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The 17-bank consortium, led by the State Bank of India, is re-auctioning Kingfisher House in Mumbai and the airlines’ trademarks and brands, including the ‘Kingfisher’ logo, on 4 August.
As the lenders and tax authorities cool their heels for Vijay Mallya to return to India, they will put under the hammer assets worth over Rs 700 crore of the embattled businessman’s long-defunct Kingfisher Airlines, for the next month.
The items waiting for the right bidders are plenty:
This would be the second attempt to auction by the lenders and tax authorities as part of their efforts to recover thousands of crores worth of outstanding dues, after the first attempt for each of these properties proved to be a damp squib.
Mallya’s personal jet is being put under the hammer by the service tax department, while other properties will be auctioned by the lenders whose dues from long-grounded Kingfisher Airlines have ballooned to over Rs 9,000 crore, including penal interest.
For almost all the properties, the reserve price has been marked down after the earlier attempts failed to attract bidders.
The lenders will re-auction Kingfisher House, the erstwhile headquarters of the airline, at a lower reserve price of Rs 135 crore. In the initial attempt in March to sell the property with a built-up area of over 17,000 sq ft in plush Vile Parle area, not a single bidder came forward at the then-reserve price of Rs 150 crore.
Banks have also put up some of the movable secured assets lying at Kingfisher House, worth Rs 13.70 lakh, for sale. These assets will be auctioned separately on 25 August by SBI Cap Trustee, which possesses these assets on behalf of the lenders.
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