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Reliance Communications Bondholders Organize After Default

Reliance Communications has hired advisers after the company defaulted on its dollar-denominated notes last month.

Reliance Communications Bondholders Organize After Default
Pedestrians walk past advertisements for Reliance Communications Ltd.’s Reliance Telecom, on a street in Mumbai, India. (Photographer: Prashanth Vishwanathan/Bloomberg News)

(Bloomberg) -- Bondholders of Reliance Communications Ltd., the embattled Indian mobile phone operator controlled by billionaire Anil Ambani, have hired advisers after the company defaulted on its dollar-denominated notes last month. 

Certain investors holding a significant percentage of the securities have formed a committee, which has appointed PJT Partners Inc. as its financial adviser and Kirkland & Ellis LLP as its legal adviser, according to a document seen by Bloomberg News. The group has commenced discussions with the company, it said.

Reliance Communications marked the highest-profile default on international debt by an Indian borrower since the nation’s insolvency and bankruptcy code was passed in May 2016, when it failed to pay interest on the dollar bonds last month. The company’s earnings slumped after deep-pocketed Reliance Jio Infocomm Ltd., backed by India’s richest man and Ambani’s older brother, started offering free calls last year.

Reliance Communications Bondholders Organize After Default

Reliance Communications’ dollar note investors hold only a small portion of the company’s overall debt, so “it’s unclear what their negotiating power is,” said Pavitra Sudhindran, a credit analyst at Nomura Holdings Inc.

The outstanding amount of the securities is only $300 million compared with the company’s total debt, which was about $7 billion as of the end of March, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Creditors have been circling. China Development Bank asked an Indian tribunal to place the mobile phone operator under insolvency proceedings, a person familiar with the matter said in November. Public-relations firm Fortuna Public Relations Pvt. made a similar request earlier this month. Reliance Communications has said that a standstill period for interest and principal repayments continues until December 2018.

In a call with bondholders in November, the company encouraged noteholders to form a committee.

“The committee and its advisers would like to engage with other noteholders to understand their positions and perspectives,” the document seen by Bloomberg News said.

Reliance Communications’ bonds due 2020 fell 0.6 cent on the dollar to 36.8 cents on Wednesday, according to Bloomberg-compiled prices.

To contact the reporter on this story: Denise Wee in Hong Kong at dwee10@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Andrew Monahan at amonahan@bloomberg.net, Ken McCallum

©2017 Bloomberg L.P.