President approves ordinance to treat home buyers as creditors

IANS  |  New Delhi 

Giving significant relief to home buyers, on Wednesday gave assent to the ordinance amending the and Code (IBC) to recognise their status as financial creditors.

"The today (Wednesday) gave assent to promulgate the and Code (Amendment) Ordinance, 2018," an official statement said.

The government said the ordinance would give home buyers due representation in the and make them an integral part of the decision making process.

The last month approved the ordinance and Minister had said the decision will bring relief to lakhs of home buyers in the country.

"Good news for home buyers: Now in situation of companies going bankrupt, home buyers will have a share along with banks in the auction of assets of such companies," he had tweeted.

The Ministry said the ordinance would also benefit Micro, Small and (MSME) by empowering the government to provide them with a special dispensation under the Code.

"The immediate benefit it provides is that it does not disqualify the promoter to bid for his enterprise undergoing Corporate Resolution Process (CIRP) provided he is not a willful defaulter and does not attract other disqualifications not related to default," the Ministry statement said.

"It also empowers the to allow further exemptions or modifications with respect to the MSME sector, if required, in public interest," it added.

Under the new ordinance, with a view to encourage resolution as opposed to liquidation, the voting threshold has been brought down to 66 per cent from 75 per cent for all major decisions.

"Further, in order to facilitate the corporate debtor to continue as a going concern during the CIRP, the voting threshold for routine decisions has been reduced to 51 per cent," the Ministry said.

The ordinance also provides for a mechanism to allow participation of security holders, deposit holders and all other classes of financial creditors that exceed a certain number, in meetings of the Committee of Creditors, through the authorized representation.

The existing IBC has also been fine-tuned to exempt pure play financial entities from being disqualified on account of non-performing assets (NPA), the statement said.

"Similarly, a resolution application holding an NPA by virtue of acquiring it in the past under the IBC, 2016, has been provided with a three-year cooling-off period from the date of such acquisition.

"In other words, such NPA shall not disqualify the resolution application during the currency of the three-year grace period," it added.

--IANS

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First Published: Wed, June 06 2018. 16:00 IST