Home Industry Healthcare NMC creditors are forming a committee for $6.6bn debt talks The company was placed in administration last week by Bloomberg April 13, 2020 The main lenders to embattled NMC Health are setting up a coordinating committee, taking a major step toward restructuring the hospital operator’s $6.6bn debt, according to people with knowledge of the matter. HSBC Holdings, Barclays and Standard Chartered will join Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank, Dubai Islamic Bank and Abu Dhabi Islamic Bank to lead the debt talks with representatives for NMC, the people said, asking not to be named because the discussions are private. The company was placed in administration last week. The coordinating committee is set to hire Deloitte and Clifford Chance to advise on the negotiations, the people said. The banks and advisers still have to formally agree on the formation of the committee and its final composition may change, they said. Representatives for HSBC, Standard Chartered, Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank and Abu Dhabi Islamic Bank declined to comment. Representatives for Deloitte, NMC, Clifford Chance, Barclays and Dubai Islamic Bank didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment. NMC is being run by administrators Alvarez & Marsal Inc. after succumbing to creditor demands. Trading in the London-listed company, which was founded by Indian entrepreneur Bavaguthu Raghuram Shetty and had a market value of $10bn at its peak, was suspended in February amid allegations of fraud. It has revealed more than $4bn of undisclosed borrowings, pushing its total of debt to $6.6bn. State-owned Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank, which is owed $963m, pushed for administration in a bid to get management to relinquish control. Tags BR Shetty committee creditors Debt Healthcare NMC Health UAE 0 Comments You might also like Flying Taxis: How Archer aims to revolutionise travel in the UAE UAE to announce petrol, diesel prices for January; will rates drop in 2024? How REITs are unlocking the potential of UAE real estate GCC region M&A blazes trail as global deals decline