HomeNewsBusinessDHFL mess deepens: Has India’s banking regulator learnt its lessons from shadow banking episodes yet?

DHFL mess deepens: Has India’s banking regulator learnt its lessons from shadow banking episodes yet?

Banks have reportedly agreed to dilute bidding terms to get a buyer but depositors have moved the Supreme Court against this decision

January 22, 2020 / 18:44 IST
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Dewan Housing Finance, DHFL, saddled with close to Rs 85,000 crore debt and the first such case of bankruptcy that entered India’s NCLT court, is proving to be a tough case to crack for everyone who is trying to fix the mess--from courts to the regulators.

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The case was referred by the RBI in November last year to the NCLT court. Two months later, there isn’t any notable progress yet. Banks, who have reportedly agreed to dilute bidding terms to get a buyer, are not lucky yet. Creditors also agreed to let the NBFC resume lending operations but since depositors have moved the Supreme Court against this decision, this plan too has hit a roadblock.

Adding to the woes, some of the large lenders including State Bank of India has tagged the DHFL account as fraud after a forensic report found that DHFL probably engaged in lending to entities linked to promoters or in violation of prudential norms. All these make an early resolution highly difficult for DHFL’s lenders. This, unfortunately, also means more sleepless nights to DHFL’s retail depositors who have already submitted Rs 4,800 crore worth claims to an RBI-appointed administrator.