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Friday, March 29, 2024
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HomeEconomySuzlon jumps ahead of bankers' meet & offers one-time settlement to resolve...

Suzlon jumps ahead of bankers’ meet & offers one-time settlement to resolve $1.4 bn debt

State Bank of India is one of the primary lenders who have been offered the one-time settlement by Suzlon, said sources.

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Mumbai: Suzlon Energy Ltd. jumped the most in five months a day before its lenders are poised to consider the beleaguered wind-turbine maker’s plan to sell its operations and maintenance business to pare debt.
Suzlon shares gained 22.4% Thursday to close at 4.1 rupees in Mumbai paring its losses for the year to 24%. The benchmark BSE Sensex index gained 9.9% this year.

The company plans to offer a so-called one time settlement to the lenders led by State Bank of India using the proceeds of the sale, people with knowledge of the matter said, asking not to be identified as the information is private. Suzlon had a net debt of 95 billion rupees ($1.4 billion) as on March 31, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

A spokesman for SBI and a spokeswoman for Suzlon didn’t immediately respond to an email seeking comment. Approval for the proposal is critical for Suzlon as ratings on its long-term bank facilities were downgraded at Care Ratings Ltd. to D from BB in April.

“Unfortunately, on account of a temporary mismatch in cash flow, the company was unable to fund its scheduled repayment obligations to its lenders,” Suzlon Chief Executive Officer J.P. Chalasani said in an exchange filing in April, reacting to the downgrade. He said the company was actively working with lenders for a debt revamp. – Bloomberg


Also read: Half of world’s electricity will come from the sun and the wind by 2050: Bloomberg research


 

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SourceBloomberg

1 COMMENT

  1. Be pragmatic. That should be the banking system’s approach to effecting recoveries from stressed accounts. The Chinese have a saying : Take a cow to Court and return with a cat. That should not become the fate of the IBC. 2. Bankers are very reluctant, even scared, now to take commercially sound decisions in the interests of their institutions. A 90% write off, so long as one’s hands are clean and safe, is better than taking proactive measures that might reduce that figure substantially. The government needs to devise internal approval and endorsement measures that will keep honest, well intentioned bankers safe, long after they have retired.

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