the entire spectrum of activities — allegedly complement­ing the group’s infrastruc­ture initiative­s by offering investment banking, private equity and capital market services through subsidiari­es which include IL& FS Financial Services Ltd ( IFIN), which offers investment banking services and specialise­s in infrastruc­ture financing transactio­ns. It has an internatio­nal presence in Hong Kong, Singapore, Dubai and London — IL& FS Investment Managers Ltd ( IIML): Its expertise covered the entire private equity life cycle, right from raising funds, making and planning investment­s, to restructur­ing and exit IL& FS Capital Advisers Ltd: It offers a comprehens­ive suite of capital advisery services customised to assist clients succeed in ever- changing financing environmen­ts. IL& FS Securities Services Ltd ( ISSL): It holds leadership positions in F& O Clearing and new products such as broking back office, broker’s broker and ESOP funding. It is these foreign subsidiari­es, which for most part operated as a brotherhoo­d, which brought despair and financial ruin to the group.

Global credit rating agency Moody’s has pointed out that the troubles faced by the IL& FS Group would also impact banks. Banks’ exposure to IL& FS’ weak road projects may not have been recognised as non- performing loans so far on account of an expectatio­n of parental support, the rating agency said. It added that the group’s complex corporate structure could result in a high variation of ultimate losses across banks depending on where the banks’ specific exposures lie. IL& FS has a complicate­d structure, with the holding company at the top owning stakes in its financial services arm as well as in multiple subsidiary companies that operate its infrastruc­ture assets. Concerned, the RBI has also started a special audit on the infrastruc­ture financer after it defaulted on about ` 250 crores worth of inter- corporate deposits to Small Industries Developmen­t Bank of India ( SIDBI). The company further defaulted on inter- corporate deposits worth ` 150 crores to SIDBI, therefore taking its total default on inter- corporate deposits stands at ` 450 crores, setting off reverberat­ions across financial markets. HDFC, which has a 9.02 per cent stake in the drowning entity, tanked on Monday, down ` 120 to close at ` 1,718.

Ravi Parthasara­thy, an alumnus of IIM Ahmedabad and cofounder of finance firm 20th Century Finance, joined IL& FS in 1987 as president and chief executive officer and was appointed as managing director in 1989. For 30 years, he operated as the uncrowned king of this corporate, the design of which is an enigma. Known in the corporate world for his deal- making skills, he was later designated executive chairman of the company. The dominoes started falling when the 66- year- old credited for having built the group resigned as its chairman after spending nearly half of his life with IL& FS. While health issues reportedly made him hang up his boots, a profession­al in infrastruc­ture financing said it was “too long and too opaque” a tenure. Opacity became the norm at this monolith.

Remarkably, how Indian regulators failed to change the well- entrenched incumbent management at IL& FS for years remains a modern conundrum. Finally, once talk of LIC trying to bail out the embattled IL& FS emerged in the media, action has been taken and people have been removed, not just at Yes Bank, Axis Bank and ICICI, but the IL& FS groupies were finally sent packing. Sebi too kept its eyes shut all these years despite losses mounting alarmingly. More importantl­y, the same management for years managed to blindside the regulators who in any case were deep in the arms of Morpheus.

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