Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

Indian court halts insolvency proceedings against Reliance's Anil Ambani

AN Indian court on Thursday (27) halted insolvency proceedings against Reliance Group chairman Anil Ambani, the younger brother of India's richest man, and barred him from disposing of any of his assets.

Anil Ambani, who runs a business group separate from his billionaire brother Mukesh Ambani, had filed a plea with the Delhi high court challenging the appointment of a resolution professional over a roughly $163 million personal guarantee that he had given to the State Bank of India for loans to his companies.


His Reliance Communications (RCom), a mobile carrier launched in 2002 with cut-price plans and is currently in insolvency.

Its heavy debt load and a string of losses exacerbated its shutdown as Mukesh Ambani's Reliance Industries in 2016 launched its Jio telecoms venture, breaking the Indian telecoms market with cheap data plans and free voice services.

Most of Anil Ambani's other companies, in sectors such as defence, entertainment and infrastructure, have also struggled.

Ambani, the joint heir to Reliance Industries, forced a split in the conglomerate after his father Dhirubhai Ambani's death in 2002.

In a 2005 deal brokered by their mother, Anil Ambani won control of the power, financial services and the newly built telecoms business, while Mukesh Ambani retained the oil and petrochemicals business.

But Anil Ambani's fortunes have ebbed since and he narrowly escaped a jail sentence last year with his elder brother coming to his rescue.

More For You

England and Wales councils

The government's "fair funding review 2.0," expected on December (17) will determine how funding is allocated

iStock

England and Wales councils warn of bankruptcy as funding reaches 'breaking point'

Highlights

  • 29 councils already unable to meet financial obligations without emergency government loans.
  • London boroughs face £1bn shortfall this year, with half potentially requiring bailouts by 2028.
  • Government's "fair funding review 2.0" expected December (17) will determine council allocations.

Local authorities across England and Wales have warned their finances are at "breaking point," with more councils expected to declare bankruptcy as they await crucial government funding announcements this month.

Council leaders anticipate changes to annual funding arrangements will result in steep cuts for many authorities, preventing them from balancing budgets and providing basic services to residents.

Keep ReadingShow less