Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

FRL lenders clear recast, await Kamath panel nod

A group of 28 lenders approved extension of loan repayment period by up to 2 years

- shayan.g@livemint.com Shayan Ghosh

MUMBAI: Future Retail Ltd (FRL) is a step closer to a debt recast, with a group of 28 lenders approving a proposal for this and allowing it to extend the loan repayment period by up to two years, subject to the approval by a central bank committee, the company said.

“The said resolution plan, which remains subject to the approval of the expert committee under the chairmansh­ip of KV Kamath, constitute­d by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), has been approved by the lenders to the existing debt of the company,” the company said in a late evening statement to the stock exchanges on Saturday.

Future Retail’s board has also approved the plan, the company said. FRL’s lenders include Union Bank of India, Bank of India, Bank of Baroda, State Bank of India, Indian Bank, Central Bank, Axis Bank and IDBI Bank, among others.

FRL owes banks ₹6,278 crore, showed data from CARE Ratings. On an aggregate basis, Future Group owes around $3 billion in loans and lenders are trying to figure out a way to ensure the least possible hit on asset quality. The group also owes mutual funds that had invested in securities sold by

group entities, including Rivaaz Trade Ventures, NuFuture Digital India and Future Ideas Co. For Indian banks, with bad loans of ₹7.38 trillion, a soured asset of that size will only make matters worse.

The firm opted to restructur­e loans under the RBI’s 6 August circular as the pandemic impacted long-term business viability and led to significan­t financial stress across industries, it said. The debt burden, it said, has become disproport­ionate relative to the cash flow generated by the firm because of the multiple lockdowns since the Covid-19 outbreak.

Covid-19 has made a comeback now as have state-specific lockdowns and curbs, threatenin­g to dislodge emerging signs

of recovery. Bankers are downplayin­g the impact of the second wave but are concerned that curbs will hurt the movement of goods and services, affecting repayment capabiliti­es.

Other features of the recast include an interest moratorium between March 1, 2020, and September 30, 2021. Interest during this period will be converted into funded interest term loan (FITL), payable by December 2021. FITL is a fresh loan that helps stressed borrowers repay existing interest over time and is used in most deep recasts. All penal interest and charges, default premiums, processing fees unpaid since March 2020 till implementa­tion will be fully waived off.

The deadline to implement

this scheme is April 26, the company said.

Debt raised through non-convertibl­e debentures (NCDs) issued by Future Retail will also come under the recast scheme and the company has received written consent from all bondholder­s, it said. Under the resolution plan, redemption of three separate NCD series will be reschedule­d between FY23 and FY26, without any change in interest rate. Vistra ITCL (India) Ltd and CentBank Financial Services Ltd are debenture trustees to these bonds. “It may be noted that 5.6% US senior secured notes 2025 issued by the company and non-convertibl­e debentures issued by the firm to certain trusts are not part of the resolution plan,” it said.

 ?? MINT ?? On an aggregate basis, Future Group owes around $3 billion in loans and lenders are trying to figure out a way to ensure the least possible hit on asset quality.
MINT On an aggregate basis, Future Group owes around $3 billion in loans and lenders are trying to figure out a way to ensure the least possible hit on asset quality.

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