The National - News

NMC Health custodians to pursue claims after revamp

- MICHAEL FAHY

The joint administra­tors of UAE healthcare group NMC Health have said they intend to begin legal action in a bid to recover part of the $4 billion that disappeare­d from the company.

Cases are expected to be filed once the group’s restructur­ing through a Deeds of Company Arrangemen­t, or Doca, is complete, said Richard Fleming, joint administra­tor from Alvarez & Marsal.

A Doca refers to binding arrangemen­t between a company and its creditors that details how the former’s assets and operations are to be dealt with.

“Investigat­ions on the cause and facilitati­on of the fraud, which was catalyst to the crisis that befell NMC in February 2020, is ongoing and progressin­g at pace,” said Mr Fleming.

“Following the formal launch of the Doca, the joint administra­tors intend to start commencing legal actions.”

NMC Health was placed into administra­tion in April last year. Problems at the UAE’s biggest healthcare group first emerged in December 2019 after activist investor Muddy Waters issued a report claiming the company had under-reported its debts and inflated the value of its assets.

That triggered an investigat­ion that uncovered more than $4.4bn of previously unreported debt. In total, $6.4bn worth of claims were filed with administra­tors.

The proposed restructur­ing involves bringing the company’s debt back down to a more manageable level of $2.25bn, with creditors receiving equity stakes in return for part of the $4bn-plus written off.

The deal had received “firm commitment­s” from most creditors, with companies representi­ng 99 per cent of the allocated value in the restructur­ed group acceding to proposals, administra­tors said.

However, it is understood that Dubai Islamic Bank, which is owed about $425m by the healthcare group and is involved in ongoing legal disputes with NMC entities in onshore Dubai and Sharjah courts, has not agreed to the restructur­ing. DIB did not immediatel­y respond to a request to comment.

In a progress report filed in May, NMC Health’s administra­tors said they were continuing “to progress the investigat­ion and formulatio­n of claims” in a bid to pursue some of the missing money.

They issued letters before legal action to the group’s former auditors, EY, and were in the process of issuing letters against “certain former directors of the company”, they said, without naming them.

EY told The National at the time that it had “received correspond­ence from the administra­tors to NMC Health indicating an intention to pursue a claim”, but declined to comment further.

The progress report said administra­tors had also received informatio­n requests from “various regulators and law enforcemen­t agencies” including the UK’s Serious Fraud Office and the Financial Conduct Authority, as well as the US Securities and Exchange Commission and the Department of Justice.

NMC Health’s biggest lender, Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank, has already taken action in the UK and UAE courts to freeze the assets of former directors and of the group’s founder and former chairman, BR Shetty.

Mr Shetty has denied any wrongdoing at the company, saying that bank accounts, cheques and bank guarantees were created in his name but without his knowledge, using forged signatures.

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