City
Epaper

Jaypee Insolvency: Adani Group backs CoC decision; opposes Vedanta's late offer

By ANI | Updated: April 21, 2026 12:05 IST

New Delhi [India], April 21 : The Adani Group on Tuesday strongly defended the integrity of the resolution process ...

Open in App

New Delhi [India], April 21 : The Adani Group on Tuesday strongly defended the integrity of the resolution process in the Jaypee Associates insolvency matter before the National Company Law Appellate Tribunal (NCLAT), where Vedanta has challenged the decision of the Committee of Creditors (CoC) to approve Adani's bid.

Senior Advocate Ritin Rai, appearing for the Adani Group, submitted that the challenge mechanism was conducted in a fair, transparent, and structured manner, with equal opportunity provided to all prospective resolution applicants. He emphasised that no additional information or modifications were permitted after the submission deadline, in line with the rules governing the Corporate Insolvency Resolution Process (CIRP).

He argued that Vedanta had participated in the process with full knowledge of its terms, including financial thresholds and timelines, and is now seeking to reopen the process by offering a higher bid at a belated stage. Such a move, Rai contended, is impermissible under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC).

Defending the CoC's decision, Rai stressed that the creditors, exercising their commercial wisdom, evaluated all compliant resolution plans before approving Adani's proposal. He added that such decisions should not be interfered with lightly by appellate forums.

Rai further cautioned that allowing last-minute revisions or unsolicited offers after the closure of the process would set a "dangerous precedent", undermining the sanctity of the CIRP framework and creating uncertainty in resolution mechanisms.

He told the tribunal that multiple challenge rounds were conducted during the bidding process, with each round identifying the highest bidder (H1). All participants, including Vedanta, were given a fair opportunity to improve their offers.

According to Rai, once the final round concluded, the process attained closure, and only the highest compliant bid at that stage could be considered. He highlighted that the CoC approved the resolution plan at its meeting held on November 7, following which Vedanta submitted an unsolicited revised offer on November 8.

He also underlined that the evaluation of bids is not based solely on headline financial figures, but on a composite assessment of factors such as structure, certainty, and compliance with process terms.

The matter has been listed for Wednesday for rejoinder arguments, with counsel for Vedanta seeking time to present submissions.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

TechnologyTop S. Korean firms launch $476.4 million AI fund in India

Other SportsTushar, Mannat share lead in IGPL Congo

BusinessTop S. Korean firms launch $476.4 million AI fund in India

NationalBitcoin scam: ED raids Karnataka Congress leaders; state govt awaits official word

EntertainmentMadonna's Coachella 2026 outfit goes missing; reward offered for its return

Business Realted Stories

BusinessTech giants Samsung and LG hike laptop prices twice in three months

BusinessPLI onboarded on Bharat Connect; digital premium payments expand to over 1.25 crore policyholders

BusinessIndia tops global AI health adoption at 85 pc, far ahead of US, UK: Report

BusinessSeoul stocks set record peak amid hopes of peace talks, tech rally

BusinessPPS Trucking Opens New BharatBenz Workshop in Silchar, Assam Driving Deeper Accessibility in the Northeast