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IL&FS crisis: Why it should not become India’s Lehman moment

The owners of IL&FS are also answerable to their stakeholders and they can’t afford to throw good money after bad

September 27, 2018 / 09:58 IST
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Madhuchanda Dey Moneycontrol Research

IL&FS was ex-Citibanker Parthasarathy's brainchild and he has now left a sick kid that no one wants to own up to. It wouldn’t have been such a bad thing but for the fact that the illness could lead to a contagion in the financial system that the country can ill afford at this stage.

Central Bank of India, Housing Development Finance Corporation and Unit Trust of India (UTI) were the initial stakeholders of the company. Later the likes of SBI, LIC, ORIX Corporation Japan, and Abu Dhabi Investment Authority (ADIA) bought a share of the pie in the 1990s. It was designated as a systemically-important, non-banking finance company by the RBI.

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Being a ‘professionally managed’ unlisted company, it has so far functioned as private sector companies with similar perks and privileges. Hence, it is not a government owned entity that got to be salvaged by the sovereign, in fact, should that happen the risk of moral hazard is high.

Given that the liquidity crisis of this infrastructure lender and its steady default on short-term borrowings have sent shockwaves in the money market and could worsen if the temporary liquidity support is not provided quickly, the owners need to act fast.