Roy, who was sent to jail on March 4 this year for non- refund of over Rs 20,000 crore with interest to depositors, was asked by the court to pay Rs 10,000 crore to get bail, out of which Rs 5,000 crore should be paid in cash and rest of the amount in bank guarantee.
In this background, Sahara' counsel S Ganesh submitted that after failed endeavours, the Group has made some achievements in its bid to sell its three overseas hotels-- Dream Downtown and The Plaza in New York and Grosvenor House in London--for which there is a need to amend the "terms and conditions" relating to loan and other transactions.
The lawyer further said that a tripartite agreement is on the anvil which will lead to grant of a loan by a "junior" lender at a much higher interest rate and if the deal fructifies, then USD 650 million (approx. Rs 3,600 crore) would be generated.
The bench, also comprising justices A R Dave and A K Sikri, deliberated upon the concept of escrow account and sought involvement of asset management agencies to ascertain the value of the amount, likely to be fetched, from the sale of the domestic properties.
The court, on being asked by the SEBI, ordered the Sahara group to provide a copy of the escrow agreement to the market regulator and posted the matter for further hearing on next Friday.
During the hearing, the bench also made queries on the recent Income Tax raids at the premises of Sahara group in national capital and wondered, "how Rs 146 crore was recovered?".
Earlier, the SEBI had moved the court seeking its direction to Sahara group to give a time schedule for payment of Rs 47,000 crore to it.
In the application, SEBI had submitted that the group be directed to furnish all details before the court regarding offers it received for its three luxury hotels, which was to be put on sale to raise money to be deposited with it.
