IPA Newspack
  • Home
  • now
  • politics
  • business
  • markets

IPA /

IPA Special

IPA Special

India’s Own Lehman Brothers Moment

By Anjan Roy

 

So close to the tenth anniversary of the collapse of the Lehman Brothers, India’s own Lehman moment had arrived, almost.

 

Infrastructure Leasing and Finance Services, better known as ILF&S to wider public, had been teetering to a collapse because of its inability to honour its payments obligations and the Union government has come to its rescue.

 

A series of defaults by IL&FS group companies in August and September, 2018 on term-deposits, short-term deposits, inter-corporate deposits, commercial paper and non-convertible debentures and rating downgrades in some and default on some other financial instruments massively affected the financial markets.

 

In turn, this caused redemption pressure on the mutual funds, which held financial instruments issued by ILF&S and this had adversely impacted the sentiments on the stock markets, money markets and debt markets. In a way, things were getting out of hand and forced the government to intervene in the interest of maintaining financial stability.

 

The after-effects of the ILFS fiasco so closely mirror developments which had led to the much bigger global financial scam. Unchecked, the ILFS collapse could have a similar adverse impact on the Indian financial system.

 

What was even worse, while the company’s fortunes were sinking and it was staring at possible collapse of the entire operations, the management had blithely gone on giving themselves hefty pay hikes and other benefits.

 

The ministry of corporate affairs moved the National Company Law Tribunal, seeking removal of its existing board of directors. NCLT acceded to the government’s plea on the ground that failure of the company would reverberate across the financial system and create a broader crisis.

 

It was a simple case of biting more than it could chew. Compared with its capital base, ILFS had borrowed funds with glee and spent these on projects without bothering too much on their viability or the overall liquidity of the company.

 

As its large number of infrastructure projects failed to take off, the funds it borrowed became sticky and without adequate returns, ILFS started failing to meet its obligations. Any failure to meet payments obligations meant that its erstwhile lenders developed cold feet in giving more funds. The company was thus facing a “liquidity crisis”.

 

In its statement taking over the board, the Union finance ministry has assured that it would ensure that funds requirements of the company were fully met. The company has outstanding liabilities of Rs1,15,000 crore and it was facing cash calls on repayment and other dues totalling Rs91,000 crore. Against this huge liability, ILFS was planning to raise fresh funds through issue of non-convertible debentures, that is fresh loans. As the company was facing a situation in which there cash flows were negative, the banks had also stopped giving it fresh accommodation.

 

“The restoration of confidence of the money, debt and capital markets, the banks and financial institutions in the credibility and financial solvency of the IL&FS group is of utmost importance for the financial stability of capital and financial markets” said the finance ministry in its statement.

 

There is an emergent need to immediately stop further financial defaults and also take measures to resolve defaulted dues to the claimants. This would require a combination of measures of asset sales, restructuring of some liabilities and fresh infusion of funds by the investors and lenders, according to the ministry.

 

The confidence of the financial market in the credibility of the IL& FS management and the company needs to be restored. There appears to be significant liquidity gap in the company as estimated liabilities might not be covered by the assets or income flows.

 

The consolidated financial statement of IL&FS holding company and its subsidiaries, associates and joint ventures projected a highly exaggerated picture of its assets. The company’s balance sheet claimed non-current assets in the form of intangible assets amounting to over Rs. 20,000 crores.

 

However, bulk of the revenue was in the form of receivables, around 50%, which were locked up in litigation and arbitration. Added to this, there has been a sharp increase in bank deposits held in lien, which rose by Rs. 1,681.59 crores in 2017-18.

 

Overall, the company has negative cash flows from operations. Further the net outflow was Rs. 7,020 crores in 2017-18. From August 2018 the company has been making repeated defaults.

 

Financial experts noted there was deep-rooted mismatch in the debt-equity ratio because of excessive leveraging, which has put a question mark in its ability to continue as a going concern if allowed to continue in the hands of the present management. The high debt stress was clearly visible in the company and its main subsidiaries for the past so many years, but was camouflaged. (IPA Service)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The post India’s Own Lehman Brothers Moment appeared first on Newspack by India Press Agency.

IPA Newspack

IPA Special

Installation Of Sengol At New Parliament Building Is A Part Of RSS Plan On Hindu Rashtra

June 1, 2023
IPA Special

Coming Caste Census Has To Focus On Many New Dynamics Of Indian Society

June 1, 2023
IPA Special

High Growth Rate Of GDP In 2022-23 Hides Many Concerns Over Its Nature

June 1, 2023
IPA Special

BJP Leadership At State, Centre Have Been Stoking Manipur Fire

June 1, 2023
IPA Special

Centre and The Ruling Party Have Lost All Propriety By Defending The Accused BJP MP

June 1, 2023
IPA Special

Brazil President Lula Pushes For Integration At South American Summit

June 1, 2023
IPA Special

The Bloody History Behind The British Possession Of The Koh-i-Noor

June 1, 2023
Politics

DMK to coordinate opposition unity efforts: Stalin

June 1, 2023
Politics

Modi blasts Cong for misleading poor, ‘guarantee habit’

June 1, 2023
Happening Now

Gehlot adds free power to pre-poll promises

June 1, 2023
Politics

Rahul holds session with Silicon Valley AI experts, entrepreneurs

June 1, 2023
Happening Now

Farmers call Khap Mahapanchayat for wrestlers

June 1, 2023
IPA Special

US Govt Putting Pressure On India To Join NATO+ As A Part Of Asia-Pacific Strategy

May 31, 2023
IPA Special

Political Outcome From Communal Cauldron May Not Favour BJP

May 31, 2023
IPA Special

No Real Truce Is Ready At Ending Gehlot-Pilot Infighting In Rajasthan Congress

May 31, 2023
IPA Special

Slowdown In Containerized Exports Poses Setback To Pro-Export Agenda

May 31, 2023
IPA Special

Sons Of First Joint Climbers Of Mount Everest Are Carrying The Legacy Of Their Fathers

May 31, 2023
IPA Special

Shiites And Not Jews Emerge As Touchstone Of Saudi Moderation

May 31, 2023
IPA Special

Kerala Govt To Move SC Against Centre’s Cut In Net Borrowings Ceiling

May 31, 2023
IPA Special

G7 Conclave Fails To Meet Commitment For Nuclear Weapons Abolition

May 31, 2023

An appeal

The legacy of IPA, founded by Nikhil Chakravartty, the doyen of journalism in India, to keep the flag of independent media flying high, is facing the threat of extinction due to the effect of the Covid pandemic. Only an emergency funding can avert such an eventuality. We appeal to all those who believe in the freedom of expression to contribute to this noble cause.
Click here to learn more

Share

Reply

  • 0
More on IPA

Installation Of Sengol At New Parliament Building Is A Part Of RSS Plan On Hindu Rashtra

June 1, 2023 4:05 pm | IPA Staff

By Prakash Karat Twenty opposition parties had boycotted the inauguration of the new parliament building on May 28 on the grounds that the Modi government...

IPA Special

Coming Caste Census Has To Focus On Many New Dynamics Of Indian Society

June 1, 2023 4:03 pm | IPA Staff

By Krishna Jha We are a multi-religious country. For each community, there is a spiritual path to arrive at the basics, the most sacred that...

IPA Special

High Growth Rate Of GDP In 2022-23 Hides Many Concerns Over Its Nature

June 1, 2023 3:52 pm | IPA Staff

By Dr. Gyan Pathak India’s growth rate for 2022-23 exceeded expectations. It has now been estimated upward to 7.2 per cent from 7 per cent...

IPA Special

BJP Leadership At State, Centre Have Been Stoking Manipur Fire

June 1, 2023 3:46 pm | IPA Staff

By Arun Srivastava It needs fairly high amount of moral strength and conviction to look straight into the eyes of the rulers of the country...

IPA Special

Installation Of Sengol At New Parliament Building Is A Part Of RSS Plan On Hindu Rashtra

in IPA Special
Jun 1, 2023   ·  

Coming Caste Census Has To Focus On Many New Dynamics Of Indian Society

in IPA Special
Jun 1, 2023   ·  

High Growth Rate Of GDP In 2022-23 Hides Many Concerns Over Its Nature

in IPA Special
Jun 1, 2023   ·  

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Follow us on
Up Next: How Technology Is Revolutionizing The Online Casino Market
©2020 -2021 India Press Agency, All Rights Reserved.
Newspack by India Press Agency | Statement of Ownership | Contact Us
logo
  • Home
  • now
  • politics
  • business
  • markets