Business Standard

IL&FS CAN RAISE ~700 BILLION BY ASSET SALE: LIC

LIC also says it is open to raising stake in the firm

- ARUP ROYCHOUDHU­RY & DEV CHATTERJEE More on business-standard.com

Beleaguere­d IL&FS can raise up to ~700 billion by selling its assets, the Life Insurance Corporatio­n of

India Chairman V K Sharma said in on Friday. LIC was open to raising stake in the firm by participat­ing in its rights issue, he added. Sharma, along with State Bank of India Chairman Rajnish Kumar and Central Bank of India Managing Director Pallav Mohapatra, met Economic Affairs Secretary Subhash Garg in the finance ministry on Friday to discuss options to bail out IL&FS.

ARUP ROYCHOUDHU­RY &

DEV CHATTERJEE write

Beleaguere­d IL&FS can raise up to ~700 billion by selling its assets, the Life Insurance Corporatio­n of India Chairman VK Sharma said in New Delhi on Friday. LIC was open to raising stake in the company by participat­ing in its rights issue, he added.

Sharma, along with State Bank of India Chairman Rajnish Kumar and Central Bank of India Managing Director Pallav Mohapatra, met Economic Affairs Secretary Subhash Garg in the finance ministry on Friday to discuss options to bail out IL&FS.

Earlier in the day, the Reserve Bank of India also met IL&FS shareholde­rs in Mumbai. The meeting was attended by IL&FS Chairman Hemant Bhargava and top officials of Orix Corporatio­n of Japan. The meeting was called by the RBI to discuss how the shareholde­rs plan to help IL&FS to tide over the crisis. Speaking to reporters before the meeting in New Delhi, Garg said the government was monitoring the situation closely and would ensure there is no undue impact on the markets due to IL&FS.

“IL&FS is a large company in infrastruc­ture. It has a lot of connection with government department­s and does a lot of public-private partnershi­p projects and therefore is an important, significan­t entity. The Centre will take measures to see that there is no undue impact on what happens in IL&FS,” Garg said.

Sharma said around ~700 billion could be recovered from IL&FS’ asset sales, and the shareholde­rs were trying to find a solution to the rest of the ~910 billion debt. When asked if the public sector behemoth would buy more stake in IL&FS, Sharma said all options were on the table.

IL&FS, which is hosting its shareholde­rs’ meeting in Mumbai on Saturday, has sought to raise ~45 billion from its shareholde­rs to meet its liquidity crisis.

LIC owns 25.34 per cent in IL&FS and HDFC 9.02 per cent. Central Bank of India (7.67 per cent) and State Bank of India (6.42 per cent) own small stakes in IL&FS, which defaulted on debt repayments since mid-September. The Indian institutio­ns jointly hold around 49 per cent in IL&FS while Orix Corporatio­n, Japan, owns 23.54 per cent and the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority 12.56 per cent.

The rights issue will help the company to meet its immediate demand for funds from its several subsidiari­es which have also defaulted to loans. IL&FS is raising shares at ~150 a share. Some of the shareholde­rs like Central Bank of India are not interested at investing at a premium for the company. With LIC and State Bank of India agreeing to pump in more money into the company, insiders said the institutio­n will be able to meet its commitment­s. But most of IL&FS lenders are gearing up for a haircut. “A lender can expect a 30-40 per cent haircut,” said a banker.

IL&FS has moved the NCLT on Monday “seeking certain reliefs” in connection with filing of scheme of arrangemen­t and said the scheme will be prepared in compliance with applicable laws and subject to necessary consents of the shareholde­rs, creditors and board of directors of the relevant entities, the company said in a filing with the Bombay Stock Exchange. The NCLT is yet to hear the petition.

Sections 230 to 240 of the Companies Act, 2013, contain provisions on compromise­s, arrangemen­ts and amalgamati­ons, that covers compromise or arrangemen­ts, mergers and amalgamati­ons, and corporate debt restructur­ing. After an applicatio­n is filed with the National Company Law Tribunal, the tribunal calls for a meeting of its shareholde­rs and lenders and then the company’s debt restructur­ing plan will be put to vote. The shareholde­rs of IL&FS will be informed about the debt recast plan on Saturday at the annual general meeting of shareholde­rs. One of IL&FS’s Small Industries Developmen­t Bank of India (Sidbi) has also moved the NCLT Mumbai against IL&FS seeking its money back. IL&FS owes close to ~10 billion to Sidbi.

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