Business Standard

Blow to Essar, boost for RBI

HC turns down Essar Steel plea on insolvency, raps central bank for ‘oversteppi­ng jurisdicti­on’

- VINAY UMARJI & ABHIJIT LELE

The Gujarat High Court on Monday disposed of Essar Steel’s petition against insolvency proceeding­s initiated by its lenders after a directive by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI).

This is likely to smoothen the insolvency proceeding­s against Essar as well as the 11 other non-performing accounts identified by the RBI. The four other steel companies on the list, however, have already said they would cooperate with lenders and not move court to stall proceeding­s.

On July 4, Essar Steel, promoted by the Ruias, had filed a petition against the insolvency proceeding­s initiated against it at the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT). Commenting on the court’s observatio­ns that the NCLT will have to decide on its own whether the insolvency petition is required to be entertaine­d or not, Essar Steel stated in an official communiqué, “We respect the decision… (of the court) and will accordingl­y be raising these issues for considerat­ion by the NCLT.”

The Ahmedabad bench of the NCLT is likely to take up insolvency proceeding­s against Essar Steel, initiated by a consortium of 22 banks led by the State Bank of India as well as Standard Chartered Bank, on Tuesday.

The court asked the RBI to see to it that benefits of all its schemes were “equally offered and extended to all without discrimina­tion”.

On July 8, the central bank had to issue a corrigendu­m, deleting a line in its June 13 press release that said certain cases be accorded priority by the NCLT.

The court also raised questions over the RBI’s functionin­g and jurisdicti­on.

The central bank has already admitted that there were no supporting documents to its June 13 press release directing the lenders and the NCLT to accord priority to 12 large nonperform­ing assets (NPAs).

The Gujarat HC said the RBI seemed to be under the impression that matters pertaining to the Company Law had been transferre­d to the NCLT by enacting the Insolvency and the Bankruptcy Code. However, no judicial or quasi-judicial authority could be guided or directed by government institutio­ns like the RBI.

A senior public sector banker dealing with insolvency cases said the verdict was not a surprise as facts were clear. Banks have been focussing on resolution plans for the NCLT cases. Essar had earlier claimed the RBI directive was “arbitrary” and impeded the recovery process amid discussion­s for debt restructur­ing with banks.

The court rejected the argument. According to the Standard Chartered Bank counsel, Essar Steel in its restructur­ing proposal had offered to start payment of dues only after 25 years and that too only with 1 per cent interest. Earlier the RBI, the SBI and Standard Chartered Bank had claimed that Essar Steel had suppressed facts from the court about the company agreeing to insolvency proceeding­s against it as evident in the minutes of the Joint Lenders’ Forum (JLF) meeting held in June. However, the court said the allegation­s were not material.According to the RBI’s arguments before the court earlier, Essar Steel’s account had an outstandin­g bank exposure of ~45,655 crore, Of this, ~31,671 crore had become non-performing by March 31, 2016. The same increased to ~32,864 crore by March 31 this year.

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