Business Standard

Srei’s great leap back

The journey from infrastruc­ture financing giant to RBI administra­tion underlines the high-risk nature of the NBFC business

- ISHITA AYAN DUTT & ABHIJIT LELE Kolkata/mumbai, 7 October

Srei promoter Hemant Kanoria sees similariti­es between his predicamen­t and the apocryphal story of King Porus after he lost the famous Battle of Hydaspes to Alexander the Great. Asked how he wished to be treated, Porus apparently replied, “Treat me as a king would treat another king.”

“We didn’t even say that. But we are also a lender with borrowers and in the same position,” Kanoria said.

The reference is in the context of banks approachin­g the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) for a resolution that resembles that of the fraud-hit Dewan Housing Finance Ltd, which was recently acquired by Piramal Enterprise­s via the bankruptcy courts.

On Monday, the central bank superseded the boards of Srei Infrastruc­ture Finance (SIFL) and Srei Equipment Finance (SEFL) and appointed an administra­tor. SIFL is a listed entity under a holding trust called Kanoria Foundation and SEFL is a whollyowne­d subsidiary.

A debt resolution plan will now be worked out under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Rules, 2019, bringing the curtains down on discussion­s of a debt recast with banks. The borrowings of both entities, including exposure to banks, is at about ~30,000 crore. Banking sources said the entire ~30,000 crore has turned bad loan.

On Wednesday, Adisri Commercial Pvt Ltd, a promoter entity of SIFL, moved the Bombay High Court against the appointmen­t of an administra­tor. On Thursday, the court dismissed the petition. For the Kolkatabas­ed group that has had as partners BNP Paribas (in SEFL, which it later exited) and the Tata group (via its telecom tower company) this is a long drop.

From a small beginning with flour mills, the Kanorias ventured into infrastruc­ture financing for the constructi­on sector about 32 years ago, then equipment financing and went on to become one of the largest nonbanking financial companies (NBFCS) in infrastruc­ture and equipment financing.

The group made a splash in Kolkata’s quiescent business environmen­t. From the tony office in Alipore area — what was once the Russian Consulate — the family built an empire across power, hospitalit­y, real estate, rural digital commerce, apart from infrastruc­ture and equipment financing.

Along the way, the group cut some neat deals. The big one was in 2015 when it sold the telecom tower business, Viom Networks, to American Tower Corporatio­n in one of the largest foreign direct investment­s in the Indian telecom sector at the time. Srei, along with other Kanoria entities, raked in ~2,952 crore.

The idea of the telecom tower business was born in 2005 under Quippo Telecom with 50 towers; in 2009, it entered into a partnershi­p with Tata Teleservic­es, creating Viom. At the time of the deal, Viom was one of the largest independen­t telecom tower companies with over 42,000 towers.

But the infrastruc­ture sector went through a slowdown in 2016-2017 and provisioni­ng guidelines from the RBI pertaining to non-performing assets (NPAS) prompted Srei to start moving away from infrastruc­ture financing and focus on equipment financing.

“In the past four or five years, RBI guidelines for the larger NBFCS stipulated that certain provisions have to be made on 90 days, 180 days, and so on. If we make those provisions on an infrastruc­ture asset, it becomes a problem for us,” Kanoria explained.

Banking sources, however, said disburseme­nts by the equipment finance wing were also lower in line with the management’s strategy to slow disburseme­nts in its books and focus on a co-lending model.

Things started going awry after IL&FS’ collapse. Although Srei’s exposure to IL&FS was only about ~1,000 crore, the implosion of this giant made it difficult for all NBFCS to raise money from the market, creating a liquidity crisis. In September 2018, SIFL published a media statement to reaffirm its sound financial standing. But an initial public offering (IPO) of SEFL was also shelved postil &fs crisis.

Then, the Covid-19 pandemic hit. The RBI directed all lending institutio­ns to offer a ninemonth moratorium and recast debts of micro, small and medium enterprise­s (MSMES) and infrastruc­ture players. But no such respite was provided for NBFCS, which suffered cash flow shortages as collection from borrowers declined.

In October 2020, Srei approached the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) with a repayment scheme that proposed to pay full dues to all creditors in a “structured manner”. But banks were not in the loop.

That was the tipping point in the equation with bankers. “That led to the bankers getting upset,” Kanoria said. But bankers say that their move was in course with the regulatory process to protect lenders’ interest.

In November, banks took control of the cash flows. They also capped the salaries of senior executives, and between December 2020 and earlier this year, there have been about 250 exits.

In April this year, KPMG was appointed to conduct a forensic audit as part of the proposed debt realignmen­t. That audit is still underway.

But the final straw may have been the probable related-party transactio­ns of ~8,576 crore that the RBI flagged. According to Kanoria, Srei had said it would exit these loans but the process would take time. Banking executives said funding to other group entities is now closed.

Besides SIFL, the listed Kanoria Foundation entities are India Power, Shristi Infrastruc­ture Developmen­t Corporatio­n (real estate and hospitalit­y) and Bharat Road Network (BRNL), a road constructi­on company. Of these companies, BRNL has informed the stock exchanges about the RBI action because SIFL holds a 19.81 per cent stake in it.

There are other unlisted entities under the foundation, Sahaj (rural digital e-commerce) and Quippo (rentals and leasing of infrastruc­ture equipment) being among the major ones.

In the past three decades, the Kanorias have weathered many a crisis, including the NBFC crisis of the 1990s and the global financial crisis in 200809. Will it be able to pull out of this one? Even Hemant Kanoria is unsure. All that he can say at the moment is: “This is the only infrastruc­ture financing company left in the country. So it will be sad to see its death.”

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