Mumbai: The Reserve Bank-appointed administrator of beleaguered Dewan Housing Finance Limited (DHFL) has admitted close to ₹4,800 crore of claims submitted by fixed deposit holders of the company, a source said.
Nearly 55,000 public depositor holders, including retail and UP Power Corporation Employees, have demanded payments aggregating to ₹5,200 crore from the troubled mortgage players as of December 17.
“The claims from fixed depositors that have been admitted, so far, are ₹4,800 crore,” a source said.
With this, the total amount of claims received by the company’s administrator, R Subramaniakumar, who is also the resolution professional, from financial creditors, operational creditors, employees, fixed deposit holders, and other creditors has touched approximately ₹93,105 crore.
Against that, around ₹85,800 crore of claims have been admitted, so far, said a banker.
Following an NCLT order dated December 3, Subramaniakumar, through a public notice, had asked all the creditors including fixed depositors to submit their claims by December 17.
While financial creditors have demanded a payment of ₹86,892.30 crore of their debt, financial creditors claimed an amount of ₹60.76 crore, as per the latest available data.
Last week, the committee of creditors met for the first time after the stressed financier was admitted for insolvency proceedings on December 2.
Subramaniakumar informed the creditors about the status of the claims made so far during the meeting.
Among the financial creditors, the country’s largest lender, State Bank of India, including SBI Singapore, submitted the highest claim of ₹10,082.90 crore. However, claim which has been admitted from SBI and SBI Singapore is ₹7,131.31 crore and ₹2,951.59 crore is under verification. An overseas subsidiary of SBI- SBI (Mauritius) Ltd has also claimed payment of ₹97.58 crore from the mortgage lender.
Other lenders include Bank of India ( ₹4,125.52 crore); Canara Bank ( ₹2,681.81 crore); Union Bank of India ( ₹2,378.05 crore); Bank of Baroda ( ₹2,074.92 crore) and National Housing Bank ( ₹2,433.79 crore), among others.
Bondholders through the debenture trustee – Catalyst Trusteeship – have submitted claims worth ₹45,550.07 crore.
The housing finance company’s employees and workmen have submitted a claim of ₹2.01 crore.
Apart from financial and operational creditors, the company also received claims of ₹950.53 crore from HM Tower Private Limited, Man Realty, Merino Shelters, and Neelkamal Realtors Tower.
DHFL, the third-largest pure-play mortgage player, is the first NBFC/HFC to face the corporate insolvency resolution process.
The RBI, on November 20, superseded the board of DHFL and appointed Subramaniakumar as its administrator after it found out governance and liquidity issues at the company.
The decision on DHFL came after the government on November 15 notified Section 227 of Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC), empowering the RBI to refer stressed financial service providers with an asset size of at least ₹500 crore to insolvency courts.
The central bank has also appointed a three-member committee- consisting of IDFC First Bank non-executive chairman, Rajiv Lall; ICICI Prudential Life Insurance managing director and CEO N S Kannan and Association of Mutual Funds in India (AMFI) N S Venkatesh, to advise the company’s administrator in the resolution process.
This story has been published from a wire agency feed without modifications to the text. Only the headline has been changed.
Source: Livemint