Lead banker SBI wants NCLAT to call fresh bids for Videocon

State Bank of India, the lead banker in the consortium of lenders moving the National
Company Law Appellate Tribunal (NCLAT) on behalf of the committee of creditors seeking
fresh bids for the bankrupt Videocon Industries, the appellate tribunal on Monday sought a
reply from the successful bidder Twin Star Technologies. The matter will now come up for
hearing on September 27.

Twin Star Technologies is owned by Volcan Investments, which is an arm of Vedanta Group.
The SBI plea on behalf the lenders is to direct the Committee of Creditors (CoC) to
reconsider its earlier decision to accept a 95% collective haircut on the exposure. The matter
is a complex one as earlier the Committee of Creditors (CoC) and the NCLT have approved
the bid of Twin Star and legal provisions do not permit going back on the approvals once
given.

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Proceedings with the implementation of the resolution plan is not feasible since the same is
not consistent with the observations made by the adjudicating authority (NCLT) and
appellate tribunal and considering the totality of the fact emerging in the present case, the
SBI petition said. The SBI’s plea is basically in response to a petition filed by dissenting
lender, Bank of Maharashtra, which has challenged the NCLT ruling in the NCLAT.

The NCLAT had on July 19 stayed Twin Star Technologies winning bid for Videocon
Industries on an appeal filed by dissenting creditors, Bank of Maharashtra and IFCI. Both the
lenders were unhappy with the value being realised through the resolution plan. Prior to it,
though the Mumbai bench of the National Company Law Tribunal had on June 8 approved
the resolution plan of Twin Star Technologies, it had observed that the firm was “paying
almost nothing” as the amount offered is only 4.15% of the total outstanding claim. It had
noted that the haircut for all the creditors is 95.85% and suggested to both the committee of
creditors and the successful applicant to increase the payout.

The NCLT had also asked the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Board of India to see whether
confidentiality was maintained during the corporate insolvency resolution process as Twin
Star’s bid was very close to the liquidation value, which was meant to be confidential.