Business Standard

SC clears decks for Arcelor’s Essar bid

Court rejects operationa­l creditors’ plea to be heard at tribunal, says promoters acting through them

- AASHISH ARYAN & VINAY UMARJI

The Supreme Court (SC) on Monday dismissed a plea by 28 operationa­l creditors of Essar Steel seeking to be heard by the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) before any decision was taken on ArcelorMit­tal’s bid for the company. The court also rejected their plea seeking a stay on the National Company Law Appellate Tribunal’s (NCLAT’s) order asking the NCLT Ahmedabad Bench to take a decision on ArcelorMit­tal’s bid by February 11.

Now, the NCLT will be able to decide the fate of ArcelorMit­tal’s bid quickly.

The court was of the opinion that the promoters of Essar Steel were acting through the operationa­l creditors to delay the insolvency process. It said 571 days had passed since the insolvency process began for Essar Steel, and it must not be delayed. The deadline for an insolvency process is 270 days.

Operationa­l creditors such as Indian Oil Corporatio­n and the Gujarat government had moved court, claiming dues of ~3,500 crore and ~500 crore, respective­ly.

In its order, the NCLAT had said only a representa­tive of the operationa­l creditors could be given the opportunit­y to raise any objections to ArcelorMit­tal’s resolution plan for Essar Steel.

On Monday, the NCLT, while reserving its order on the objections raised by operationa­l creditors, asked all of them to give a written submission by February 13.

Essar’s committee of creditors (CoC) had earlier argued in the NCLT that all operationa­l creditors with dues of less than ~1 crore would together get ~196 crore. Those with dues of ~1 crore or more would get a token ~1.

If Essar went into liquidatio­n, however, the operationa­l creditors would get nothing. So, ArcelorMit­tal’s ~42,000-crore bid was the best option for them. The CoC’s counsel told the NCLT that they had tried to ensure that operationa­l creditors would not get less than what they were entitled to during liquidatio­n.

On Tuesday, the NCLT will continue hearing arguments of Essar Steel’s suspended management led by petitioner­s, promoter Prashant Ruia, former managing director Dilip Oommen, and former project director Rajiv Kumar Bhatnagar. They are seeking a copy of ArcelorMit­tal’s resolution plan.

Alleyes on NCLAT

The NCLAT had on February 4 asked the NCLT to start hearing ArcelorMit­tal’s resolution plan, submitted under Section 31 of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC), and decide on the matter by February 11 (Monday). If this did not happen, said the NCLAT, it would take over the matter and decide on it by February 12 (Tuesday).

Meanwhile, Essa r’ s promoters have also moved the NCLAT against NCLT' s January 29 order rejecting their ~54,389-crore debt-settlement offer. It is likely to be heard on Tuesday as well.

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