Deccan Chronicle

Costly homecoming for Mittal

- SWANSY AFONSO & UPMANYU TRIVEDI

New Delhi, March 11: The National Company Law Appellate Tribunal on Monday pulled up SBI, the lead lender of Reliance Communicat­ions, along with others for giving a 'false impression' to monetise `37,000 crore from asset sales of the telecom company to Reliance Jio.

A two-member bench headed by Chairman Justice S.J. Mukhopadha­ya came down heavily on the lenders, specially SBI, and asked why a "proceeding­s against them should not be initiated" for this. "You have failed. JLF (Joint Lenders' Forum) has failed. No sale took place," the bench observed.

The bench said the lenders gave a "golden outlook" to NCLAT on recovering around `37,000 crore from sale of assets but nothing happened. It's been a tough year as India's fourth-richest man has struggled to return to his roots.

When Lakshmi Mittal, 68, left India for a vacation through Asia more than four decades ago, he didn't plan to stay in Indonesia and lay the foundation for a steel empire that spans the globe and generated $5 billion in profits last year. Yet that's what he did, even as a string of efforts to establish himself in India's steel market failed until now.

Mittal's global giant ArcelorMit­tal is finally nearing the end of a yearlong battle to break into India with the $5.9 billion acquisitio­n of Essar Steel India. The Indian steelmaker was put on the block after its lenders approached the court to recover about $7 billion in dues.

The forced sale of the 10 million tonnes a year mill has hit numerous roadblocks, including rules that compelled Mittal to shell out an extra $1 billion to clear the dues of two firms where he held some stake and to reportedly sell his holdings in one of them for 1 rupee a share.

Perhaps the biggest hurdle was posed by Essar Group's Ruia brothers, who lost control of the mill after a regulator pushed it into bankruptcy New Delhi, March 11: Three directors of erstwhile board of Essar Steel on Monday approached the National Company Law Appellate Tribunal (NCLAT) against a lower bankruptcy court order that allowed takeover of the company by ArcelorMit­tal. The matter was mentioned before a twomember bench headed by Chairman Justice S J

court. Challenges from Essar Group, rival bidders and some creditors have seen ArcelorMit­tal make dozens of trips to court since an initial bid in February 2018 - dwarfing its five-month long campaign for Arcelor SA in what was the industry's biggest merger. Mukhopadha­ya, which asked it to be listed after the Ahmedabad bench of the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) posts its full written order. The three directors of Essar Steel are Prashant Ruia, Dilip Oommen and Rajiv Bhatnagar. Standard Chartered Bank has also approached the appellate tribunal against the order. — PTI

"We have acquired lots of companies around the world. For the first time, we have been sued for acquiring a company," Aditya Mittal, Mittal's 43year-old son and the company's Chief Financial Officer, said in January. "These are unique circumstan­ces."

The legal wrangling landed in the Supreme Court last year, setting precedents for India's twoyear-old bankruptcy law. The drama also sounded a warning to other founders, who till recently were accustomed to an ineffectua­l court system and to walking away from debts without serious consequenc­es. Lakshmi Mittal was born in a village in Rajasthan, where, he has said, a lack of electricit­y and water made his early years difficult. Mittal joined his father's steel business early and went on to set up Mittal Steel in 1976 in Indonesia, before spreading out to Trinidad, Mexico and Germany. In 1994 the family business was split. Mittal's initial success overseas helped him decide that his future lay outside India, he has said, and he also wanted to avoid conflicts around expansion plans within the family.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India