Dabhol settlement suffers twin blows

| ABN Amro, ANZ have refused to sign the settlement deal, demand $25 mn more. | |
| The plan to restart the Dabhol power project has received a hard knock with two of the 19 foreign banks involved in financing the plant refusing to sign the proposed settlement with Indian banks. | |
| The deadline for entering into a settlement, which expired on Saturday, has now been extended by 2-3 weeks. | |
| Sources close to the development said ABN Amro and ANZ had refused to sign the deal and had asked for an additional $25 million. It was decided earlier that the domestic lenders would buy out the exposure of the 19 foreign banks for $230 million. | |
| In yet another setback, the proposal to buy out the equity exposure of General Electric (GE) and Bechtel has also hit a roadblock with both demanding a guarantee from either the government or the domestic lenders indemnifying them against the liabilities of Dabhol Power Company (DPC). | |
| "Neither the government nor the group of domestic lenders is willing to offer them indemnity against an unspecified amount as nobody has any idea about the liabilities of DPC," a source said. The deadline for signing the deal with the equity holders expires on June 1. | |
| According to the sources, the government is willing to guarantee a 20-year bond, which will be floated to generate money to clear foreign lenders' dues. The Life Insurance Corporation (LIC) will subscribe to the bond. | |
| ICICI Securities, the investment banking arm of ICICI, is brokering the deal. The bond will offer a 55-60 basis points higher coupon over a comparable maturity government paper. One basis point is one hundredth of a percentage point. | |
| The first leg of the plan was to settle the dues of the foreign lenders at a discount. At the second stage, the plan was to buy out the exposures of two export credit agencies -- Japanese Exim and US Exim. | |
| This was to be followed by settling about $225 million exposures of Overseas Private Investment Corporation (OPIC), a US risk insurance agency. | |
| The last leg of the plan was to buy out the equity holders with the money raised from National Thermal Power Corporation (NTPC), Gail (India) Ltd and three Indian lenders -- State Bank of India, ICICI and Industrial Development Bank of India. | |
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First Published: May 24 2005 | 12:00 AM IST
