IANS | 27 Jan, 2024
Overseas lenders of Byju’s $1.2 billion term loans on Thursday said they
have filed a petition before the Bengaluru Bench of the National
Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) to initiate corporate insolvency resolution
proceedings against Think & Learn Pvt Ltd, the parent company of
Byju’s.
The GLAS Trust Company LLC (as administrative agent and
collateral agent of the Term Loans) has filed a petition pursuant to
Section 7 of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy code of India, 2016.
“The
myriad issues facing Byju’s are entirely self-inflicted. For months, we
sought to avoid this exact situation, repeatedly attempting to engage
constructively with Byju’s management and other stakeholders and
providing them with multiple paths to reach a mutually agreeable
resolution, even including after the Delaware court confirmed the
validity of Byju’s’ defaults,” the Ad Hoc Group said in a statement.
Byju’s had secured $1.2 billion in debt through a term loan facility from a consortium of foreign investors in November 2021.
“It
is our belief now that Byju’s management has no intention or ability of
honouring its obligations under the Term Loans. That said, we are
hopeful that India’s corporate insolvency resolution process will help
stabilise Think & Learn and result in implementing a resolution plan
that accounts for the interests of all stakeholders,” the Group added.
According
to the term loan lenders, the action was taken following over 16 months
of good faith efforts on behalf of the Ad Hoc Group to restructure the
term loans, which, if successful, would have immediately solved the
loan’s numerous outstanding defaults, acceleration, and ended all open
litigation while avoiding further enforcement actions.
In November
2023, the Delaware Chancery Court recognised that Byju’s had defaulted
on its loan obligation and found that the Term Loan lenders were within
their contractual rights to replace the sole director of Byju’s Alpha
(the US subsidiary of Byju’s established in 2021 to receive proceeds of
the term loans).
“Byju’s has exacerbated its defaults and
repeatedly disregarded its loan obligations post-default, including
refusing to make any contractually required loan payments and Byju’s
Alpha transferring $533 million in loan proceeds to an obscure, nascent
hedge fund and then apparently transferring the ownership of the money
to a still undisclosed entity,” claimed the Group.
Byju’s said in a
statement shared earlier in the day that the validity of lenders’
actions, including acceleration of the term loan, “is pending and under
challenge in several proceedings, including before the New York Supreme
Court”.
“Hence, any proceedings by lenders before NCLT are premature and baseless,” it added.
Byju’s said that the timing of the lenders’ proceedings coincides with the commencement of a rights issue by the company.