Friday, October 12, 2012

Banks tighten noose around Kingfisher Airlines


 S. Visvanathan, Managing Director, SBI. 

The Hindu :MUMBAI, October 12, 2012



Commercial banks which have lent over Rs.7,000 crore to Kingfisher Airlines are closely monitoring the situation and are tightening the noose around its promoter to protect their interest.

They may take drastic steps, including auctioning the mortgaged assets or selling pledged shares in case the airline fails to come up with a revival plan in the next three weeks.

State Bank of India (SBI), the lead banker of the 17 member lenders’ consortium, with exposures of over Rs.1,400 crore to Kingfisher, said it was concerned about the current situation and was waiting to hear from the management.

“We are talking to them daily. It (the lock out) is a matter of concern but what we can do? Our efforts are on to recover the maximum by all possible means,” said S. Visvanathan, Managing Director, SBI. “The banks are looking at all aspects to ensure that money given to them (Kingfisher) will be recovered,” Mr. Visvanathan added. By the end of this month, Kingfisher should come up with a revival plan which the banks will closely examine. SBI Caps has been entrusted with this task but banks have made it clear that there will be no more restructuring this time. The airline has told banks that the loans could be repaid by flying all the aircraft to generate money and by roping in a foreign partner. “Let us not second guess. They will come out with something. Our effort is to ensure that our interest is protected at all costs,” the SBI MD said.

The banks also confirmed that Rs.60 crore had been released to Kingfisher from an escrow account that was de-frozen by the tax authorities. However, the airline has not paid salary to employees so far. “We are still waiting to hear from the management. We don’t know what is Mr. Vijay Mallya upto? He is not saying any thing,” said a striking employee.

Meanwhile, the lock out is expected to be extended till October 20. The deadline of the DGCA show cause notice ends on October 19.




Recovery still 6 months away for Indian economy: BofA-ML

The BofA-ML report says a turnaround in loan demand is critical for recovery and high lending rates are still pulling down credit. Photo: Indranil Bhoumik
The BofA-ML report says a turnaround in loan demand is critical for recovery 
and high lending rates are still pulling down credit. 
Photo: Indranil Bhoumik


New Delhi: The worst is over for the Indian economy but it will be another six months before the country shows signs of improvement and growth recovers to 6.5% level, Bank of America Merrill Lynch(BofA-ML) has said in a report.
According to BofA-ML, lead indicators still point to six months of pain and it is not until the March quarter that growth is expected to recover to 6.5% levels.
“We grow more confident of our call that while the worst is over, recovery will stretch for another 6 months,” the report said.
While reforms are a medium-term positive, immediate revival will surely depend on lending rate cuts. A turn-around in loan demand is critical for recovery and high lending rates are still pulling down credit, the report said.
“High lending rates, are still pulling down credit, our other key lead indicator. Unless lending rates come off, FY13 growth will likely find it difficult to do our 5.6% forecast, let alone the Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI’s) 6.5%,” BofA Merrill Lynch said.
It expects RBI to cut cash reserve ratio by 50 basis points to pull down lending rates.
The report further noted that India is likely to bottom out at higher levels than Brazil and Russia.
There are, three “faint-and-flickering” rays of hope for a March turnaround. Firstly, trade credit - advances to traders - has bottomed out; secondly, north Indian reservoirs that water the winter wheat crop have recovered and thirdly, risk aversion is topping off.
In addition, the three key concerns for risk aversion—Greek exit from euro zone, drought and policy paralysis in New Delhi—are receding now.
The government has recently taken a number of reform initiatives like opening foreign direct investment (FDI) in multi-brand retail sector to aviation and broadcasting sector, hiking diesel prices, capping the number of subsidised LPG cylinders.
Moreover, the government has unleashed a second wave of reforms deciding to open the pension sector to foreign investment and raising the FDI cap in insurance to 49%. PTI

Bad debt situation may improve by fiscal-end: SBI

SBI expects its credit to grow at 15-18% this fiscal year and sees retail loans, which includes housing and auto loans, growing by 18-20%. Photo: Hemant Mishra/Mint
SBI expects its credit to grow at 15-18% this fiscal year and sees retail loans,
 which includes housing and auto loans, growing by 18-20%. 
Photo: Hemant Mishra/Mint

Mint : Dinesh Unnikrishnan & P.R. Sanjai  :Thu, Oct 11 2012. 04 27 PM IST


The bank has been restructuring stressed accounts and expects a major part of such loans to turn good


Mumbai: State Bank of India (SBI), the country’s largest lender, is not worried about the downgrade of its stand-alone credit profile by rating agency Standard & Poor’s (S&P) and expects its bad debt situation to improve in fiscal 2013.
S&P downgraded SBI’s stand-alone credit rating to “BBB-” from “BBB” on Wednesday citing asset-quality concerns.
The downgrade is not a major concern as it constitutes only a “small part of the overall rating”, said S. Viswanathan, the bank’s newly appointed managing director.
The bank is hopeful that it can “improve its NPA (non-performing assets) situation towards the end of this fiscal even though there is stress visible from some segments like textiles, power and aviation,” Viswanathan told reporters in Mumbai on Thursday.
The bank expects its credit to grow 15-18% this fiscal and retail loans, which includes housing and auto loans, to rise 18-20%, said managing director A. Krishna Kumar.
NPAs from education loans, at around 7% of the bank’s total loans to the segment, are a concern, Kumar said. “Though there is stress from the education loan segment, it continues to be a focus area for SBI,” he said.
The bank has been restructuring stressed accounts to facilitate repayment and expects a major part of such loans to turn good. But it estimates at least 15-20% of the restructured assets to slip into NPAs.
SBI is also exploring whether it can restructure its exposure to crisis-ridden, wind-energy provider Suzlon Group, which is currently facing a default of $260 million to bondholders in overseas bonds.
The group has an overall exposure of Rs.14,000 crore to the banking system, out of which that of SBI isRs.3,500 crore. The loan has not turned bad as yet, said SBI deputy managing director and head of corporate lending Santosh B. Nayar.
Suzlon is working out restructuring options and various banks are in talks with it for such a plan, he said.
“Suzlon has got a very large order book; they are continuously flowing with orders. This is a field where a lot of the investors are interested in. If the finances are set right, obviously they could attract other investors also,” Nayar said.
Suzlon can also look at the option of merging with its European subsidiary, RE Power, to manage the debt situation, Nayar said.
“Company also has a very good subsidiary in Europe—RE Power, which is practically debt free and has got huge cash balances… Suzlon needs to leverage the RE Power balance sheet and probably in the long run merge these two operations. Because when they merge these two operations, the profitability of the whole group can go substantially higher using India’s lower cost of production,” Nayar said.
SBI has provided fully for its exposure to the aviation sector and is in discussion with Kingfisher Airlines Ltd to recover its loans. The firm is expected to draw up a revival plan by the end of this month, Viswanathan said.
The lender’s exposure to Kingfisher is about Rs.1,500 crore, while that of all banks to the carrier is Rs.7,500 crore. The account has turned bad.
“We will explore all possible methods to recover the money from Kingfisher Airlines,” Viswanathan said.
According to another senior banker, who did not want to be named, lenders expect founder Vijay Mallyato infuse equity into the airline by month-end.
Kingfisher Airlines rose 4.8% to Rs.12 on Thursday after 2.6 million shares changed hands on BSE, according to Thompson Reuters data. The identity of the buyers and sellers aren’t known. The stock ended flat at Rs.11.45, while the benchmark Sensex rose 0.93% to 18,804.75 points. SBI ended 1.87% up at Rs.2,268.75.
Kingfisher Airlines is likely to extend its lockout for a second time and has suspended ticket sales until 20 October. The top management is in talks with striking employees to convince them to return to work.
Kingfisher Airlines, which declared a lockout until 12 October, had been selling tickets for flights from 13 October onwards, when the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) asked it to stop doing so on Tuesday.
The regulator has asked the airline to submit a revival plan before it resumes flights.
Analysts said the stress on SBI’s loan book is expected to continue for a few more quarters until there is a pick-up in economic activity.
“SBI continues to be a proxy for the overall economy. Though there are positive sentiments emerging from the recent government steps, it is yet to translate into any palpable improvement at the ground-level economic situation,” said V. Sri Karthik, analyst at Mumbai-based brokerage Espirito Santo Pvt. Ltd.
“This, in turn, will mean that it may take a few more quarters for SBI before significantly improving its NPA situation,” Karthik said.
dinesh.n@livemint.com

Saturday, October 6, 2012

Smt.Kalpana Masur V/S KSFC and anr





A.IR:914/2009


Record of proceedings on 5.10.2012 in  IA 41/2012(waiver): 

 Ld. Counsel Shri K.A.Ramakrishnanappearing on behalf of the petitioner stated that the petitioner has complied with the conditional order of this Tribunal and also obeyed the order of theHon’ble High Court of Karnataka and that the respondent bank has issued a fresh sale notice and that in view of the pendency of this IA and that in view of the  compliance of the conditional order of this Tribunal and the order of the Hon’ble High Court of Karnataka the bank should be restrained from proceeding further with the sale.  Ld. Counsel prayed that interim order may be passed restraining the Authorized officer from proceeding further under the provisions of the SARFAESI Act. 

Ld. Counsel ShriBalasburamaniam appearing on behalf of the respondent bank stated that nothing survives in this matter and that the petitioner did not comply with the conditional order of this Tribunal dt 26.3.2010 and that the Hon’bleHigh Court of Karnataka was pleased to quash the sale notice dt20.3.2010 and that this petition warrants only a dismissal as the petitioner has not complied with the conditional order dt23.10.2010. Heard both sides.

 It is seen that this Tribunal by order dt26.3.2010 in IA No.41/2010 in AIR No.914/2009 directed the petitioner to deposit a sum of Rs.7.00 lakhsinto this Tribunal on or before 29.3.2010 and a further deposit of Rs.30.00 lakhs into this Tribunal on or befoe29.4.2010. 

 It is also seen that the petitioner has deposited Rs.7.00lakhs on 29.3.2010 and that thereafter the petitioner approached the Hon’bleHigh Court of Karnataka and that the Hon’bleHigh Court of Karnataka by order dt 30.3.2010 in WP No.10632/10 directed the petitioner to pay a sum of Rs.5.00lakhs into this Tribunal within 8 weeks and that the petitioner accordingly deposited the said amount of Rs.5.00 lakhs into this tribunal.  

It is further seen that later theHon’ble High Court of Karnataka was pleased to allow WP No.10632/2010 and quashed the sale noticedt 20.3.2010.    It is also seen that the petitioner has not complied with the conditional order of this Tribunal dt26.3.2010  and that theHon’ble High Court of Karnataka was also pleased not to stay the said order of this Tribunal.  Therefore in view of the fact that the conditional order passed in this IA on 26.3.2010 has not been complied with by the petitioner this tribunal is driven to dismiss this IA. 

 Accordingly this IA is dismissed for non compliance of the conditional order of this Tribunal dt 26.3.2010.  It is further directed that the Registry shall send whatever sums of money that have been deposited into this Tribunal in this case along with accrued interest to the first respondent viz. the KSFC on or before 6.11.2012 for appropriation into the loan account of the petitioner. IA 42/2010 (stay);  IA 41/2010 is dismissed.

  Hence this IA is also dismissed. IA 1011/2012(stay); R2 has been given up.   R1 has filed its counter. However IA 41/2010 is dismissed for non compliance of the conditional order dt26.3.2010.  Hence this IA is also dismissed.

The above Order was passed by the Hon''ble Chair Person of DRAT ,Chennai on5th Oct 2012

M/s.MOH Leathers P ltd and ors V/S Indian bank



A.IR:967/2010

Record of proceedings on 5.10.2012 in IA 1590/2010 (waiver):  No representation for the petitioners.  Petitioners are called absent.  

Ld. Counsel ShriBalasubramaniam appearing on behalf of the respondent bank stated that the conditional order of this Tribunal dt 17.8.2012 has not been complied with by the petitioners and that therefore this IA has to be dismissed for non compliance of the conditional order dt17.8.2012. 

 This IA is dismissed for non compliance of the orderdt 17.8.2012. IA 1591/2010 (stay);  IA1590/10 is dismissed. Hence this IA is also dismissed.

The above Order was passed by the Hon''ble Chair Person of DRAT ,Chennai on5 th Oct 2012

Dr.Zubaida Begum and anr V/S Indian Bank & anr




A.IR:779/2009

Record of proceedings on 5.10.2012 in IA 1378/2009 (delay):

  Ld. Counsel Shri  Balasubramaniam  appearing on behalf of the respondent bank stated that the delay cannot be condoned in cases of appeals filed under Sec.18 of the SARFAESI Act as per the orders of the Hon’bleHigh Court of Madras passed on 28.8.2012 in WP Nos. 13456/2012, 8381/2012 and 12970/2012 and that this IA should be dismissed in obedience to the orders of theHon’ble High Court of Madras.

  Ld. CounselShri A. Periasamy  appears on behalf of the petitioner.

 Heard the Ld. Counsel for the respondent bank. It is seen that the Hon’bleHigh Court of Madras has held on 28.8.2012 in WP Nos. 13456/2012, 8381/2012 and 12970/2012 thatcondonation of delay does not arise in  cases of  appeals filed under Sec.18 of the SARFAESI Act.  

 This tribunal being bound by the orders of the Hon’bleHigh Court of Madras is therefore driven to dismiss this IA.

 Accordingly this IA is dismissed. IA 1215/2009 (stay) :  IA 1378/09 is dismissed. Hence this IA is also dismissed.

The above Order was passed by the Hon''ble Chair Person of DRAT ,Chennai on5th Oct 2012

Friday, October 5, 2012

Banks to release funds to KFA on humanitarian grounds: SBI




Money Control :Fri, Oct 05, 2012 at 18:41




State Bank of India today said Kingfisher lenders have decided to release funds to the debt-ridden airline on "humanitarian grounds" considering that its employees have not been paid for the past seven months.


State Bank of India  today said Kingfisher lenders have decided to release funds to the debt-ridden airline on "humanitarian grounds" considering that its employees have not been paid for the past seven months.

"The money that has been released by the tax authorities, 80 percent of that will be made available to the company on humanitarian grounds, specifically to pay salaries of the employees," SBI Chairman Pratip Chaudhuri told reporters here.

     
Sources had said bankers after an emergency meeting yesterday had agreed to release funds from escrow accounts, which is likely to fetch up to Rs 60 crore for the carrier. SBI heads the consortium of 17 lenders to the crippled
carrier. Chaudhuri, however, did not divulge the total quantum of the money banks were having.
     
Collectively, the 17-bank consortium has Rs 7,000-crore outstanding to the Vijay Mallya-promoted airline. The SBI chief said that he does not know how much of a solace this would offer. "I don't know how adequate that (the
release of money) would be."

The wife of a Delhi-based technician of the airline, which has been grounded since Sunday following a strike by its engineers and a section of pilots, allegedly committed suicide yesterday due to the financial troubles in the family and blamed the airline for it in a suicide note.

The Aviation Ministry and the sector regulator DGCA have been insisting to keep the fleet grounded unless concerns around safety and wages are solved.

The striking employees have been asking for an immediate payment of salary for three months out of the total seven months outstanding for resuming duties.

Chaudhuri said the only way forward for the banks is to be patient and wait for Mallya to get an investor. "Banks are still giving time to Mallya to get an investor. Because if we pull the plug it would be irretrievable. And if we are
patient with him, possibly there is a chance he would revive."

"If we pull the plug now then all possible investors would also walk away. Having waited for so long we might as well wait some more time," Chaudhuri said.