Business Standard

Insolvency Board proposes, Reserve Bank disposes

Central bank says info utilities can source all informatio­n only from credit bureaus

- SUBHOMOY BHATTACHAR­JEE

Even as the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Board of India (IBBI) has issued standards for public informatio­n registries or informatio­n utilities to make the bankruptcy process work smoother, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has thrown a spanner in the works.

Unless resolved soon, the dispute could prolong bankruptcy litigation and hurt the recovery of capital from companies that face sell-off or liquidatio­n.

The dispute is simple. Should any entity other than credit bureaus (Cibil, etc) have independen­t access to a company’s financial informatio­n as sourced from banks? The IBBI feels it is necessary, but the RBI differs.

The bankruptcy law requires banks to provide legally verified copies of their relevant documents to informatio­n utilities. Section 215 of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC) obliges a financial creditor to submit financial informatio­n to informatio­n utilities. These utilities will be record keepers of such documents, storing them for providing informatio­n that can be drawn upon by courts or tribunals.

Since the utilities have to also ensure that these documents are certified true by both parties to the dispute, the lenders and the borrowers, they become verified documents on which the courts and tribunals can rely on to pass quick judgments. The RBI has issued an amendment to a gazette notificati­on in August this year that apparently defeats this role of the informatio­n utilities. It has mandated that the informatio­n utilities set up under the bankruptcy regime are obliged to source all informatio­n only from credit bureaus.

So the primary sourcing of informatio­n from the banks has to be carried out by the bureaus, who will then pass them on to the utilities, depending on their discretion. The dispute became big enough to land on the table of the Financial Stability and Developmen­t Council (FSDC) at its last meeting.

The FSDC brings the Indian financial regulators together under the chairmansh­ip of the finance minister to assess the risk-reward environmen­t of the sector. Specific issues that require detailed assessment are handled by a sub-committee of the FSDC headed by the RBI governor. This committee has given the IBBI the go-ahead to discuss with banks if they would want to share such data with the informatio­n utilities. India has obtained a full-fledged bankruptcy law in 2016 and more than 400 cases have already been filed in the courts since.

But as the RBI has not withdrawn the amended gazette notificati­on, banks are obviously reluctant to share financial informatio­n about companies despite prodding by the bankruptcy board. In a letter to M S Sahoo, chairman of the IBBI, S Ramann, managing director of the first such utility, National e- Governance Services (NeSL), has made the same point. “…since the financial creditors squarely by the RBI, in absence of a notificati­on/direction by the RBI allowing or directing the financial creditors to submit financial informatio­n with NeSL in accordance with provision of the IBC, the purpose of the IBC could not be realised absolutely”.

The RBI did not respond to this story. Others involved in the issue did not wish to comment because of the sensitivit­y of the subject. The IBBI has also argued that informatio­n kept with the informatio­n utilities can be accessed by domestic and foreign creditors to the company that is headed for bankruptcy courts.

Credit informatio­n bureaus cannot give out such informatio­n which cripples the rights of the lenders to secure a fair deal in cases of bankruptcy.

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