Business Standard

Lenders take 94% haircut in Synergies insolvency

Synergies-Dooray’s acquirerSy­nergies Castingsto­pay~54cr tocreditor­softotal duesofover~900cr

- VEENA MANI & ABHIJIT LELE New Delhi/Mumbai, 24 August

The country’s first corporate resolution plan under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code has caused a ripple in the banking and finance industry, with the NCLT permitting Synergies-Dooray Automotive to settle a minuscule amount of its liabilitie­s. The plan states that the acquirer, Synergies Castings, will pay ~54 crore to its creditors of its total dues of over ~900 crore. Synergies-Dooray owes ~89.26 crore to Synergies Castings, ~122.06 crore to Alchemist Asset Reconstruc­tion Company, ~86.92 crore to Edelweiss ARC and ~673.91 crore to Millennium Finance. Each of the lenders would take a 94 per cent haircut. VEENA

MANI & ABHIJIT LELE write

The country’s first corporate resolution plan under the new Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC) has caused a ripple in the banking and finance industry, with the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) permitting Synergies-Dooray Automotive to settle a minuscule amount of its liabilitie­s.

Synergies-Dooray Automotive used to manufactur­e and supply aluminium alloy wheels to global carmakers.

The resolution plan states that the acquirer, Synergies Castings, would pay ~54 crore to its creditors of its total dues of over ~900 crore, and that, too, at attractive terms. Of the ~54 crore, ~20-odd crore would be paid upfront and the remaining over five years, sources aware of the insolvency proceeding­s said.

The principal amount of the debt was ~215 crore, the source said. The remaining ~685 crore includes interest, statutory dues and payments to other creditors.

“If the assets of the company were to be liquidated, creditors would have barely received an eighth of what they have got (about ~7 crore) in the current restructur­ing process,” the person said.

Kolkata-based Mamta Binani, who was the resolution profession­al for the case, had received plans from three entities — S.M.B. Ashes Industries, Synergies Castings and Suias Industries. The resolution profession­al recommende­d Synergies Castings’ plan to the NCLT, which was accepted by the Hyderabad bench of the tribunal earlier this month. Synergies Castings is a company related to Synergies-Dooray Automotive.

Synergies-Dooray Automotive owes ~89.26 crore to Synergies Castings, ~122.06 crore to Alchemist Asset Reconstruc­tion Company (ARC), ~86.92 crore to Edelweiss ARC and ~673.91 crore to Millennium Finance.

Edelweiss ARC had taken over the debt from EXIM Bank, which had earlier pursued legal remedies to recover its loan from the company. Each of these lenders would take a 94 per cent haircut.

However, Edelweiss ARC has issues with the resolution plan. It had raised the issues with the NCLT earlier and said that Millennium Finance was wrongly included in the committee of creditors, and that it was a related party. Under the IBC, obligation­s and dues of related parties should not be considered in a resolution plan.

Edelweiss ARC is now planning to approach the National Company Law Appellate Tribunal challengin­g the NCLT order. An Edelweiss ARC executive was not available for comment.

Synergies-Dooray is one of the 93,000 cases that were pending with the Board for Industrial and Financial Restructur­ing (BIFR) and transferre­d to the NCLT under the IBC.

Synergies-Dooray’s case was one of the early cases to be filed with the NCLT under the code. The IBC allows a company to restructur­e itself in a time-bound fashion.

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