AT-1 bonds write-off- Yes Bank moves SC against high court ruling
时间:2024-06-29 04:17:35 阅读(143)
Yes Bank has approached the Supreme Court to appeal against a Bombay high court ruling on the write-down of additional Tier-1(AT-1) bonds worth Rs 8,415 crore.
“The Bank has filed appeal(s) before the Honourable Supreme Court of India against the Judgment dated January 20, 2023 of the Honourable Bombay High Court setting aside the decision of the Bank to write down AT-1 Bonds,” a spokesperson for the lender told FE in a statement.
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In January, the Bombay high court held that there were procedural lapses in the bank’s decision to write off the bonds. The decision came as a relief to the bond investors, many of whom had lost their life’s savings in the process.
“During this period, the administrator could not have taken such a policy decision as writing down the AT-1 bonds. Nor the Reserve Bank of India had authorised him to do so. The final reconstruction scheme also did not authorise the administrator to write off the AT-1 bonds,” the high court said in its order.
Yes Bank’s managing director and chief executive officer Prashant Kumar had said the lender had strong legal grounds to appeal the decision. Prior to assuming his role heading the bank, Kumar had served as its administrator.
In 2020, RBI superseded the bank’s board due to mounting bad loans, and appointed Kumar administrator.
AT-1 bonds are unsecured, perpetual bonds that are issued to bulk up banks’ core capital base. They carry call options that enable investors to redeem them after five or 10 years. Banks issuing these bonds can skip interest payouts for a particular year or reduce the bond’s face value if their capital ratios fall below thresholds specified in their offer terms.
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In Yes Bank’s case, RBI had asked the administrator to write off the bonds as a part of the latter’s restructuring scheme.
In its appeal to the Supreme Court, the bank has argued that its administrator had the power to fully write-down the AT-1 bonds, a person familiar with the matter said without disclosing the specific details of the petition. The RBI may reportedly choose to provide a regulator’s perspective when the petition is brought up before the apex court.
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