Insolvency: What is important about ‘information utilities’

Veena SivaramakrishnanSumant Prashant Updated - September 25, 2022 at 09:05 PM.

How a record of default held by ‘information utilities’ will ensure timely resolution

Delay in corporate insolvency resolution leads to erosion and devaluation of the debtor’s assets | Photo Credit: imagedepotpro

‘Information utilities’ (IU) established under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code provide authenticated information about debt and default, which an adjudicating authority can rely on as evidence of money owed by the company facing insolvency.

The intention is that the adjudicating authority should rely solely on the IU, and not the documents and records of the parties, in establishing facts like credit given and/or default. As per recent amendments to IBBI (Information Utilities) Regulations, 2017, creditors should submit the details of default to the adjudicating authority.

Source of delay

The Insolvency and Bankruptcy Board of India (IBBI) and the Ministry of Corporate Affairs have independently noted the delay in initiating the Corporate Insolvency Resolution Process (CIRP), leading to the erosion and devaluation of assets of the corporate debtor.

The IBBI felt that information of debt or default should be streamlined, the current process of authenticating information should be improved, the information asymmetry among creditors should be reduced, and the record of default should be submitted by both financial and operational creditors.

The ministry, in its May 2022 ‘Report of the Insolvency Law Committee’, recommended that financial creditors should be mandated to submit IU records with the CIRP application; the adjudicating authority should not ask for any other information to prove default.

The amendments to IU regulations in June 2022 mandate that, before filing a CIRP application, creditors should file information of default with the IU, which would process it to issue a record of default. The IU is required to provide information of default to the corporate debtor for authentication. If the corporate debtor does not confirm the default beyond three reminders (sent at three-day intervals), the information is deemed to be authenticated.

Next, the IU should record the authentication of information of default and pass it to the creditors. For financial creditors, the information can be recorded under two heads — authenticated or disputed. For other creditors, the information can be authenticated, disputed, or deemed to be authenticated.

Effective step

The requirement to submit a record of default held by IU is surely a step in the right direction. It will ensure that applications to initiate CIRP are either admitted or rejected in a time-bound manner.

Creditors should take note of the changes before initiating CIRP. The aspect to be considered is that the debtors have the option to dispute the information and, given this, the adjudicating authority will have to rely on the documents and records available with the parties, leading to the authority adjudicating disputes over the default itself, which was never the intention.

(The writers are Partner and Counsel, respectively, with Shardul Amarchand Mangaldas, a law firm)

Published on September 25, 2022 15:35

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