Cents On The Dollar: Who Is Responsible For The Low Recoveries At IBC?

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Read Time: 6 mins
Indian Rs 500 banknotes arranged for photograph. (Source: Vijay Sartape/NDTV Profit)

About 89 months since the introduction of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, lenders are still grappling with low recoveries and inordinate delays in resolution of corporate stress.

But, who is responsible for this? Is it the judiciary, which oversees repeated delays in admission? Is it financial creditors, who regularly delay the resolution process way beyond the 330-day time limit? Is it promoters, who come up with constant legal hurdles for anyone daring to drag their company through insolvency?

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Like with most things, the answer is not black or white.

According to data released by the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Board of India, out of creditor claims worth over Rs 10.46 lakh crore, IBC has managed to ensure recoveries worth Rs 3.35 lakh crore, as of March 31. That amounts to a recovery rate of a little over 32%.

Now, it is probably easy to equate claims with outstanding debt to the banking system. But, that would be a flawed comparison to begin with. A claim, by definition, is a right to payment, whether or not such right is reduced to judgment, fixed, disputed, undisputed, legal, equitable, secured or unsecured.

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To simplify the legalese, a claim is whatever a creditor says is owed to them. It may include outstanding debt, excess interest, punitive charges, and capitalisation of such punitive charges, among other things.

Thus, claims are charges at a given point in time in the past, while the recoveries are based on what is the realisable value today. If you were to take IBBI's estimates, the recovered money as of March 31 represents nearly 85% of the realisable value of the assets at the time of resolution.

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Be that as it may, there is something to be said about why the realisable value has fallen so much.

Judicial Delays

In a post on social media platform X (formerly known as Twitter), Kotak Mahindra Bank Ltd.'s former MD and CEO Uday Kotak noted that the low recoveries are a function of judicial delays.

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