News of Business Standard newspaper on IBBI guidelines
Understanding the Rushed IBBI Guidelines for COC is crucial when navigating the complexities of insolvency resolution in India. To fully comprehend the im
plications, it is crucial to focus on understanding the rushed IBBI guidelines for COC.
y-not-be-effective-experts-124082300872_1.html”>Ibbi guidelines for CoC need monitoring mechanism, say IBC experts | Finance News - Business Standard (business-standard.com)
Key Points:
- The focus is on understanding the recently issued IBBI guidelines for COCs, which some experts believe were rushed.
- A recent High Court case raised questions about a COC's decision to sell a company at a significantly lower price than its fair value.
- The case also points out how the COC, while managing the company during insolvency, may not be held accountable for maintaining its fair value.
- The author questions the purpose of fair value assessments if the promoter (company owner) doesn't benefit and the COC isn't responsible for maintaining it.
Additional Information:
- The passage defines "fair value" according to the CIRP (Corporate Insolvency Resolution Process) Regulations.
So here, the law point is: Why have fair value at all? Why burden the already sick company with two reputed valuers when no one will give a dam to that report? If the promoter does not get absolved based on his company’s fair valuation and COC is not responsible for taking care of Fair valuation, then what is the need to waste money? That’s my point of view.
Fair Value: Regulation 2(hb) of CIRP Regulations defines Fair Value as “estimated realizable value of the assets of the corporate debtor if they were to be exchanged on the insolvency commencement date between a willing buyer and a willing seller in an arm’s length transaction, after proper marketing and where the parties had acted knowledgeably, prudently and without compulsion”.