Friday, October 12, 2012

Banks may have to write off Deccan Chronicle Holdings loans




Anita Bhoir, ET Bureau | Oct 8, 2012, 08.37AM IST

MUMBAI: Banks may be forced to write off about three-fourths of their Rs 4,000-crore loans to media company Deccan Chronicle Holdings due to skimpy collateral, and slow progress in the investigation into possible fraud due. 

About two-dozen lenders, including Canara Bank, Axis Bank, ICICI Bank, Corporation Bank, and Yes Bank, are wrangling over what could be recovered from the once-sprawling media group that has fallen on bad times. 

"Even if we are able to recover funds from the sale of Deccan Chargers, the recovery could be just about Rs 1,000 crore," said a banker who lent money to the company but did not want to be identified. "This is also on the assumption that we are able to sell the cricket franchise." 


Lenders are in a fix as the main business of the company may be losing value fast and an early sale of its Indian Premier League cricket franchise Deccan Chargers looks unlikely as the Board of Control for Cricket in India and potential buyers have set stiff conditions. 

A decision on admitting the company into the corporate debt restructuring cell may also get delayed since the headless Canara Bank, the lead bank, is unable to proceed with the forensic investigation into the company. The bank's chairman and managing director, S Raman, retired last month and the government is yet to appoint a successor. 

"The forensic audit is expected to take a month as the Canara Bank chairman and managing director has retired. The appointment of the new head is still pending," a senior public sector bank official in the know of the development said not wanting to be named. The CDR cell will discuss the matter in its meeting on October 19, said a person familiar with the developments. 

Canara Bank has lent Rs 330 crore to Deccan Chronicle Holdings and ICICI Bank has lent Rs 490 crore. Both have classified the loans as bad loans. Canara Bank officials did not comment and ICICI Bank did not respond to an email query. 

Financial woes: Deccan Chronicle Holdings chairman T. Venkattram Reddy in a 2008 photo.(Mint)

Recently, the Bombay High Court asked Deccan Chronicle to give an irrevocable and unconditional bank guarantee of Rs 100 crore to the Board of Control for Cricket in India on or before October 9. 

The bank guarantee would be in force for one year, said Justice SJ Kathawala, who heard a petition filed by DCHL challenging the BCCI's decision to terminate the contract of Deccan Chargers franchise. The court, on September 26, had appointed retired Supreme Court judge CK Thakkar as arbitrator to resolve the dispute between BCCI and DCHL. 


Ramesh Sargam (Bangalore, India.)
Employees of DCHL are a worried lot now a days. Do not know how long they will be kept in service and will be getting their salaries. Many of the employees have taken loans, like housing loans, vehicles loans, etc. on the basis of their salary. One day if the DCHL close the shops, what will be future of these poor employees. Particularly those who had taken bank loans. Because of inefficient management all the employees have to suffer. Their condition is so pathetic and living a life full of fear.


 The Deccan Chronicle office building in Secunderabad


தினமலர் :புதுடில்லி: அக்டோபர் 12,2012,16:44 IST 

டெக்கான் சார்ஜஸ் அணியை மும்பையைச் சேர்ந்த ரியல் எஸ்டேட் நிறுவனம் ஒன்று வாங்கியுள்ளது. ஐ.பி.எல். கிரிக்கெட் அமைப்பில் ஐதராபாத்தைச் சேர்ந்த டெக்கான் சார்ஜஸ் அணி உள்ளது. கடந்த 2008-ம் ஆண்டு ரூ. 450 கோடிக்கும் அதிகமான தொகைக்கு இந்த அணி வாங்கப்பட்டது. 2009-ம் ஆண்டு சாம்பியன் பட்டம் பெற்றது.

இந்நிலையில் இந்நிறுவனம் கடும் நிதி நெருக்கடியில் சிக்கியதை தொடர்ந்து விற்க முடிவு செய்தது. கடந்த மாதம் ரூ. 900 கோடிக்கு விலை போனது, இது போதாது என அறிவித்தது. இதற்கிடையே பி.சி.சி. நிர்வாகம் டெக்கான் சார்ஜஸ் அணி வீரர்களுக்கு சம்பள பாக்கி ரூ. 38 கோடி வரை தர வேண்டும் எனவும் இல்லாவிட்டால் ஐ.பி.எல். அமைப்பில் இருந்து நீக்கிவிடுவோம் என நெருக்கடி கொடுத்தது.

 இது தொடர்பான வழக்கு ‌கோர்ட்டில் உள்ளது.இந்நிலையில் மும்பையைச்சேர்ந்த கம்லா லேண்ட்மார்க் என்ற ரியல் எஸ்டேட் நிறுவனம் டெக்கான் சார்ஜஸ்.அணியை விலைக்கு வாங்கியுள்ளது. எனினும் எத்தனை கோடி என்பதனை தெரிவிக்கவில்லை


Asian debt mountain














IN THE NAMDAEMUN market in Seoul on September 20. Instead of saving for the future, South Korean households are consuming out of what they hope would be tomorrow's income


SEONGJOON CHO/BLOOMBERG 

The South Korean experience of an unsustainable, reinforcing build-up in household debt is, in fact, a trend in South-East Asia.
WHILE the world’s attention is focussed on the continuing crisis in Europe and its global fallout, another crisis is brewing in Asia. 

More than one South-East Asian country, among those that were overcome by financial crises in 1997, has seen a substantial accumulation of private debt, especially household debt. In some, debt levels are high enough to fear a financial collapse. This has come as a surprise, given the resilience they showed at the time of the global crisis of 2008.

Worst off is South Korea, the rags-to-riches miracle that is now a member of the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), the “rich country club”. 

According to a survey conducted by Statistics Korea and analysed by the Korea Development Institute, six out of 10 households in Korea were in debt in 2011, and more than a third of them were unable to meet their annual expenses with their incomes. Debt also weighs heavy on current incomes. One in every 10 households spends more than 40 per cent of annual income on servicing that debt.

With these households having to borrow more to stay afloat and others joining their ranks, a large proportion of households could be caught in a debt trap that would force default. This is exactly what happened in the United States and elsewhere when the subprime crisis broke. If that is repeated, the impact on the financial system experienced there could follow in Korea as well

. Already, a significant proportion of households in Korea has more liabilities than assets and cannot, therefore, clear dues by selling assets. In case of widespread default, the banks that lent to them will not be able to recoup even a part of their loans, leading to systemic problems of the kind that Asian emerging markets seemed to have been insulated from.

However, the runaway growth in household debt in Korea appears to be a longer-term phenomenon, having been under way since the 1997 crisis in the region. Starting at around Korean won (KRW) 210 trillion in 1997, the debt of households in Korea rose to more than KRW 450 trillion in 2002 and stood at KRW 922 trillion at the end of June 2012.

 The near-fivefold rise over 15 years has taken the ratio of household debt to net household disposable income from less than 100 per cent before the turn of the century to the three-digit mark in 2001, more than 140 per cent in 2006 and an unsustainable 160 per cent in 2011.

 The 2011 figure is higher than the level that prevailed in the U.S. before the subprime crisis broke. An implication of this has been the collapse of the household savings rate in what used to be a high-saving nation: from more than 15 per cent before the 1997 crisis to around 10 per cent in 2000 and a low of 2-3 per cent recently. Increasingly, instead of saving for the future, South Korean households are consuming out of what they hope would be tomorrow’s income.

CHANGING LENDING PATTERN

It is indeed true that traditionally banks in South Korea tended to “overlend” to the private sector. But there have been important changes. Before the 1997 crisis banks were substantially publicly owned and their lending to the private sector was focussed on the then-successful South Korean corporations.

 Problems began when in the 1990s South Korea chose to open up and deregulate its financial sector, partly as a quid pro quo for continued access to international markets on which its growth was based, partly to diversify into services led by finance because of a growing loss of manufacturing competitiveness, and partly to meet the requirements set for OECD membership. 

The process, which increased the role of foreign finance in the South Korean economy, also led to a shift of lending away from productive investment that had been the main target of directed credit until then, into sectors such as the stock market, real estate and housing. 

That shift was financed with low-cost foreign finance, accessed in large measure by the private sector in South Korea, and directed less to the productive sectors and more to non-tradable services with a strong speculative component. This created the circumstances in which South Korea became vulnerable to the boom-bust cycles typical of foreign financial flows and to the contagion that spread across the region in 1997.

Interestingly, post-crisis adjustment in South Korea (and elsewhere in South-East Asia) did not lead to the reversal of the liberalisation that enhanced the external vulnerability of a successful “miracle” economy and increased the fragility of its financial system.

 Rather, the role of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) during and after the crisis and the success of foreign finance resulted in the government opening the doors wider to foreign capital and diluting regulation of the domestic financial sector, even while taking over and guaranteeing repayment of the debt that foreign finance had, without due diligence, provided the domestic private sector.

“OVERBORROWING”

Thus, both before and after the crisis, “overborrowing” by the private sector remained high, but the target borrowers were now engaged less in productive activity and more in areas such as finance, real estate and housing. Moreover, after the crisis, bankrupt financial firms were displaced or taken over by new players, especially foreign firms.

 This led, in turn, to the importation into the country of the practices that had characterised finance in the developed industrial countries. Prime among them was a sharp increase in lending to the retail sector—housing, automobile purchases and personal credit—with the risk associated with such fragmented, large-scale lending being concealed by pooling credit assets, securitising these bundles and transferring the risk. 

The net result is that in this third phase, even though lending to the private sector continued to be important in South Korea, households have been replacing corporates as leading borrowers.

Excess borrowing is also a result of the adverse impact of the growth pattern after liberalisation on the distribution of income. 

While developed country status has increased the cost of living and the consumption aspirations of the population, incomes of the poorer sections have not kept pace. In the event, as happened in the U.S., encouraged by an easy credit environment, the poor have sustained their consumption and diversified into new economic activities with the aid of credit. 

As the survey of household finances quoted earlier found, while the top 20 per cent too borrowed, the proportion of borrowers in the bottom quintile in terms of income increased the fastest. Moreover, while the rich borrowed to acquire real estate, the poor did so to make ends meet.
























SEONGJOON CHO/BLOOMBERG

THE BANK OF KOREA headquarters in Seoul. The government and the bank are conscious of the dangers implicit in this excessive debt overhang.


The government and the Bank of Korea are conscious of the dangers implicit in this excessive debt overhang. They responded last June with measures to reduce bank exposure to the retail market and to induce borrowers to shift out of floating rate loans to fixed interest loans.
The intention was to reduce the impact of an interest rate shock on borrowers under strain and unable to meet their debt service commitments.

 However, with financial liberalisation having created a layered financial system, this did not resolve the problem. Stricter bank regulation may rein in borrowing for speculation by the rich. But the poor, who cannot but borrow, have turned to the non-banking system: mutual associations and credit unions, in particular, which are unregulated and charge exorbitant interest rates. That only worsens the problem.


Clearly, South Korea is experiencing an unsustainable build-up in household debt, on a trajectory that seems self-reinforcing. But South Korea is by no means an exception. It merely shows up starkly a trend that is widespread in South-East Asia. In Malaysia, too, the ratio of household debt to GDP has risen from 33 per cent in 1997 to 78 per cent in 2011.

 As a result, though it has a household debt to disposable income ratio that, at 140 per cent, is lower than that of Korea’s, it too is pointing to what could be the future for countries like Singapore (105 per cent) and Thailand (53 per cent).
SEONG JOON CHO/BLOOMBERG 
 
KIM CHOONG SOO, Governor of the Bank of Korea.


Further, trends of the kind seen in South Korea after the 1997 crisis are visible in Malaysia too. Before the crisis households accounted for a third of loans provided by the banking sector, and credit to the corporate sector accounted for 67 per cent of loans outstanding. After the crisis that ratio moved up and now stands well above the 50 per cent mark. 

The composition of lending also points to the changed drivers of credit in the new business environment. At the end of 2007, housing loans amounted to 55 per cent of household debt, automobile loans for 23 per cent and credit card advances for a little more than 5 per cent.

Even in countries where the estimates suggest that retail lending is low, such as China and Thailand, this is because banks that do not lend directly to the household sector often do so indirectly. They provide credit to a second tier of intermediaries, often in the informal financial sector, which in turn lend to households. 

While a large proportion of these loans is for housing, other loans such as for purchases of automobiles or to finance credit-card receivables have also increased considerably. The focus seems to be on lending short-term or against assets considered more liquid.

What we are witnessing is a replication of the trends observed in the developed industrial countries. That is perhaps inevitable since financial liberalisation or “reform” is aimed at replicating the Anglo-Saxon model of an “efficient” financial structure in countries across the world. 

As a corollary, it paves the way for the spread of the crisis from the U.S. and the United Kingdom to Europe, and now possibly Asia. Hopefully, Asian governments would take note and halt and reverse this process.


C.P. CHANDRASEKHAR
Frontline
Volume 29 - Issue 20 :: Oct. 06-19, 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