The stock of TV broadcasting & software production had dipped 15 per cent in past six trading days between February 17 and February 27.
Death Cross on the Zee Entertainment may push stock in the bear grip
The National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) has approved the joint bid of Reliance Industries and Assets Care & Reconstruction Enterprise (ACRE) for debt-ridden textiles maker Sintex Industries. The Ahmedabad bench of the NCLT in an oral order on Friday approved the resolution plan by RIL and ACRE, Sintex Industries said in a regulatory filing. "NCLT has orally pronounced an order" on Friday "approving the resolution plan submitted jointly by Reliance Industries Limited and Assets Care & Reconstruction Enterprise Ltd," Sintex Industries said. The approved Reliance-ACRE plan contains the reduction of share capital and delisting of equity shares with nil value, it added. The company would make updated disclosure upon the written order being made available, it added. According to reports, RIL-ACRE had offered around Rs 3,650 crore. The lenders of Sintex Industries had voted in favour of the joint bid of RIL & ACRE, following which the resolution professional of the company in ..
Reliance Capital has a consolidated debt of about Rs 40,000 crore
The Consolidated Committee of Creditors (CoC) of two debt-ridden Srei companies are likely to ask bidders to improve their resolution plans by December 15, a top official said on Sunday. The CoC, however, remains committed to the January 5 (2023) deadline offered by the adjudicating authority to complete the corporate insolvency resolution process, he said. The Kolkata-based Srei Infrastructure Finance Ltd (SIFL) and Srei Equipment Finance Ltd (SEFL), which are undergoing a resolution process in the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT), have received three bids. "Intense negotiations are taking place with each of the bidders, and after another meeting slated on December 12, bidders will be offered to submit their revised bids by December 15," a top official involved in the process told PTI. The CoC will "vote on the resolution plans after the revised bids are submitted and the RBI nod will be taken" before submitting to the NCLT, he said. "The deadline of January 5 to conclude the
The insolvency law might have helped resolve more than 500 cases in six years but manpower shortage at the NCLT and average resolution period being much higher than the stipulated 330 days pose challenges in tackling stressed companies in a time-bound manner. While the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC) timeframe for resolution is 330 days, inclusive of time taken for litigation, the 517 cases that yielded resolution plans took an average of 460 days for conclusion till the end of June. And the recovery rate for creditors against the claims made was around 31 per cent. Delay in admission of a case as well as the resolution period also results in erosion in value of the assets. Experts opined that litigations, shortage of manpower at the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) benches, infrastructure woes and the pandemic-induced disruptions have adversely impacted the envisaged time-bound resolution process, resulting in delays. Amid concerns in various quarters over the delays and
Eldest daughter of former Murugappa Group exec chairman M V Murugappan was the one who had taken family members to NCLT
The National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) on Monday reserved its order on the petition filed by Amazon opposing Bank of India's plea to initiate insolvency resolution proceedings against Future Retail
The National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) will hear on March 7 and March 9 matters related to approval of the Suraksha group's bid to acquire debt-ridden realty firm Jaypee Infratech Ltd
The National Company Law Appellate Tribunal on Tuesday set aside an NCLT order that rejected an appeal by Reliance Asset Reconstruction Company Ltd (RARCL) to initiate insolvency proceeding against Narendra Plastics. The NCLAT also directed the NCLT to initiate the insolvency proceedings against the company. A three-member NCLAT bench headed by Chairperson Justice Ashok Bhushan set aside the order passed by the Mumbai bench of the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) which on August 13, 2021, rejected RARCL's plea to initiate insolvency proceedings. The NCLT had said the RARCL's plea was barred under limitations as it was filed beyond the prescribed limit of three years after default. The tribunal had said the RARCL had filed a petition under section 7 of the Insolvency & Bankruptcy Code on May 8, 2019, while Narendra Plastics' account was declared as NPA on June 30, 2014, which was prima facie filed after more than five years. This was challenged by RARCL, which is registered as
Only a few large cases have seen higher recovery, says agency.
PSU banks to get 26% of dues after third party guarantor payments
Sale will garner enterprise value of Rs 1,076 cr as upfront payment; was completed as per a 'Scheme of Arrangement' approved by NCLT
JSW Steel had emerged the highest bidder for the company in June last year with an offer of Rs 1,550 crore
That sale consideration payable to IL&FS excluding resolution process costs shall be credited into a designated escrow account intimated to the infrastructure lending group
Slimmer chances of recovering Rs 20,000 cr from Bhushan Steel resolution in the near future add to lender's woes
The cash-strapped airline, which was grounded in April 2019, owes more than Rs 8,000 crore to banks
NCLAT relief for Flipkart, FM on credit scores, flurry of dividend payouts by companies and more
Petition says, JSW disqualified under Section 29A, has no claim on Rs 3,000 crore EBITDA during CIRP
The government has approached the National Company Law Appellate Tribunal seeking additional 270 days to complete resolution process of 105 IL&FS group companies. The Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA) has also requested the appellate tribunal to release 55 other entities from moratorium, so that they can discharge their debt obligations. Certain protection and reliefs were granted to the 55 entities through an order passed by the National Company Law Appellate Tribunal (NCLAT) on October 15, 2018. In addition to the 55 entities, the ministry has also asked the NCLAT to release nine companies from the scope and operation of the October 2018 order, according to an affidavit filed by the ministry with the appellate tribunal. Lalpur Wind Energy, Etesian Urja, Khandke Wind Energy, Ratedi Wind Power, Wind Urja India, Tadas Wind Energy, Kaze Energy, Jharkhand e-Governance solutions Services and Infrastructure Development Corporation of Assam are the nine companies. "For the remaining .