Tuesday 14 October 2014

SEBI ban puts DLF in a spot

  • The Securities and Exchange Board of India’s ban on the country’s largest property developer, DLF, means the company could now struggle to pay down its debt using equity or debt instruments regulated by the market regulator. Its debt, which swelled as the firm ramped up land acquisitions before the financial crisis, stood at Rs.19,100 crore ($3.13 billion) at the end of June.
  • The ban, a blow to the heavily indebted real estate firm, follows what the regulator said was DLF’s failure to provide key information on subsidiaries and pending legal cases at the time of its record-breaking 2007 initial public offering.
  • A DLF spokesman said the company was reviewing the order, but declined to comment further.
  • “As far as non-disclosure cases are concerned, this is the biggest case in SEBI’s history, and this is by far the biggest punishment they have imposed,’’ said J. N. Gupta, a former Executive Director at the regulator, who now runs a shareholder advisory firm.
  • DLF raised $2.3 billion in 2007 at the height of the pre-financial crises euphoria, in what was then the country’s biggest market debut. New Delhi-based DLF builds homes, offices and shopping centres, and is now developing a 1.9-million square-foot retail mall close to the capital, which is expected to be the biggest in the country when it is completed next year.


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