Reliance Capitals lenders decide to propose their own plan to bidders
Amid a standoff over the bidding process for debt-ridden Reliance Capital Ltd (RCL) and its subsidiaries, lenders have rejected the concerns raised by the RBI-appointed administrator and have decided to go ahead with their own proposal, an unprecedented development under the insolvency proceedings, sources said.
Amid a standoff over the bidding process for debt-ridden Reliance Capital Ltd (RCL) and its subsidiaries, lenders have rejected the concerns raised by the RBI-appointed administrator and have decided to go ahead with their own proposal, an unprecedented development under the insolvency proceedings, sources said.
The Committee of Creditors (CoC) has also decided that all the bids of RCL will be on an all cash basis, the sources said on Tuesday.
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Multiple bidders for subsidiaries under the second option will be forced to form a consortium amongst themselves and bid for RCL as a company.
RCL had offered two options to all the bidders. Under the first option, companies could bid for RCL, including its eight subsidiaries or clusters. The second option gave the companies freedom to bid for its subsidiaries, individually or in a combination, the sources said.
Key clusters of RCL are Reliance General Insurance, Reliance Health Insurance, Reliance Nippon Life Insurance, Reliance Asset Reconstruction, and Reliance Securities.
Reserve Bank of India (RBI), on November 29 last year, superseded the board of RCL in view of payment defaults and serious governance issues.
RBI appointed Nageswara Rao Y as the administrator in relation to the Corporate Insolvency Resolution Process (CIRP) of the company.
Around 22 bidders, out of total 55 EOIs received, have bid for Anil Ambani Group firm as a whole company while the rest have bid for different subsidiaries of RCL, individually or in combination, the sources said.
Adani Finserve, Piramal, Yes Bank, IndusInd International Holding are some of the leading names that have bid for RCL at the company level under the first option.
The sources said that now, CoC has also decided to direct all the bidders of second option, who have bid for different subsidiaries of RCL, to form a consortium amongst themselves and then bid for RCL at the company level.
The decision has been taken as all the businesses (subsidiaries/clusters) of RCL are profit-making entities and are well capitalised and management teams for each of the business are also intact, they added.
Hence, there is no requirement of turnaround since none of these entities are facing any stress and are well-run businesses.
Under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC), no compliant plan can be submitted for these subsidiaries as there is no requirement of turnaround because none of these entities is facing any stress and is a well-run business, the sources said.
These consortiums will also have to bid on an all cash basis like bidders under the first option and the bidders under the second option will be given 30 days to form consortium amongst themselves, they added.
This means, a company which has submitted EoI only for life insurance business or general insurance business or securities business of RCL has to form a consortium with other companies who have bid for other businesses of the company. Then, that consortium will submit a financial bid for RCL at the company level.
This bid will also be an all cash bid and will compete with the bids of first option, the sources said, adding that due to this arrangement, competition will go down as the total number of bidders will reduce substantially.
It may even get challenged by some bidders as it is not compliant with IBC norms, the sources said.
Total verified claims of RCL is Rs 23,666 crore and the CoC is scheduled to meet on Wednesday to finalise the Request for Resolution Plan (RFRP) document.
The RFRP was to be issued by April 5 but was delayed due to the differences between CoC and the administrator over the bidding process under the second option.
The administrator and its legal advisors were not in favour of this kind of propsal as they feared that it may get challenged legally by some bidders and this logjam had delayed the finalisation of RFRP document.
RCL is the third large non-banking financial company against which the central bank has initiated bankruptcy proceedings under the IBC. The other two were Srei Group NBFC and Dewan Housing Finance Corporation (DHFL)
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