Business Standard

HC dismisses Srei promoters’ writ plea against RBI

- SUBRATA PANDA Mumbai, 7 October

The Bombay High Court on Thursday dismissed the writ petition by Srei Group promoters against the Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI’S) move to supersede the boards of two group companies. The division bench of the HC presided over by Ujjal Bhuyan and Madhav Jamdar said they are not inclined to entertain the matter after hearing arguments from both sides.

The RBI can move the NCLT for initiating insolvency proceeding­s against the two Srei Group companies, whose boards it had superseded earlier this week, citing governance issues. The promoters of

Srei Group, Adisri Commercial and Hemant Kanoria, moved the HC late on Wednesday night seeking a stay on the insolvency proceeding­s against the group companies.

Hemant Kanoria, founder Srei Group, in a statement said, “The Srei Group has been making full efforts to repay creditors in a structured manner. It is important to note that the Srei Group had submitted a proposal to pay the full outstandin­g amount to banks under a scheme filed under Section 230 of the Companies Act 2013 earlier in October 2020. The banks neither accepted it nor proposed a payment schedule acceptable to them. Instead the lenders have been controllin­g the company’s cash flow since November 2020. Almost ~3,000 crore has been collected by them, of which they have been disbursing to themselves and there were no defaults.

“We were also exploring a fund raise and were in active talks with two strategic investors to infuse a capital of ~2,000, crore which would have brought relief. We deny all the allegation­s of diversion of funds against Srei companies and with RBI’S action and now the high court’s decision we will explore various other legal options.”

The RBI said it had been pointing out governance issues in the Srei Group companies in 2016 and gave the companies enough time to get their house in order. It said inspection reports have thrown up shocking revelation­s that the group companies were involved in related party transactio­ns, disbursed loans to existing NPA accounts via round-tripping of funds, and also indulged in evergreeni­ng of loans, and in dubious lending activities and accounting adjustment­s.

The RBI said inspection revealed Srei Infrastruc­ture Finance Limited (SIFL) as of March 2020, did not meet the regulatory requiremen­ts on capital adequacy and net owned funds. All the parameters were in red and they also reported very high divergence when it comes to reported non-performing assets (NPAS) and their extent.

The RBI counsel said, as of March 2020, gross NPAS were about 35 per cent of the loan book, while they reported gross NPAS of 9.18 per cent.

Also, only 3.3 per cent of their loan book was towards infrastruc­ture financing against the regulatory requiremen­t of 75 per cent of the loan book, the RBI counsel said.

Srei Group promoters said they acted on the red flags pointed out by the regulator and are in talks with two overseas investors — Makara Capital and Arena Investors — who are willing to put in more than ~4,000 crore.

Srei promoters moved the HC late on Wednesday night seeking a stay on the insolvency proceeding­s against the group companies

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