As per the resolution proposal, banks would recover over 90 per cent of their claims against Essar Steel, amounting to over 40,000 crore.
The
State
Bank of India (SBI), the lead banker of the bankrupt Essar Steel,
is likely to settle dues of other lenders as it received Rs 40,000
crore on Friday from ArcelorMittal, which is going to takeover the
company bringing to an end to the much-prolonged resolution process.
The
SBI may settle the dues of all the other lenders on Monday.
The
development followed the tabling of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy
Code (Second Amendment) Bill, 2019, in the Lok Sabha on Thursday,
which also provides for protection of buyers from criminal
proceedings against previous promoters of the bankrupt firm.(Share
Market News)
ArcelorMittal
had kept the promised Rs 42,000 crore in an escrow account, but
didn't release it immediately after the Supreme Court's order in the
case last month, as the company wanted immunity for Essar Steel's
assets from probe against its previous promoters.
The
SBI had the largest exposure to Essar
Steel of over Rs 13,000 crore, while the amount approved by the
committee of creditors (CoC) stood at Rs 12,161 crore. The other
lenders of Essar Steel included IDBI Bank, Canara Bank and Punjab
National Bank.
Both
ArcelorMittal and SBI, however, are yet to respond to questions sent
by IANS.
As
per the resolution proposal, banks would recover over 90 per cent of
their claims against Essar Steel, amounting to over 40,000 crore. The
operational creditors would initially get Rs 196 crore, and another
Rs 1,000 crore later, allowed by the CoC, taking the total repayment
to Rs 1,196 crore.
The
resolution of Essar Steel can be marked as a landmark in the
3-year-old Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC). A major roadblock in
the resolution was removed by the Supreme Court on November 15 as it
set aside the National Company Law Appellate Tribunal's (NCLAT)
ruling that provided for equal distribution of proceeds between
financial and operational creditors.
The
Essar case, which was among the first 12 cases to be referred by the
Reserve Bank of India (RBI) for resolution, faced several hurdles as
its promoter Prashant Ruia also tried to bid for the company and
moved the appellate tribunal for rejection of the ArcelorMittal's Rs
42,000 crore bid.
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