Jet stopped operations on April 17 leaving over 14,000 employees in the lurch.
The
National
Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) on Thursday admitted the insolvency
petition moved by State Bank of India (SBI) — under section 7 of
the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC) — against Jet
Airways, and instructed that the resolution process be wrapped up
in 90 days as the matter is of national importance.
Typically,
the corporate insolvency resolution process (CIRP) should be
completed in 180 days, and an extra 90 days’ time is granted in
case the process doesn’t conclude in the stipulated period. The
interim resolution professional (RP) has been instructed to submit
fortnightly progress reports on the CIRP process, with the first to
be filed on July 5, the day of the next hearing.
The
tribunal also declared a moratorium on recovery of dues from Jet, the
country’s first aviation firm to be admitted for bankruptcy. Jet
had over 120 planes, of which only about a dozen have not been
de-registered by the civil aviation regulator. The rest of the planes
had their leases terminated and many of them have been inducted by
other airlines in India or abroad.
Also,
on a day which saw the beleaguered airline being admitted under the
insolvency process, Jet shares posted their highest single-day gain
on the bourses on Thursday, rising 93 per cent on the BSE to end at
Rs 64 after declining 75 per cent in the previous 10 sessions. Such a
movement in share prices is highly unusual.
ALSO
READ: Jet
Airways: Exit is best
Moreover,
presiding judges V P Singh and Ravi Kumar Duraisamy did not take
cognizance of the Dutch court order that had declared Jet bankrupt,
given that cross-border insolvency is still not in place under the
IBC and because the jurisdiction of the corporate debtor rests with
the tribunal (as the company is listed in India).
SBI,
in its plea, said the airline had defaulted on working capital loans
of up to Rs 970 crore. Jet had a working capital facility of Rs 505
crore. This account was overdrawn by around Rs 460 crore for 30 days.
The lender had also provided a term loan facility of Rs 1,292 crore
to the carrier, which owes over Rs 8,000 crore to a consortium of 26
lenders.
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