
Indian edtech giant Byju’s has filed a complaint in the New York Supreme Court to challenge the acceleration of the $1.2 billion term loan B and to disqualify Redwood, who it alleges has conducted a series of predatory tactics.
The Bengaluru-headquartered startup said Redwood purchased a significant portfolio of the loan while primarily trading in distressed debt.
India’s most valuable startup said it will not make any payments to the term loan B lenders until the dispute is resolved.
The move from the Indian giant follows lenders “unlawfully” accelerating the term of the loans on the account of “certain alleged non-monetary and technical defaults,” the company said.
“On the back of this unconscionable acceleration of the TLB, the TLB lenders undertook unwarranted enforcement measures including seizing control of Byju’s Alpha and appointing its own management. Not resting content with this, the TLB lenders (acting through their agent, GLAS Trust Company) commenced litigation in Delaware in an attempt to lend credence to these actions,” Byju’s said Tuesday.
“In the Delaware proceedings, the TLB lenders (unsuccessfully) attempted to deprive Byju’s of its contractual right to ‘disqualify’ lenders engaged primarily in opportunistic trades. The Delaware court rejected this attempt, ruling that the TLB lenders “have not demonstrated either irreparable harm or the balance of the harms as required to support a provision restraining” this contractual right of Byju’s.”
Source link