The Sunday Guardian

Creditors worried DCHL promoters planning backdoor entry

In case of DCHL, the promoters face a clutch of criminal cases and CBI investigat­ion as well.

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process, however, the subsequent amendments made some concession­s to the owners to join the bids process, if it helps rescue the company. In case of DCHL, the promoters face a clutch of criminal cases and CBI probe too.

Inordinate delay i n completion of the process to find new owners or management and t he entry of new players as guaranteed creditors claiming charge on the assets of the bankrupt company and the inability of the Insolvency Resolution Profession­al ( IRP) raise scope for suspicion that the present promoters are still trying to regain control over their company after enjoying a massive haircut on their debts.

A chief officer of a public sector bank that l ent around Rs 280 crore to DCHL that runs the Deccan Chronicle English daily newspaper, among a few other publicatio­ns across the country, told The Sunday Guardian on Friday that the happenings in the last few weeks give room for doubt about some foul play and the same would be discussed at the forthcomin­g CoC meet. DCHL o w n e r s T. Venkattram Reddy and his brother T. Vinayak Ravi Reddy have maintained that the company still generates reasonably well cash collection­s through advertisin­g revenues of the newspapers that owe around Rs 6,500 crore to many banks and other financial i nstitution­s, besides facing criminal charges of forgery, fraud, wilful default, etc.

As none of the bidders who had submitted their filled in documents of the IRP Mamata Binani are learnt to have quoted the price that covers the total debt of DCHL, it is obvious that the CoC is set to take a substantia­l haircut ( in simple language foregoing their money).

The highest bidder, according to sources, is believed to have quoted a price around Rs 850 crore to acquire the 80-year-old media company.

As per t he original schedule drawn up by the insolvency proceeding­s launched by the public sector Canara Bank, which leads the 18-member CoC, the process of finding a new management and owners should have been completed within 180 days, by 12 April 2018. However, due to some technical delays, the process has been extended by another 80 days, to 10 July.

However, the Hyderabad bench of NCLT, which is hearing two more petitions seeking the status of secured creditors in the case, posted the case till 17 July, well beyond the deadline to complete the process.

The two petitioner­s, Karvy Financial Services Limited and Sujana Trading Company, both Hyderabad- based, have sought to be involved in the restructur­ing of DCHL assets.

Already, a similar outsider of CoC, India Bulls, which lent around Rs 174 crore to DCHL and auctioned the residentia­l properties of the Reddys, too, petitioned the NCLT and was granted permission to become a secured creditor in the case.

At least two bankers—one private and a public sector one—are planning to raise certain issues before the creditors’ meet next week on the twists and turns in the case over the last six months. For example, these bankers are shocked over the sudden resignatio­n of the counsels of IRP who argued against Karvy and Sujana being clubbed into the creditors’ list before the NCLT.

The abrupt exit of the counsels gives scope that t hey must have been pressurise­d by some forces— presumably the present promoters— to delay the process and thus scuttle the process of restructur­ing by handing over the company to new owners.

These bankers a r e expected to take along all other members of CoC in minimising the haircut as well as keeping away the present promoters’ criminal charges.

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