India's second largest listed real estate developer Unitech on Monday
claimed that its debt obligation up to March '09 has reduced
from Rs 2,500 crore
to Rs 600 crore on account of repayment and roll over of loans. Of the Rs
600 crore loan, which the company is now expected to pay back by March, 60%
is due to banks and rest to mutual funds. The company claimed it paid back
close to Rs 950 crore and the rest was rescheduled to a later date.

Unitech had a total debt of Rs 8,300 crore on its balance sheet as of
September, of which Rs 2,500 was supposed to be repaid by March 2009.
Unitech MD Sanjay Chandra said over Rs 1,000 crore loan has been
restructured so far, but didn't give the exact figure.

Some of the loans that have been rescheduled include those which were due
after March. Without clarifying how much Unitech still owed its lenders
following the repayment and restructuring of loans Mr Chandra said, "We
don't have substantial repayment obligation now. Nothing that worries us."

Unitech had raised Rs 900 crore at 19% interest rate from 8-9 mutual fund
houses, including Reliance and Kotak, in November 2008. This was due for
repayment on Monday. The company said it paid back a 'substantial' amount on
Saturday, while the rest was rolled over.

"We are trying to replace our short-term mutual fund debt by long-term bank
loans," said Mr Chandra, adding that he expected to replace Rs 2,500-crore
short-term loans by long-term loans in the next two months. He said he has
been able to raise fresh debt, mainly to retire old ones, but refused to
give the amount of fresh debt raised.

Unitech in a hurriedly concluded EGM on Monday also obtained approval of
shareholders to raise Rs 5,000 crore through fresh issue of equity or
convertible instruments. "The way restructuring is happening and the pace at
which it is happening, we don't need fresh capital. But if there is a window
of opportunity, we will go for it," said Mr Chandra. He declined to comment
on the shares promoters have pledged with other financial institutions.

On the issue of share buy-back of AIM-listed Unitech Corporate Park(UCP), Mr
Chandra said a decision will be taken by the UCP board next week in Dubai.
UCP holds real estate projects being executed by Unitech in India. Unitech's
wholly owned subsidiary Nectrus Ltd will buy back shares using management
fee it gets from UCP once the board gives a green signal.

Source: http://indian-mutualfund.blogspot.com/

-- 
___________________________________________________________________________________
'I made my money by selling too soon.'

Blog: www.indian-mutualfund.blogspot.com

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