Indeed, PE funds squarely blame the lack of interaction and transparency between the potential buyer and the resolution professionals (RP), who represent the sellers, as a key problem area. Unlike typical merger and acquisition deals, to which PE funds are accustomed, RPs they say don’t provide adequate data on the target company, offer little scope for detailed due diligence and don’t organise even adequate factory visits. In short, they say, the process is ad hoc and opaque. “The RP initially tells you it is a 180-day process, then pushes it for another 90 days. Why did we not start with a 270-day deadline so that everyone is prepared? The whole process is so complex,” says an irate PE fund investor.
Others blame the frequent amendments to the law – such as barring promoters from the bidding process but leaving loopholes for them to bid – which have compounded the issue of making an informed decision.
That is why some PE funds have tries up with Indian companies that know the way around with creditors and the process. An added advantage is that the operating partner already has experience in running the same business (of course, if promoters were allowed to bid many PE funds could have tie up with them).
However, senior PE fund executives say that this strategy could well change in the second phase of asset sale.
“One idea of the process is to get fresh foreign capital, rather than money from Indian investors who will borrow from the banks again to fund the acquisition. In the first phase we are bringing in half the capital from abroad, in the second phase we can go up to 100 per cent,” says a PE fund manager who is talking to some international operating companies.
PE investors say they are looking at the long term — at least a seven-year horizon — before they cash out. But critics point out that they are only looking at deals in which creditors are taking drastic haircuts, writing off 50 to 70 per cent of the loan, if not more.
PE funds deny this. For instance, for Monnet, AION-JSW agreed to give Rs 2 billion more up front as well as increase the banks’ stake in the company from 9 to 18 per cent, despite being a solo bidder.
Also PE players point out that the write-off (which is based on what is paid upfront) does not account for the upside. “We think banks will be able to recover 100 per cent of their loan after they write off 50 per cent. If you combine upfront cash with potential value of equity, which could go up five to ten times from its current zero value, there is no reason banks won’t be able to recover their loans,” says a PE executive.