Hit by rejection of its bid to acquire Bhushan Power and Steel, UK-based Liberty House plans to move NCLT this week to direct creditors and resolution professional to consider its offer.
“We plan to file an application with the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) either on Monday or Tuesday and ask it to direct RP (resolution professional) and CoC (Committee of Creditors) to open our bid...We are hopeful that NCLT would clarify and our bid would be opened.,” a spokesperson with Liberty House told PTI.
Stating that Liberty House’ bid was submitted before the bids for Bhushan Power and Steel were opened, the company said that nothing unfair has happened.
“India should encourage entrepreneurs like us to invest in India. If we are successful on our bids, we will invest $10 billion in India over the next five years,” the spokesperson said.
Terming itself as a “turnaround specialist”, the company said that it has more than two dozen turnaround success stories in the last three years and an “impeccable track record’’.
The Committee of Creditors had on Wednesday rejected the bid of Liberty House to acquire Bhushan Power and Steel Ltd, leaving Tata Steel and JSW Steel in the race for taking over the assets of the bankrupt firm, a source said.
“Committee of creditors (CoC) in a meeting has rejected the bids of Liberty House (of the UK) because the company submitted the bids after the last date of submission date which was February 8,” a source privy to the development had said.
Liberty House had submitted the bid on Tuesday. In the CoC meeting, the bids of Tata Steel and JSW Steel were disclosed and the detailed terms and conditions of the bids were disclosed to the lenders, the source said.
Bhushan Power and Steel owes about Rs 45,000 crore to its lenders. When contacted, Resolution Professional (RP) Mahender Kumar Khandelwal had declined to comment on the developments.
According to the source, while Tata Steel offered Rs 17,000 crore to the lenders as upfront amount and Rs 7,200 crore for the operations of Bhushan Steel, JSW made an offer of Rs 11,000 crore to the lenders and Rs 2,000 crore for the operations of the beleaguered power firm.
CoC will now meet on March 6 to take the process forward, including declaration of the highest bidder. Bhushan Power and Steel was among the 12 non-performing accounts referred by the Reserve Bank of India for the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) proceedings.