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Nine years of IBC: Over Rs 26 trillion stressed debt resolved
Nine years of IBC: Over Rs 26 trillion stressed debt resolved

New Indian Express

time22-07-2025

  • Business
  • New Indian Express

Nine years of IBC: Over Rs 26 trillion stressed debt resolved

MUMBAI: The Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC), introduced nine years ago in May 2016, has enabled direct resolution of Rs 12 trillion (excluding cases under liquidation) of debt across 1,200 cases of stressed borrowers but when the indirect resolutions are considered, the number tops Rs 26 trillion and another Rs 22 trillion of debt have been resolved through other mechanisms. While the IBC has directly resolved Rs 12 trillion worth of stressed loans, it has also created significant deterrence amongst borrowers leading to the settlement of 30,000 cases with Rs 14 trillion of debt even before insolvency applications were admitted by the various benches of the national company law tribunals (NCLTs), shows and analysis by Cirisil Ratings. When the number of resolutions through the pre-IBC mechanisms like the debt recovery tribunals (DRTs), the lok adalats and the Securitisation and Reconstruction of Financial Assets and Enforcement of Security Interest Act (Sarfaesi), the total resolved debt tops Rs 48 trillion since 2016. While the IBC has been periodically amended to further enhance its efficiency, stretched timelines and limited success in implementation for certain sectors may need some more interventions, the report primary changes in debt resolution approach that IBC brought in has been the shift from a debtor-in-control model to a creditor-in-control framework that distinguishes it from other debt resolution mechanisms existing prior to IBC such as the debt recovery tribunals (DRTs), the lok adalats and the Securitisation and Reconstruction of Financial Assets and Enforcement of Security Interest Act (Sarfaesi). This has meant that since 2016, of the total resolved debt of Rs 48 trillion across different debt resolution mechanisms, the average recovery rate under the IBC has been the highest at around 35%, versus 22% for Sarfaesi, 7% for DRTs and 3% for lok adalats. Other reasons for the relative success of the IBC over other debt resolution mechanisms include the flexibility accorded to creditors to change the managements of viable assets on a going-concern basis and to right-size debt. These, coupled with the improved economic environment over the past three fiscals, have boosted investor interest, especially in the infrastructure and manufacturing sectors. The IBC has also enabled the resolution of numerous small-to-mid sized (up to Rs 500 crore) distressed assets--while the past three fiscals accounted for 60% of all resolution approvals since the IBC, it represented only 40% of the total debt. According to Mohit Makhija, a senior director with Crisil, one-fourth of total debt resolved since 2016 has been through the IBC, contributing to 50% of total recovery. Aided by its deterrent effect, the IBC will remain the preferred route for debt resolution going ahead as well. Further, small-to mid-sized assets, which form 85% of the IBC's unresolved pipeline, are likely to attract investors with varied risk appetites. That said, the key challenge, according to him that IBC faces, has been the high backlog of cases at the NCLTs, primarily due to procedural delays at various stages and cross-litigation by stakeholders stretching the resolution timelines beyond what was earlier envisaged (713 days as of last fiscal vs the regulatory prescribed 330 days).To address this, the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Board of India (IBBI) has increased the bench strength of NCLTs, allowed routine submissions by resolution professionals online, and enabled part-wise resolution of corporate debt.

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