17 , June , 2024
In a major development, the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) has ordered initiating an insolvency proceeding against Supertech Realtors, which is developing a residential apartment, office, retail and luxury hotel at its Supernova project. A two-member Delhi bench of NCLT admitted the insolvency plea filed by the Bank of Maharashtra over a default of Rs 168.04 crore and appointed Anju Agarwal as interim resolution professional (IRP), suspending the board of Supertech Realtors, a step-down subsidiary of Supertech.
Supertech is also facing a Corporate Insolvency Resolution Process (CIRP). Supertech Realtors is developing Supernova project at a cost of Rs 2,326.14 crore on a land admeasuring 70,002 square metres at Sector 94, Noida. As per the plans, Supernova project will have 80 floors and will be the tallest building in Delhi-NCR at a height of 300 metres.
For the project, Supertech Realtors approached a consortium of lenders led by Union Bank of India seeking a financial assistance of Rs 7,35.58 crore. Out of this, it had also requested for a credit facility of Rs 150 crore, which was granted by Bank of Maharashtra. In December 2012, a term loan of Rs 150 crore was granted. The term loan was repayable in quarterly instalments in the consolidated door-to-door tenor for 10 years and 4 months by March 2023.
However, Supertech Realtors failed to maintain financial discipline and defaulted in properly maintaining the said accounts in addition to committing other breaches and violations of the credit limit, leading to accumulation of huge outstanding.
This was also acknowledged by the realty firm and despite repeated reminders and requests, no further payments of the dues were made, the corporate debtor (Bank of Maharashtra) said.
Following this, it approached NCLT. The NCLT also put a moratorium on all transactions related to Supertech Realtors, as per the provision of the Insolvency & Bankruptcy Code.
"We direct that public announcement shall be made by the Interim Resolution Professional immediately" about the admission of the insolvency application, said the 34-page NCLT order.
(WITH INPUTS TAKEN FROM PTI)