Haldia’s ₹600 crore scheme to takeover Nagarjuna gets nod

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Haldia Petrochemicals would take over Nagarjuna Oil Corporation Ltd. (NOCL), as per the ₹600-crore scheme of arrangement approved by the National Company Law Tribunal, Chennai.

As per the scheme, secured lenders would get ₹560 crore, or about 6% of their total admitted claims of ₹9,864.16 crore. Lenders include State Bank of India, IDBI Bank, Canara Bank and Syndicate Bank, among others.

NCLT had ordered the liquidation of NOC, after none of the resolutions got through. Later, Haldia submitted a resolution plan under section 230 of Companies Act. Section 230 of the is a mechanism to ensure institutional settlement of disputes between creditors and the company. It ensures that the company has a chance to save itself from insolvency or liquidation by entering into a deal with at least a majority of creditors.

Meanwhile, other claimants are unlikely to get any amounts towards their claims, including statutory authorities, barring priority payments payable as per Section 53 of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code 2016. The shareholders’ equity of ₹1800 crore also gets wiped out.

According to a source, the banks get to recover ₹560 crore out of the principal amount of ₹2,200 crore, which is about 25%. The interest is high because the account turned NPA long before it was referred to the NCLT.

In September 2019, Haldia Petrochemicals signed an MoU with the Tamil Nadu Government to invest almost ₹50,000 crore in Cuddalore district, by converting the NOCL facility into a refinery-cum-petrochemical complex.

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HDFC Bank’s MSME book grows 30% to cross Rs 2 trillion-mark – Times of India

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MUMBAI: HDFC Bank‘s MSME book grew 30 per cent year-on-year to cross the Rs 2-lakh-crore-mark as of December-end, mainly boosted by the pandemic-induced ECLG scheme under which it disbursed over Rs 23,000 crore.
The growth is also driven by a renewed push towards customers in semi-urban and rural areas, the bank has said.
In December 2019, the bank’s MSME book stood at Rs 1.4 lakh crore, which has grown by over 60,000 crore or 30 per cent to Rs 2,01,758 crore by the December 2020 quarter, giving it a 10.6 per cent share system-wide MSME lending, becoming the second-largest lender in this segment after the State Bank of India, the bank added.
“Our MSME lending is back to pre-pandemic levels, with loan book growing at 30 per cent year-on to Rs 2,01,758 crore as of the December 2020 quarter,” Sumant Rampal, senior executive vice-president, business banking and healthcare finance, at the bank told PTI on Friday.
“While the ECLG scheme was the biggest driver boosting the loan book by Rs 23,000 crore disbursed to around 1,10,000 MSME customers, our own renewed push towards customers in semi-urban and rural areas has also helped us during the pandemic, leading to an incremental loan growth of over Rs 60,000 crore,” he said, adding most of the ECLGS disbursals took place only in the past three-four months.
At 30 per cent loan growth, the MSME book is the fastest-growing vertical for the bank.
“This is a testimony to our commitment to strengthen the MSME sector that accounts for about 30 per cent of GDP and the largest employer,” Rampal said.
The government launched the third version of the Rs 3-lakh crore emergency credit line guarantee scheme (ECLGS) last November for MSMEs, following the KV Kamath committee report.
On Thursday, Union MSME minister Nitin Gadkari told the Lok Sabha that banks and other financial institutions have cumulatively sanctioned Rs 2.46 lakh crore of the Rs 3 lakh crore scheme, while disbursal stood at low Rs 1.81 lakh crore, as of February 28, according to the data from the National Credit Guarantee Trustee Company, which is the implementing agency of the ECLGS.
The scheme comes with a 2 per cent interest subvention and is a five-year tenor of which the first year gets a payment moratorium.
“Our MSME portfolio is geographically balanced spread across all metropolitan cities, urban, semi-urban and rural regions. And we reached out to them with a suite of customised products which they could access conveniently either through physical or electronic channels,” said Rampal.
The bank offers a range of services to MSMEs, ranging from conventional working capital/term loans, structured cash flow management and financing solutions, trade financing solutions, forex services, individual banking needs of promoters and family, salary accounts plus advisory on investment banking.
Its MSME portfolio is spread across sectors like textiles, fabrication, agri-processing, chemicals, consumer goods, hotels & restaurants, auto components, pharma and the paper industry, and also include the entire selling chain ranging from wholesalers, retailers, distributors, stockists and supermarkets, he said.
On Q4, Rampal refused to share numbers citing the Nasdaq silent period, just saying my team is busy at work and pointed to the large market of 6 crore registered MSMEs, but only 1.2 crore of them borrowing even after all the push by the government and the Reserve Bank.
He said of their 5,500 branches, 1,800 of them have more than 25 per cent of their loans to MSMEs and 4,800 units service this segment of customers. Geographically speaking, the bank is present in 630 districts, of these, 560 districts have MSMEs.
There is no concern on the asset quality front for the bank, which has a history of having the lowest NPAs in the system. In December 2019, the MSME bad loans for the bank were just 0.48 per cent and Rampal said, anyway currently the entire ECLGS book is under mandatory moratorium.
He said, the services industry is still facing challenges and expressed apprehension about the second wave of the pandemic.

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Bank operations may be hit on Mon, Tue due to nationwide unions’ strike – Times of India

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NEW DELHI: Banking operations across the country could be impacted on Monday and Tuesday as United Forum of Bank Unions (UFBU) has given a call for a nationwide strike to protest against the proposed privatisation of two state-owned lenders.
Services such as deposits and withdrawal at branches, cheque clearance and loan approvals would be affected due to the strike.
UFBU, an umbrella body of nine unions, in a statement claimed that about 10 lakh bank employees and officers of the banks will participate in the strike.
Many public sector lenders, including State Bank of India (SBI) have informed their customers that their normal working could be affected at the branches and offices if the strike materialises.
Banks have also informed that they are taking necessary steps for the smooth functioning of bank branches and offices.
In the Union Budget presented last month, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman had announced the privatisation of two public sector banks (PSBs) as part of the government’s disinvestment plan.
The government has already privatised IDBI Bank by selling its majority stake in the lender to LIC in 2019 and has merged 14 public sector banks in the last four years.
Conciliation meetings – before the Additional Chief Labour Commissioner on March 4, 9 and 10 – did not yield any positive result, so the strike stands, All India Bank Employees Association (AIBEA) general secretary C H Venkatachalam said.
Members of UFBU include All India Bank Employees Association (AIBEA), All India Bank Officers’ Confederation (AIBOC), National Confederation of Bank Employees (NCBE), All India Bank Officers’ Association (AIBOA) and Bank Employees Confederation of India (BEFI).
Others are Indian National Bank Employees Federation (INBEF), Indian National Bank Officers Congress (INBOC), National Organisation of Bank Workers (NOBW) and National Organisation of Bank Officers (NOBO).

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SBI to conduct e-auctions of 12 bad accounts this month – Times of India

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NEW DELHI: The State Bank of India (SBI) will conduct e-auctions of 12 bad accounts this month to recover dues of over Rs 506 crore under sale to asset reconstruction company (ARC) mechanism.
“In terms of the bank’s policy on sale of financial assets, in line with the regulatory guidelines, we place these accounts for sale to ARCs/banks/NBFCs /FIs, on the terms and conditions indicated there against,” SBI said in sale notifications.
The total outstanding against these companies is Rs 506.22 crore.
Aarya Industrial Products Pvt Ltd has dues of Rs 72.24 crore and the e-auction of the account is slated to take place on March 16.
SBI said Aarya Industrial Products has filed a suit against it in January 2016 before Civil Court, Alipore, Kolkata for claiming recovery damages of Rs 226 crore.
“The sale of assets of Aarya Industrial Products Pvt Ltd will be made with the entire contingent obligation, if any, arising in future in respect of the said counterclaim,” SBI said in the sale notice.
Ten accounts will go under the hammer on March 26 against their collective outstanding dues of Rs 383.23 crore.
These accounts include Heavy Metal & Tubes Ltd (Rs 116.91 crore); Shree Vaishnav Industries (Rs 58.92 crore); Sri Balmukund Polyplast (Rs 49.73 crore); Times Ferro Alloys (Rs 41.25 crore); and Bihar Raffia Industries Ltd (Rs 38.14 crore).
Others are Joharilal Agarwala Sales Pvt Ltd (Rs 24.70 crore); Megha Granules Pvt Ltd (Rs 23.21 crore); Abhinandan Interexim (Rs 14.16 crore); Timespac India (Rs 14.03 crore) and Shyam Sales (Rs 2.18 crore).
The e-auction for GOL Offshore Limited will take place on March 30 against outstanding dues of Rs 50.75 crore.
Asking the interested bidders to conduct due diligence of these assets with immediate effect, SBI said the sale is on ‘as is where is basis’ and the bank reserves the right not to go ahead with the proposed sale at any stage, without assigning any reason.
The decision of the bank in this regard shall be final and binding, SBI said.
Any taxes that may be arising out of the transaction will be payable by the purchaser, it added.

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