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REC intimates on Subsidiary incorporation

REC intimates on Subsidiary incorporation

REC has announced that Rajgarh Neemuch Power Transmission Limited has been incorporated as Wholly Owned Subsidiary of REC Power Development and Consultancy Limited (HRECPDCL"- a Wholly Owned Subsidiary of REC Limited). The said company is also subsidiary company of REC Limited, in terms of the provisions of Section 2(87) of the Companies Act, 20l3 .Powered by Capital Market - Live News

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HC confirms ₹9.76-crore Stamp Act penalty on IL&FS
HC confirms ₹9.76-crore Stamp Act penalty on IL&FS

Hindustan Times

time5 hours ago

  • Hindustan Times

HC confirms ₹9.76-crore Stamp Act penalty on IL&FS

MUMBAI: The Bombay high court on Wednesday confirmed a ₹ 9.76-crore penalty imposed on IL&FS Financial Services Ltd (IFIN) for failing to pay stamp duty on time following the demerger of the company. A single judge bench of justice Jitendra Jain dismissed the petition filed by the IL&FS group firm, challenging the levy of penalty over and above the stamp duty of ₹ 7.07 crore, which was payable towards registration of the court order on the company's demerger. (Shutterstock) IL&FS (Infrastructure Leasing & Financial Services) underwent a demerger in 2007-08, wherein iIts ancillary businesses including IFIN were constituted as wholly-owned subsidiaries and IL&FS was transformed into a holding company focused on investments and lending to its group companies. After the Bombay high court operating under the Companies Act, 1956 sanctioned the demerger scheme in April 2008, the company lodged the document with the collector of stamps for adjudication of stamp duty. The company subsequently failed to supply documents and information sought by the collector of stamps, which resulted in the collector issuing a demand letter on December 19, 2014 for payment of stamp duty and penalty. On December 31, 2014, the collector of stamps issued a demand notice to the company, directing them to pay ₹ 7.07 crore towards stamp duty and ₹ 9.76 crore towards penalty under the Maharashtra Stamp Act, 1958. The company accepted the stamp duty, but opposed imposition of the penalty and appealed before the Chief Controlling Revenue Authority (CCRA) in January 2015. On March 25, 2015, the CCRA granted a stay on recovery proceedings for the penalty after the company deposited the stamp duty. After the CCRA dismissed the company's petition in 2017, it approached the high court. Before the high court, IL&FS argued that as per section 31(4) of the Maharashtra Stamp Act, penalty at the rate of 2% could be imposed only if the stamp duty payable under section 30 of the Act was not paid within 60 days from the date on which the notice of demand was served. The company contended that March 25, 2015 – the date of the interim order of the CCRA – was the date of serving demand notice under section 31(4) and since it had paid the stamp duty on March 27, 2015 – that is, within two days of the said interim order – there was no default and consequently, no penalty could be imposed. The court observed that the 60-day period would, at most, start from December 19, 2014 – the date on which the demand letter was issued; or December 31, 2014 – the date on which the demand notice was issued; or January 14, 2015 – then the company filed an appeal with the CCRA. 'The petitioner after having admitted the liability of payment of stamp duty vide letter dated December 19, 2014 and made the respondents (collector of stamps) to issue final demand notice dated December 31, 2014 failed to make payment within 60 days thereof, which would expire on March 2, 2015,' the court said, confirming the penalty imposed on the company.

PFC, REC gain as RBI unveils final project finance norms
PFC, REC gain as RBI unveils final project finance norms

Business Standard

timea day ago

  • Business Standard

PFC, REC gain as RBI unveils final project finance norms

Shares of Power Finance Corporation (PFC) and REC rose by 3.33% to 5.37% after the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) issued its final Project Finance Directions, 2025. The comprehensive framework, aimed at streamlining and standardizing project loan regulations across banks, NBFCs, and cooperative lenders, comes into effect from 1 October 2025. The market responded swiftly to the announcement, with shares of key project financiers surging in morning trade. PFC jumped 5.37%, while REC climbed 3.33%, as investors welcomed the regulatory clarity and operational flexibility promised by the new guidelines. Compared to the RBIs draft proposal from May 2024, which had outlined a steeper 5% standard asset provisioning for under-construction projects, the final guidelines dial things down substantially. Now, lenders will need to set aside just 1% for infrastructure projects and 1.25% for commercial real estate (CRE). Thats a major breather for dedicated project financiers like REC and PFC, who had been staring at potentially higher capital requirements under the earlier draft. The RBI has rationalized the norms around the extension of the 'Date of Commencement of Commercial Operations' (DCCO), allowing extensions of up to three years for infrastructure projects and two years for non-infrastructure ones. Lenders will also have greater flexibility to assess and decide on DCCO extensions within these ceilings based on commercial viability. The provisioning requirements for under-construction projects have been streamlined as well. Lenders will now set aside a standard 1% for such exposures, with a gradual increase depending on the length of DCCO deferment. In the case of under-construction commercial real estate, the initial provisioning will be slightly higher at 1.25%. For projects that have already achieved financial closure, existing provisioning rules will continue to apply, ensuring a smooth transition to the new regime. Once projects become operational, the provisioning rates are clearly defined: 1% for commercial real estate, 0.75% for CRE-residential housing, and 0.40% for other project loans. This structured approach is expected to bring predictability to provisioning and risk management practices. The market view is clear: the final norms are far more balanced and pragmatic. They reduce capital drag without compromising prudential standards. The relaxed provisioning norms, coupled with the exclusion of existing loan books from the new rules, would have negligible impact on NBFC and bank profitability. For power sector financiers like PFC and REC, the relief is doubly reassuring. Even the marginal provisioning required under the new norms will be comfortably absorbed through existing impairment reserves. Importantly, the directions only apply to loans achieving financial closure on or after 1 October 2025, meaning current portfolios are unaffected. While the earlier draft had also proposed a stringent 360-day performance requirement for loan upgrades -- another red flag for lenders, this too has been relaxed in the final version. The overall tone of the guidelines has shifted from caution-heavy to growth-accommodating, signalling the RBI's intent to support long-term infrastructure finance without straining lender balance sheets.

Stocks in uptrend: REC, PFC, IREDA up on RBI project finance norm. Do you own any of these?
Stocks in uptrend: REC, PFC, IREDA up on RBI project finance norm. Do you own any of these?

Mint

timea day ago

  • Mint

Stocks in uptrend: REC, PFC, IREDA up on RBI project finance norm. Do you own any of these?

Stocks in uptrend: REC, PFC, IREDA share prices gained up to 5% in the morning trades on Friday. The gains were led by news flow around RBI finalizing the project finance norm. Do you own any of these? Power Finance Corporation Ltd was the largest gainer as its share price gained more than 5%. The REC Ltd and Indian Renewable Energy Development Agency Ltd or IREDA share price also were up 3-4% in the morning trades on the BSE on Friday

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