IL&FS Financial Services Thursday said it has defaulted on seven fresh payment obligations worth Rs 395.46 crore.
The company was unable to service its obligations in respect of bank loans (including interest), term deposit and short term deposit, it said in a regulatory filing.
These defaults were in respect of five bank loans (including interest) totalling Rs 239.50 crore, term deposit obligation of Rs 103.53 crore and short term deposit worth Rs 52.43 crore.
The short term deposit of Rs 52.43 crore was due for September 27, 2018, while the term deposit of Rs 103.53 crore was to be serviced on September 25.
In bank loan repayments, it defaulted on Rs 100.60 crore and Rs 50.30 crore obligations due for September 24, while a Rs 62.90 crore loan due on September 26 could not be serviced.
It also defaulted on loan repayments of Rs 50.20 crore (due September 16) and Rs 20.50 crore (September 12), IL&FS Services said in the filing.
Having already declared three defaults this month, the company has thus far not been able to service a total of 10 obligations.
On Monday, it had disclosed defaulting on interest payments on commercial papers.
Following this, the company has been barred from accessing the commercial papers market for up to six months from the date of repayment of this obligation.
The troubled IL&FS group has been on a spree of defaults which led to resignation of IL&FS Financial Services Managing Director and Chief Executive Ramesh C Bawa and some key board members on September 21.
Amidst monetary defaults, the group is also grappling with corporate governance issues.
IL&FS has an aggregate debt pile of Rs 91,000 crore and it has been downgraded to junk status by rating agencies following the default.
Of this, Rs 57,000 crore are bank loans alone, most of which are from state-run lenders.
State-owned LIC is the largest shareholder with a fourth of the firm's equity, while Orix Corporation of Japan owns 23.5 per cent.
Other shareholders include Abu Dhabi Investment Authority with 12.5 per cent stake, IL&FS Employees Welfare Trust with 12 per cent, HDFC with 9.02 per cent, Central Bank of India with 7.67 per cent and State Bank of India (SBI) with 6.42 per cent at March-end 2018.
IL&FS Financial Services earlier also informed the stock exchanges that Infrastructure Leasing & Finance Services Limited (IL&FS), the promoter and majority shareholder of the company, filed an application with the National Company Law Tribunal, Mumbai Bench on September 24 seeking certain reliefs in connection with filing of a scheme of arrangement under Section 230 of the Companies Act, 2013.
LIC and SBI have stated that they will not let the financial conglomerate to collapse and efforts are on to help the entity.
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