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One of India’s biggest state-run banks said it had fallen victim to its third multimillion-dollar fraud in as many years, a stark illustration of the bad debts and weak defenses against misconduct that plague the country’s financial system, the Wall Street Journal reported. Punjab National Bank said yesterday that a customer, the ailing property lender Dewan Housing Finance Corp., had defrauded it of the equivalent of $491 million. In a separate statement, the bank said that its board had approved a plan to raise about $1.33 billion by selling shares and bonds.
The National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) approved the resolution plan for bankrupt firm Amtek Auto, submitted yesterday by US-based hedge fund Deccan Value Investors LP (DVIL), the India Times reported. This brought to a close the three-year old case after the Supreme Court (SC) in June, refused to give more time for DVIL to assess the impact of the economic contraction caused by the pandemic. A two-judge bench headed by Justice Ajay Kumar Vatsavayi passed the order, which as per the law, provides DVIL with 30 days to complete the payments.
V2 Retail has settled its payment-related dispute with an operational creditor and expects to come out of the insolvency proceedings, according to Ram Chandra Agarwal, the Chairman of the suspended board of the company, IndiaRetailing.com reported. V2 Retail has made payment to the operational creditor, which had dragged it to NCLT, he said.
Cirque du Soleil and its secured creditors are close to reaching a agreement on a second stalking horse bid for the financially strapped entertainment group, after lenders opposed a deal with shareholders including TPG Capital and Fosun International, a Canadian court heard today, Reuters reported. Canada’s once high-flying Cirque has received protection from creditors as it restructures after the COVID-19 pandemic forced it to cancel shows and lay off artists. The Montreal-based entertainment company filed for bankruptcy in late June.
Canadian employment rose by a record-setting 953,000 people in June as COVID-19 lockdown restrictions eased across the country, the Globe and Mail reported. Statistics Canada said today that combined with May’s gain of nearly 290,000 workers, the labour market has recovered about 40 percent of the three million jobs that were lost during the pandemic. The unemployment rate fell to 12.3 percent from May’s record of 13.7 percent. June’s employment gains were almost evenly split between full-time and part-time work.
The 19 finance ministers of the euro zone have elected Paschal Donohoe to be the president of their influential Eurogroup, giving Ireland a significant platform as the European Union debates how to handle the economic fallout of the Coronavirus pandemic, the Irish Times reported. The successful bid means that Donohoe will have the role of chairing and setting the agenda for discussions among the euro zone finance ministers, as well as setting the long-term agenda for the influential group.
LATAM Airlines, the largest airline group in Latin America, said today that it had secured an additional $1.3 billion for its financing proposal before a New York bankruptcy court, while adding its unit in Brazil to the debt restructuring process, Reuters reported. LATAM filed for U.S. bankruptcy protection in May, aiming to reorder $18 billion in debt. It was the world’s largest airline to date to seek an emergency reorganization due to the coronavirus pandemic. Today it said it had secured an additional $1.3 billion in funding from Oaktree Capital Management L.P.