My colleague Neelasri Barman co-authored this story which appeared in DNA Money edition on Tuesday, May 8, 2012.
Moser Baer Solar (MBS), pioneer of solar power in India and a subsidiary of Moser Baer India, has received bankers’ in-principle approval for its proposed Rs 739 crore corporate debt restructuring (CDR).
In April 2012, MBS had approached the CDR Cell for the purpose.
MBS’s bankers — Punjab National Bank (PNB), State Bank of India (SBI), Bank of Baroda (BoB), IDBI Bank and Indian Overseas Bank (IOB) and a few other banks — met in Mumbai on Monday.
A public sector bank official who attended the meeting confirmed the approval.
Although it is a no-brainer that MBS is facing some sort of financial problems and hence unable to repay its existing debts, it is not clear why exactly the company needs CDR.
MBS officials declined comment. “We are in a silent period,” said an MBI spokesperson.
The banker, however, said CDR will encompass a Rs 500-crore term loan, working capital loans of Rs 230 crore and the remaining Rs 9 crore of dollar loans.
PNB’s exposure to MBS is to the tune of Rs200 crore, SBI’s Rs150 crore, IOB’s Rs130 crore and BoB’s Rs60 crore.
A few other banks account for the rest (Rs199 crore).
The approval will be followed by a new plan for repayment of MBS’s loans. The company will be relieved from interest payment. Repayment tenure will be also extended.
MBS last made news in January this year when it commissioned a 5mw solar power project in Rajasthan with a capacity of 92 lakh units of electricity per annum and saving carbon emissions equivalent to 8,400 tonnes annually.
The project, developed jointly with the ministry of new and renewable energy and spread over 60 acres of rocky terrain, is expected to power up over 70,000 households in Jodhpur.
The CDR Cell was formed in 2001 as both the Reserve Bank of India and the government felt the need for such an exclusive body to resolve cases of corporate financial sickness.
The cell maintains records of all CDR cases reported by banks and financial institutions.
CDR reduces debt burden on the company concerned by lowering interest rates and extending loan tenures.
Moser Baer Solar (MBS), pioneer of solar power in India and a subsidiary of Moser Baer India, has received bankers’ in-principle approval for its proposed Rs 739 crore corporate debt restructuring (CDR).
In April 2012, MBS had approached the CDR Cell for the purpose.
MBS’s bankers — Punjab National Bank (PNB), State Bank of India (SBI), Bank of Baroda (BoB), IDBI Bank and Indian Overseas Bank (IOB) and a few other banks — met in Mumbai on Monday.
A public sector bank official who attended the meeting confirmed the approval.
Although it is a no-brainer that MBS is facing some sort of financial problems and hence unable to repay its existing debts, it is not clear why exactly the company needs CDR.
MBS officials declined comment. “We are in a silent period,” said an MBI spokesperson.
The banker, however, said CDR will encompass a Rs 500-crore term loan, working capital loans of Rs 230 crore and the remaining Rs 9 crore of dollar loans.
PNB’s exposure to MBS is to the tune of Rs200 crore, SBI’s Rs150 crore, IOB’s Rs130 crore and BoB’s Rs60 crore.
A few other banks account for the rest (Rs199 crore).
The approval will be followed by a new plan for repayment of MBS’s loans. The company will be relieved from interest payment. Repayment tenure will be also extended.
MBS last made news in January this year when it commissioned a 5mw solar power project in Rajasthan with a capacity of 92 lakh units of electricity per annum and saving carbon emissions equivalent to 8,400 tonnes annually.
The project, developed jointly with the ministry of new and renewable energy and spread over 60 acres of rocky terrain, is expected to power up over 70,000 households in Jodhpur.
The CDR Cell was formed in 2001 as both the Reserve Bank of India and the government felt the need for such an exclusive body to resolve cases of corporate financial sickness.
The cell maintains records of all CDR cases reported by banks and financial institutions.
CDR reduces debt burden on the company concerned by lowering interest rates and extending loan tenures.