Business Standard

Slow to start, banks wrestle with insolvency regime, VEENA MANI & N SUNDARESHA SUBRAMANIA­N write

Only 17 of 112 cases admitted by NCLT initiated by banks

- VEENA MANI & N SUNDARESHA SUBRAMANIA­N

Neeraj Singhal, promoter and vice-chairman of Bhushan Steel, was arrested by the Central Bureau of Investigat­ion (CBI) in August 2014. Singhal’s arrest came days after the agency had arrested S K Jain, the then chairman and managing director of Syndicate Bank on bribery charges.

Soon after, the Bhushan Steel account was referred to a joint lenders’ forum. It was part of the Reserve Bank of India’s asset quality review in 2015 before being declared a nonperform­ing asset (NPA) by the end of 2015-16. Three years later, Bhushan Steel is one of the 12 companies recommende­d for insolvency proceeding­s by the RBI.

Another complicate­d case is that of Era Infra Engineerin­g, against which as many as 18 winding-up pleas are pending in courts. The shares of this company were suspended by the bourses over a year ago, implying its troubles are much older.

Essar Steel first defaulted on debt repayment in 1999. It went into a corporate debt restructur­ing in 2002 and came out of it in 2006. Its shares were delisted in 2007, but it still emerged with a loan book of ~37,000 crore. In 2014, Essar Steel’s Canadian acquisitio­n Algoma filed for bankruptcy, two years later Essar Steel Minnesota filed for Chapter 11.

Young defaults versus critically ill

An insolvency expert whose firm is advising the resolution process of one of the large accounts, said, “Each case has to be taken on its merits. While some accounts may be difficult, others might be eminently suitable.”

There is a view in the industry that the law is more suited for “young defaults”, when companies are in a better state of health. When insolvency is taken up as the last option, it may not be effective.

Pavan Vijay, managing director of Corporate Profession­als, said some companies entering insolvency were like patients that need ventilator support. Some of these companies are not a “going concern” and liquidatio­n is inevitable.

Laden with such challengin­g and chronic cases, banks, especially the public sector ones, have been slow to wake up to the new insolvency regime. The bankruptcy code was passed by parliament a year ago, the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Board of India (IBBI) was constitute­d in October and registrati­on of profession­als began by late November. But the PSU banks swung into action only a few months later.

According to regulation­s, resolution profession­als are required to make a public announceme­nt of the beginning of the insolvency resolution process once this has been admitted by the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT). The process has to be completed within 180 days of this announceme­nt, failing which liquidatio­n will be initiated.

Missing banks

As of July 10, 112 such announceme­nts have been made. Of these, banks account for just 17 announceme­nts, or 15 per cent. State Bank of India and Punjab National Bank have been applicants in three cases each, while Bank of India, IDBI Bank and ICICI Bank account for two cases each. Edelweiss Asset Reconstruc­tion has initiated three cases. A majority of the cases admitted by the NCLT have been initiated by the companies themselves or operationa­l creditors like suppliers and customers.

Private lender ICICI Bank was first off the blocks and received the tribunal’s clearance for Innoventiv­e Industries as early as January. At this point, there were 977 registered insolvency profession­als. The NCLT was also not as crowded as it is now. But the public sector banks did not do much in the first four months.

By the time Bank of India’s applicatio­n in the matter of Hindustan Dorr Oliver was cleared it was May 5. SBI and PNB came into the picture a couple of weeks later. PNB’s first case was in early May in Chandigarh and SBI’s account was opened with two cases in Telangana towards the end of that month.

State-owned banks were cooling their heels in the first few months, said insolvency profession­als. Only after receiving a clear signal of this being the preferred route to dealing with stressed assets did banks begin to scamper for talent, knowledge and other resources.

With the government and the RBI on their heels, the late start and bureaucrat­ic processes have added to the challenges for banks. SBI Chairperso­n Arundhati Bhattachar­ya’s comments that the ecosystem had not evolved must be seen against this backdrop, said insolvency profession­als. Bhattachar­ya pointed out that certain mandatory components, such as informatio­n utilities, were not yet in place and that there were not enough insolvency profession­als. She also pointed to the lack of capacity in the NCLT.

Teething troubles

Insolvency profession­als feel banks are the weak links in the ecosystem. They pointed out that there were about 500 registered profession­als and, despite its workload, the NCLT had not delayed hearing insolvency cases. Further, the government has started the process of appointing 15 new members to the NCLT.

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