Hindustan Times (Noida)

Reliance Capital’s bidders seek clarity on process, timeline

- Gopika Gopakumar gopika.g@livemint.com

MUMBAI: Bidders for Reliance Capital and its subsidiari­es have sought greater clarity on the bidding process before raising their offers, while lenders who have put these assets on the block want them to raise their bids first or expect the companies to go into liquidatio­n.

The bidders asked lenders to provide greater clarity about the process at a meeting on Friday, two people familiar with the discussion­s said on the condition of anonymity. The lenders are disappoint­ed that the bids came in far below the liquidatio­n value of Reliance Capital (Rcap) and its subsidiari­es but are hopeful that these offers may be raised.

“Everyone will up their bid, but by how much is the question,” said a banker, one of the two people cited above.

“Everybody knows there will be one more round. Obviously, everybody will keep something back. Everyone has put in bids. Nobody knows what the next step is. Is it going to be a Swiss Challenge or e-auction, or negotiatio­n? Unless the process is clear, why would bidders want to push the bid until we have

the timeframe? Are they trying to close it by December end or January end?” the banker asked.

The lenders will meet again on Tuesday to discuss different options, including a closed envelope bidding process, an auction with a reserve price, or a reverse auction.

After the bidders submitted their offers on Monday, two independen­t companies hired by lenders submitted their estimates on the liquidatio­n value of Reliance Capital and its subsidiari­es to the committee of creditors on Wednesday.

Of these, Duff and Phelps arrived at a liquidatio­n value of ₹12,500 crore, while RBSA pegged it at ₹13,200 crore. However, the highest bid received was a mere ₹5,231 crore—placed by Piramal-cosmea Financial— followed by the Hinduja group at ₹5,060 crore, Ahmedabadb­ased Torrent at ₹4,500 crore and Oaktree at ₹4,200 crore.

Bidders, however, argue that their offers are in line with Life Insurance Corp. of India’s sale of Reliance Capital bonds worth ₹3,400 crore to Ares SSG Capital-backed Assets Care and Reconstruc­tion Enterprise Ltd.

“Stress is there at the core investment company (CIC) level. Both insurance companies are well-performing. The bids are below both the fair market value, which is one year old and also the liquidatio­n value,” said a banker, who is part of Reliance Capital’s committee of creditors.

“LIC’S sale is different as it is an open process, and bidders can buy the debt at 27 cents to a dollar. But that doesn’t mean the company is up for sale at the same reference price,” the banker added.

 ?? MINT ?? The lenders will meet again on Tuesday to discuss different options.
MINT The lenders will meet again on Tuesday to discuss different options.

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