Appeal by Srei bondholders to be heard on 23 March

Apart from bank loans, the company is estimated to have outstanding market-linked debt instruments worth  ₹499 crore, including the money put in by retail investors.
Apart from bank loans, the company is estimated to have outstanding market-linked debt instruments worth 499 crore, including the money put in by retail investors.
1 min read . Updated: 04 Mar 2021, 12:39 PM IST Shayan Ghosh

MUMBAI : The National Company Law Appellate Tribunal (NCLAT) will next hear on 23 March, the case filed by Srei group’s bondholders challenging an order by the Kolkata bench of the tribunal allowing Srei to skip repayments between 1 January and 30 June.

“Learned senior counsel for the respondent submits that due to some difficulty, they could not file the documents. Let the matter be fixed ‘for admission’ (after notice) on 23 March 2021," the appellate tribunal said in its order on Thursday.

MORE FROM THIS SECTIONSee All

Also Read | How citizen data led India’s covid battle

Debenture trustees Axis Trustee Services Ltd and Catalyst Trusteeship Ltd which represent bondholders have jointly moved the tribunal against the NCLT order, which has impacted retail and institutional investors alike.

Retail investors were particularly hit by the halt to repayments, which the company said was meant to deal with the asset liability mismatches that occurred as a consequence of the covid-19 pandemic. So far, the Kolkata-based non-bank financier missed repayments on eight instances between 11 January and 15 February, showed data.

Apart from bank loans, the company is estimated to have outstanding market-linked debt instruments worth 499 crore, including the money put in by retail investors.

Under the scheme of arrangement, Srei proposed to make repayments to several categories of debenture holders over an extended period. Retail investors will get their interest accrued during the moratorium period within 15 days after it ends. This arrangement, Srei said on 31 December, is a “natural consequence" of the first scheme that SEFL proposed to banks and financial institutions and is pending before the NCLT.

The new plan will encompass all its secured and unsecured non-convertible debenture holders, foreign lenders from whom the company had raised secured and unsecured external commercial borrowings, and all the perpetual debenture holders.

Subscribe to Mint Newsletters
* Enter a valid email
* Thank you for subscribing to our newsletter.

Click here to read the Mint ePaperMint is now on Telegram. Join Mint channel in your Telegram and stay updated with the latest business news.

Close