
In 2016, the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code ushered in a new resolution framework that has also helped reset credit relations by strengthening the position of both financial and operational creditors. The fear of having to relinquish control over their firms has acted as a strong incentive for promoters to fulfil their financial obligations. At the end of September, 7,058 cases had been admitted under the IBC framework. Another 26,000 applications, where the underlying defaults have been around Rs 9.33 lakh crore, have been withdrawn even before their admission under IBC according to the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Board of India. Of the cases that have been admitted, roughly half continue to be initiated by operational creditors, underlining that the code does provide these firms, which tend to be small and medium enterprises, a tool to help recover their dues.
Of the total cases that have been admitted so far, 1,053 have been closed on appeal/review/settled, while another 947 have been withdrawn under section 12A, due to possibly a settlement with the applicant or creditors. Resolution plans have been approved in 808 cases, while liquidation has commenced in 2,249 cases. In the cases yielding resolution plans, creditors have realised only Rs 3.15 lakh crore or 31.85 per cent of their admitted claims, suggesting that realisations have been lower than expected. The liquidation values have been even lower, at only 6.5 per cent of the claims. However, around 77 per cent of the cases that have ended up in liquidation were earlier with the Board for Industrial and Financial Reconstruction and/or defunct. As per IBBI, in most of these cases, the economic value had diminished — their asset values were pegged at only 7 per cent of outstanding debt.