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SC Judgement on Essar Steel Case

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November 19, 2019

Why in news?

In a major judgement, the Supreme Court has paved the way for global steel giant ArcelorMittal to take over Essar Steel.

Click here to know more on the issue

What are the different types of creditors?

  • The Companies Act, 2013 merely introduced the term 'creditor', without any classification thereof.
  • The Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC) has introduced new concepts of 'Financial Creditor' and 'Operational Creditor' as opposed to the above.
  • Operational Creditor is a person to whom an operational debt is owed and includes any person to whom such debt has been legally assigned or transferred.
  • In other words, vendors and suppliers of raw materials, etc are the operational creditors.
  • In Essar case, these were Dakshin Gujarat, Gujarat Energy, Bharat Petroleum, Indian Oil, GAIL, ONGC, and the NTPC.
  • Financial creditor is any person to whom a financial debt is owed and includes a person to whom such debt has been legally assigned or transferred to.
  • In simple terms, they are those who provide long-term capital in the form of loans.
  • Public-sector lenders are Essar Steel's primary financial creditors.

What is the dispute?

  • Essar Steel owes around Rs 54,500 crore to its creditors - financial creditors and operational creditors combined.
  • The company had been put on the block under IBC to recover the unpaid dues.
  • The Ahmedabad bench of National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) had in March 2019 approved global steel-giant ArcelorMittal’s bid for Essar Steel.
  • ArcelorMittal had offered an upfront cash payment of about Rs. 42,000 crore to the financial creditors and capital infusion of Rs. 8,000 in the next few years.
  • The operational creditors had opposed the bid on the basis that they were getting notional payment while 92.5% of the financial creditors' dues were being paid.
  • NCLAT Order - The National Company Law Appellate Tribunal (NCLAT), in July 2019, had ordered equal distribution of funds among all classes of creditors.
  • It ruled that operational creditors should be treated on a par with financial creditors for distribution of funds from ArcelorMittal’s bid in the Essar Steel insolvency case.
  • NCLAT had said all operational creditors including employees with claims below Rs. 1 crore were to recover 100% of their dues.
  • Financial and operational lenders having claims above Rs. 1 crore were allowed to recover 60.7% of their total dues.
  • As of July 2019, total debt in the Essar Steel case had inflated to around Rs. 69,000 crore following fresh claims by some operational creditors.
  • The Committee of Creditors (CoC) had filed petitions against NCLAT’s judgment. [The CoC includes all financial creditors.]
  • [A consortium of banks (financial creditors) led by the SBI had moved the Supreme Court against the NCLAT order in the case.]
  • The CoC challenged that it should recover more than operational creditors in the bankruptcy resolution process.

What is the SC judgement?

  • The Supreme Court decision overrules NCLAT’s July 2019 judgment.
  • The verdict paves the way for ArcelorMittal’s takeover of the bankrupt Essar Steel.
  • The court said that the CoC will have a final say in the resolution plans under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC).
  • The NCLT and NCLAT cannot interfere with the commercial decisions taken by the CoC.

Why is the judgement so significant?

  • Bankruptcy cases - The insolvency and bankruptcy process is still young in India.
  • There is a long way to go yet, especially in the matter of recovery percentages.
  • Moreover, significant capital is locked up in bankrupt companies.
  • Given these, these clarifications made in the judgement could help in quickening a number of other cases that are stuck in the insolvency courts.
  • Primacy - The apex court has upheld the primacy of financial creditors over operational creditors in the repayments process.
  • [It is the financial creditors who provide capital to an enterprise and their interests are secured in the form of collaterals on the firm’s assets.
  • Operational creditors are unsecured creditors and they cannot claim equality or precedence over financial creditors.]
  • The ruling clarifies that the CoC is supreme when it comes to deciding on commercial issues, including the repayment waterfall, in an insolvency resolution.
  • [A waterfall payment is a repayment system by which senior lenders receive principal and interest payments from a borrower first, and subordinate lenders after.]
  • Time limit - The apex court has also held that the 330-day limit for resolution is not sacrosanct.
  • This will ensure that creditors are not pressured to accept a below-par deal due to paucity of time.
  • Banks - With the go-ahead given to the sale of Essar Steel, banks could recover over 90% of the over Rs. 40,000 crore that the company owes them.
  • Operational creditors are set to receive close to Rs. 1,200 crore.
  • This should clearly help improve the financial position of weak public sector banks and boost profitability.

 

Source: The Hindu, Economic Times, Livemint

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