Business Standard

COMPANIES

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▶ Uttam Galva offers 51% of outstandin­g loan to avoid asset auction

▶ Bhushan Steel staff move NCLT against Tata Steel bid

Uttam Galva Steels has offered to settle the ~56.5 billion loan default by paying 51 per cent amount upfront to the public sector banks so as to abort the auctioning of the company’s assets.

The company, part of the Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI) second list of loan defaulters who have been referred to the bankruptcy tribunal for insolvency proceeding­s, on March 15 wrote to the State Bank of India (SBI), proposing a “one-time settlement” of all dues of lenders “through an upfront payment mechanism”.

SBI is the largest of the 18 banks that have to recover ~56.5 billion from the company.

Uttam Galva has offered to pay ~28.8 billion upfront to settle with all of them and take the firm out of the insolvency proceeding­s.

Calls made to Uttam Galva Managing Director and CEO Anuj R Miglani for comments, remained unanswered. According to the five-page letter reviewed by PTI, the company proposed “a one-time settlement (OTS) of the dues of lenders to the extent of 51 per cent of the outstandin­g claims as on the date of non-performing asset (NPA), that is Q1 FY17”.

SBI has the highest dues at ~15.3 billion followed by Canara Bank — ~8.6 billion and Punjab National Bank — ~6.6 billion.

If the proposal is accepted, lenders would have to take a haircut or write-off 49 per cent of the dues. It may also lead other companies to file similar settlement applicatio­ns with their lenders, stalling the insolvency and bankruptcy proceeding­s initiated against 12 big loan defaulters.

In the letter to SBI, Uttam Galva said its loan account had turned into an NPA during Q1 of 2016-17 fiscal year due to adverse operating conditions.

“Being an OTS and not debt restructur­ing, the proposal doesn’t fall under the requiremen­ts specified in the RBI guidelines of February 12, 2018 (on insolvency and bankruptcy proceeding­s). Hence, the procedure for debt restructur­ing mentioned in the circular such as independen­t credit evaluation etc may not be required,” Uttam Galva has said.

Stating that its proposal has minimum payment risk for the lenders as the entire amount is paid upfront, the company said that since the account has already been classified as D1 by the lenders and referred to NCLT, 50 per cent provisioni­ng must have already been done by lenders.

“In this case, an OTS of 51 per cent would not adversely impact the financial performanc­e of the lenders,” it said. “We once again request lenders to consider this proposal as it is in the best interest of all the stakeholde­rs.” In future, “we assure you our complete cooperatio­n in all the matters and reiterate our commitment to address all issues to your full satisfacti­on to the best of our ability,” it added.

 ??  ?? If the proposal is accepted, lenders would have to take a haircut or write-off 49% of the dues
If the proposal is accepted, lenders would have to take a haircut or write-off 49% of the dues

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