Jet Airways’ shares faced massive drubbing on Tuesday and tumbled nearly 41 per cent after State Bank of India-led consortium of lenders decided to send the grounded airline to the National Company Law Tribunal.
The scrip plummeted 40.78 per cent to close at ₹ 40.45 on the BSE. During the day, it tanked 52.78 per cent to hit an all-time low of ₹ 32.25.
On the National Stock Exchange (NSE), shares plunged 40.78 per cent to close at ₹ 40.50 apiece. During the day, it dropped 53.72 per cent to a record low of ₹ 31.65.
On the traded volume front, 60.53 lakh shares of the company were traded on the BSE and over four crore shares on the NSE during the day.
This is the 12th consecutive trading day fall for Jet Airways and the scrip has plunged over 73 per cent during this time, wiping out ₹ 1,253.5 crore from its market valuation, on the BSE.
Read also: Failing to get investor, lenders take Jet to insolvency court
Harried bankers on Monday decided against an outright sale of Jet Airways to the lone bidder and instead voted to send it for bankruptcy to recover their ₹ 8,000 crore dues.
The once-largest private sector airline, started over 25 years ago, stopped flying in April after it ran out of cash and the unpaid lessors took away most of its 100-odd operational aircraft.
After a meeting of the 26 lenders on Monday, SBI in a statement said that “after due deliberations, the lenders have decided to seek resolution for Jet Airways under the bankruptcy code since only a conditional bid was received“.
The decision of the lenders to seek bankruptcy process through the NCLT came exactly two months after the airline stopped flying on April 17 after being on the fringe since last July.
The scrip has also been on a backfoot following announcement that stock exchanges will impose restrictions on trading in Jet Airways’ shares from June 28 as part of preventive surveillance measures to curb excessive volatility, according to a circular issued last week.