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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Thursday, August 02, 2001 |
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Bail-out package for IFCI
By Our Special Correspondent
NEW DELHI, AUG. 1. Concerned over the possibility of another
financial institution getting into a resource crunch, the
Government today approved of a Rs. 1,000-crore bail-out package
for the ailing Industrial Finance Corporation of India (IFCI).
As per the proposal, accepted at a meeting between the Finance
Minister, Mr. Yashwant Sinha, and the major stakeholders of IFCI
today, Rs. 400 crores have been cleared for immediate infusion.
The funds would be contributed by the Industrial Development Bank
of India, the Life Insurance Corporation, the General Insurance
Corporation and the State Bank, all being stakeholders in IFCI,
and it would be in proportion to their equity holding.
The Rs. 400-crore infusion would come in through the issue of
convertible debentures with a 20-year maturity period. The long
maturity period was necessary to make the loan eligible for Tier-
1 category.
At the meeting, the stakeholders also agreed to ``consider
favourably'' the IFCI's request for another Rs. 600 crores to
take the total bail-out package to Rs. 1,000 crores, as worked
out by IFCI. From these funds, Rs. 720 crores would be required
to reach the stipulated capital adequacy norms of 9 per cent. The
current capital adequacy of IFCI stands at 6.2 per cent.
Briefing presspersons after the meeting, the Joint Secretary in
the Finance Ministry, Mr. U. K. Sinha, and the chairman, IFCI,
Mr. P. V. Narasimham, said the IFCI would now restructure its
assets as well as its portfolio to turn around the organisation
at the earliest. It had about Rs. 1,500 crores locked up in
companies which were before the Board for Industrial and
Financial Reconstruction (BIFR) while its non-performing assets
stood at Rs. 600 crores. Mr. Narasimham hoped the BIFR and the
Debt Recovery Tribunals would expedite the cases pending before
them so that the locked up money could be recovered.
The IFCI also had Rs. 500 crores outstanding as interest and Rs.
220 crores as principal amount to be paid by the State-level
cooperatives for which the respective State Governments had stood
guarantee. This recovery process would also be expedited.
It had also been decided to exercise the call option in case of
some family bonds and millennium bonds which were issued earlier
at 16 per cent interest. Since the lending rates had come down,
it was practically impossible to service these bonds at the high
interest rate, the IFCI chairman said.
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