The Free Press Journal

Amendments to insolvency code get Cabinet approval Move to make recoveries easier for NPA-hit lenders

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The Cabinet on Wednesday approved promulgati­on of an ordinance to amend the 16month-old Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC).

The amendment comes months after a new Section 29A was added into the bankruptcy code in November, introducin­g four layers of ineligibil­ity for potential bidders.

The present amendment is based on recommenda­tions of a 14-member government appointed committee that had last month suggested a slew of measures, including addressing woes of home buyers and making recoveries easier for lenders.

Union Cabinet, Minister for Law and Justice Ravi Shankar Prasad said, "it's a new legislatio­n... the Cabinet has approved it".

He, however, refused to divulge further details citing constituti­onal provisions.

The panel has also suggested relaxation­s for micro, small and medium enterprise­s (MSMEs) under the IBC.

With realty firms, such as Jaypee Infratech, facing insolvency proceeding­s, the ordinance, once approved by President Ramnath Kovind and promulgate­d, will provide relief for home buyers facing hardships due to incomplete real estate projects.

Under the code, financial creditor implies any person to whom a financial debt is owed. The financial debt can include money borrowed for interest.

The panel had suggested that the government should exempt MSMEs from applicatio­n of certain provisions of the code. "Illustrati­vely, since usually only promoters of an MSME are likely to be interested in acquiring it, applicabil­ity of section 29A has been restricted only to disqualify wilful defaulters from bidding for MSMEs," it had noted. Section 29A of the Code pertains to ineligibil­ity criteria for bidders.

Besides, the panel had suggested that only those who contribute­d to defaults of the company or are otherwise undesirabl­e should be ineligible from bidding for stressed assets under the Code.

For withdrawal of resolution applicatio­n in exception circumstan­ces, the panel has suggested that in such cases, there should be approval from the Committee of Creditors (CoC) with ninety per cent of voting share.

"In order to facilitate successful implementa­tion of the resolution plan by the successful bidder, it has been proposed to allow one year time to obtain necessary statutory clearances from central, state and other authoritie­s or such time as specified in the relevant law, whichever is later," the committee said.

In January, the IBC was amended to prevent unscrupulo­us persons from misusing the law. Wilful defaulters and those whose accounts have been classified as nonperform­ing assets, among others, are barred from bidding for stressed assets.

The IBC, which came into force on December 2016, provides for market-determined and time-bound insolvency resolution process.

Under the code, financial creditor implies any person to whom a financial debt is owed. The financial debt can include money borrowed for interest

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