Bitter court battles bog down Arcelor, Tata as bankruptcy law is tested
Economy

Bitter court battles bog down Arcelor, Tata as bankruptcy law is tested

The successful resolution of stressed loans, which holds nearly 90 percent of impaired assets is crucial for Modi to clean up the balance sheets of state-run banks. India’s new bankruptcy law is being bogged down by bitter courtroom disputes that include the likes of ArcelorMittal and the Tata Group – jeopardizing the law’s promise of […]

   
A worker uses a cutting torch in a workshop in the Naraina steel and iron market area of New Delh

A worker uses a cutting torch in a workshop in the Naraina steel and iron market area of New Delh | Bloomberg

The successful resolution of stressed loans, which holds nearly 90 percent of impaired assets is crucial for Modi to clean up the balance sheets of state-run banks.

India’s new bankruptcy law is being bogged down by bitter courtroom disputes that include the likes of ArcelorMittal and the Tata Group – jeopardizing the law’s promise of time-bound resolution in a country famous for its sluggish legal system.

None of the 12 large debtor companies that the central bank forced into bankruptcy court in June have been sold yet. The National Company Law Tribunal or NCLT, in charge of the process, has extended a 270-day deadline enshrined in the law for Bhushan Power & Steel Ltd. and Essar Steel India Ltd. by excluding the days under litigation. Others may follow as the courts are inundated with appeals from founders, administrators, lenders, and bidders.

The successful resolution of about $210 billion in stressed loans is crucial to Prime Minister Narendra Modi efforts to clean-up the balance sheets of state-run banks, which hold nearly 90 percent of impaired assets. The first 12 large cases are being closely watched to gauge whether India can hasten the pace of bad-loan recovery, which the World Bank puts at 4.3 years, ranking the nation at 103 for resolving insolvency.

“Discretionary extensions run the risk of setting a dangerous precedent, driving a hole through the very integrity of the code,” said Ran Chakrabarti, a New Delhi-based finance lawyer, and partner at IndusLaw. Should the courts water down the 270-day period, “we’re back to square one, and any hope of a swift liquidation process and an efficient recycling of capital — the very point of any insolvency law — will go out of the window.”

In what was seen as an initial success for the law, Electrosteel Steels Ltd. was awarded to billionaire Anil Agarwal’s Vedanta Ltd. The hurrah was short-lived as the process has now been stalled by a court order following an appeal by a rival bidder.

The company tribunal has repeatedly postponed a verdict on a bid for Monnet Ispat & Power Ltd. by JSW Steel Ltd. and Apollo Global Management LLC-backed Aion Capital Partners. Tata Steel Ltd. is waiting on final approval for its purchase of Bhushan Steel Ltd., even as it appeals an order allowing a late bid by Liberty House Group for Bhushan Power. ArcelorMittal and a VTB Capital-backed consortium are in court over Essar Steel.

Beyond the 12, the fight for Binani Cement Ltd. is also emerging as a test case, with a consortium backed by Bain Capital Credit slugging it out with billionaire Kumar Mangalam Birla’s UltraTech Cement Ltd. While the former had the winning bid under the bankruptcy process, Birla’s company made a late counteroffer and then signed an agreement with Binani’s founders to buy the asset. The matter has been taken to an appellate tribunal and the nation’s supreme court before being referred back to the lenders’ committee.

Bankruptcies Are Booming in India, But Where Are the Judges?

“If in nine months you can’t get a resolution done then you’ve failed the law,” said Shardul S. Shroff, executive chairman of law firm Shardul Amarchand Mangaldas & Co., which represents one of the Binani suitors.

Following is the status of the 12 large defaulters identified by the Reserve Bank of India in June.

Company Claims (INR Billion) 270-Day Deadline Current Status Bhushan Steel  559.9 April 22 NCLT approval pending on offer by Tata Steel Lanco Infratech  515.1 May 4 Administrator may file application for  liquidation Essar Steel 507.8 May 29 Plea by bidders in appeals court on May 17 Bhushan Power  485.2 April 22 Tata Steel’s plea in appeals court due on May 24 on Liberty’s bid Alok Industries 299.1 April 14 NCLT to hear appeals objecting to liquidation on June 11 ABG Shipyard  185.4 April 28 Tribunal extends deadline by excluding period under litigation; NCLT to hear Liberty’s application on June 13 Jaypee Infratech  133.2 May 12 Creditors reject resolution plan by Lakshadweep Investments Electrosteel Steels  133 April 16 Sale to Vedanta put  on hold as appeals court to hear Renaissance plea on May 17 Amtek Auto 125.9 April 20 NCLT decision pending on Liberty resolution plan Monnet Ispat & Energy  104.1 April 13 NCLT hearing on June 25 on  JSW-Aion’s resolution plan Jyoti Structures 80.8 March 31 NCLT nod awaited on resolution plan by unnamed applicant Era Infra Engineering  Not yet filed February 2019 Tribunal admits insolvency case on May 8. – Bloomberg