May
07, 2000
Bankrupt Maharashtra
It has been a fairly short journey from Advantage Maharashtra to Bankrupt
Maharashtra. The state barely managed to pay back the Rs 425 crore overdraft
from the Reserve Bank of India in the end of April, by leaning on some
State Government Undertakings to lend it the money. This week, it plans
to go back to the RBI for a fresh overdraft of at least Rs 200 crore.
At the same time, it is in the midst of formalising an ambitious borrowing
and funding programme to tide over its monetary problems. This includes
a proposal to raise a hefty Rs 5,500 crore through state guaranteed
bonds for Krishna Valley-like schemes and projects at what is considered,
by bankers, to be an outrageous interest rates of 18.5 per cent.
The
argument goes that if the Irrigation bonds were raised at 16.5 per cent
under the previous government, then after its credit rating downgrade
it would have to pay more. This logic ignores the fact that interest
rates have moved down since the irrigation bond days. The steep interest
rate is attracting interest from Indian and foreign banks that have
been approached so far. Also in the pipeline is the ambitious announcement
that it will raise Rs 15,000 crore from multilateral agencies for old
and pending projects.
The ALBM advantage
The National Stock Exchange (NSE) has reason to be grateful to the big
industry house. The Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE) after BOLT was gaining
rapidly on the NSEs position as the biggest Indian bourse
in fact, the BSE had begun to beat the NSEs turnover on occasion.
Everything changed after the market meltdown when the Income Tax department
investigated the Mauritius tax concessions. That day, brokers afraid
that they would not be able to rollover their trading positions on to
the BSE discovered the NSEs Automated Lending and Borrowing Mechanism
(ALBM) and got funded by the big industry house. From a measly turnover
of Rs four-five crore, ALBM suddenly saw volumes shoot up to Rs 400
crore plus per settlement even though margins are higher and monitoring
stricter. The NSE has since begun to widen the gap between its trading
turnover and that of the BSE and badla volumes are down too. Naturally,
the BSE is unhappy. We learn that the regulator is planning to conduct
an inspection to check how the ALBM works.
Money first, reforms later
The power ministry, tired of browbeating financial institutions (FIs)
to fund private power projects without escrow facilities is now reportedly
directing them to do so. A news report says
that if the State Electricity Boards (SEB) are willing to undertake
reforms and set out a milestone chart then FIs should cough up the money
and complete financial closure. But what happens if the SEBs renege
on their commitment? Will the FIs then hold back balance funding to
the private projects?
And
what happens to the money that is already invested? It is just too bad
that several private power projects are stuck for funds, but that is
not the problem of financial institutions. Few states have any control
over power theft or their unionised SEB employees and until they can
summon up the political will to push through reforms, the release of
funds is foolhardy.
Updated
weekly.
The
author's e-mail address is: suchetadalal@yahoo.com
Other
columnists: