Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Firms seek relief on loan contracts

Businesses are seeking concession­s on repayment timelines amid worries of erosion in earnings

- Ridhima Saxena and Shayan Ghosh ridhima.s@livemint.com

MUMBAI: Companies in India are revisiting their loan contracts and seeking concession­s from lenders on repayment timelines and financial covenants as they worry about a sharp erosion in earnings because of strict restrictio­ns during the nationwide lockdown.

The financial impact is being felt across sectors, as evident in a survey conducted in May by Confederat­ion of Indian Industry (CII) among 300 companies.

The survey, which was released on May 2, showed that 65% of the companies expect revenues to decline nearly 40% in the June quarter. This will severely impact the ability of these companies to maintain the financial parameters promised to lenders.

Given these challenges, many companies are going back to lenders to renegotiat­e their loan agreements as they fear they may not be able to adhere to certain financial covenants due to disruption­s caused by covid-19. Financial covenants in loan contracts are based on achievemen­t of certain prearrange­d financial projection­s, which are tested on a particular date, usually on an annual basis.

These loan terms commonly include hitting financial ratios such as the ratio between net debt and earnings before interest, taxes, depreciati­on and amortisati­on (Ebitda), debt-to-equity ratio, interest cover ratio, debt service coverage ratio and fixed asset coverage ratio.

If the borrower fails to meet these targets on or before the reporting date, the lender could accelerate the loan repayment cycle or recall the loan facility.

“In a loan agreement, force majeure events such as the ongoing pandemic crisis typically do not give any relief to the borrowers from their repayment obligation­s. Therefore, borrowers for whom the testing date is near are now approachin­g their lenders to request them to not call any defaults or any breach of financial covenants,” said Siddharth Srivastava, partner at law firm Khaitan and Co.

A force majeure implies disruption caused by an unanticipa­ted and chance occurrence beyond the control of either party.

Experts believe that most lenders will take an accommodat­ing stance on covenants, given the market conditions.

 ??  ?? A CII survey conducted among 300 companies showed that 65% of the firms expect revenues to decline nearly 40% in the June quarter.
A CII survey conducted among 300 companies showed that 65% of the firms expect revenues to decline nearly 40% in the June quarter.

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