Rajkiran Rai, the managing director and chief executive for the state-run UBI, which is the lead-lender to the crippled housing financier, Tuesday clarified that if the banks take equity stake in the company, it will be for a short -term, which is till they get a suitor.
DHFL owes over Rs 45,000 to banks, and the rest to other financiers including mutual funds, pension funds and insurers, which are not regulated by RBI.
"It's not a normal resolution process. It's a financial company. Here the creditors are banks, insurance companies, pension funds and mutual funds. It is not so easy.
In normal resolution, its banks and NBFCs, so this is new to us also," Rai told reporters on the sidelines of the annual banking industry event Fibac.
DHFL has become the poster-boy of the NBFC crisis that afflicted the financial sector after the infra-lender IL&FS went belly up last September.
Rai said converting debt into equity is "one of the ideas" on the table as lenders seek to wriggle out a solution.
However, he did not offer specific comments on questions surrounding how other lenders to DHFL like the debenture trustees and pension funds will be a part of the inter-creditor agreement, which is essential before any resolution begins under the new RBI norms.
"So many regulators are involved in this. There is RBI, then there is Irdai and also Sebi It is not so easy. But for us banks, thankfully it's easy as our regulator allows it," Rai said.
It can be noted that earlier this month, governor Shktikanta Das had said on August 7 that the RBI was in touch with capital markets regulator Sebi, and insurance watchdog Irdai to allow MFs and insurers to become a part of the ICA.
Meanwhile, Arijit Basu, a managing director at SBI, which also has exposure to DHFL, said lenders are "evaluating" resolution plan received from DHFL.
"We are bankers who have lent, there are others who have also lent like MF, insurers, pension funds. All have to be brought on the same page if we have to have a resolution.
Both the banks and the regulators are looking at this issue very closely," Basu said.
When asked specifically if everybody is on board with the plan being discussed, Basu initially said everyone is working "jointly to find a solution".
"...all the regulators have to come on board and give their approval. That is moving forward in a very coordinated and systematic manner," Basu said.
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