Byju's unable to pay salaries as rights issue funds locked in separate a/c
In a letter to staff, Raveendran said the rights issue, launched a month ago, has been successfully closed
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Byju's founder Byju Raveendran
New Delhi, 2 March
Byju's founder Byju Raveendran on
Saturday said the edtech company will not be able to pay salaries to employees
as the recent funds raised through a rights issue are inaccessible due to a
legal dispute with certain investors.
In a letter to staff, Raveendran
said the rights issue, launched a month ago, has been successfully closed. "This
was supposed to be a happy correspondence. After all, we now have funds to meet
our short-term needs and clear our liabilities. However, I regret to inform you
that we will still be unable to process your salaries," he said.
In the letter - seen by PTI -
Raveendran said the company is still striving to ensure that salaries are paid
by 10 March. "We shall make these payments the moment we are permitted to
do so as per law," he added.
Further, Raveendran said that last
month, the company faced challenges due to a lack of capital, and "now we
are experiencing a delay despite having funds". "Unfortunately, a
select few (4 out of our 150 plus investors) have stooped to a heartless level,
ensuring that we are unable to utilise the funds raised to pay your hard-earned
salaries," Raveendran said. "At their behest, the amount raised
through the rights issue is currently locked in a separate account," he
added.
Raveendran accused these select
investors of having a callous disregard for the lives and livelihoods of others
even though they had reaped substantial profits from investment in Byju's. "It
is an agonising reality that some of these investors have already reaped
substantial profits - in fact, one of them has made a staggering eight times
their initial investment in BYJU'S. And yet, their actions convey a callous
disregard for our lives and livelihoods," he said in the letter.
Raveendran noted that he has fought
fearlessly and tirelessly, "leaving no stone unturned" to find a way
to honour the company's commitment to employees. "Countless hours have
been spent exploring every possible avenue, engaging our legal teams, and
advocating for your rights. However, despite our best efforts, we are left with
no option but to confront the heart-wrenching reality that we are temporarily
unable to provide you with the financial support you deserve," he said.
Earlier this week, a company law
court had asked the embattled edtech firm to consider extending the closing
date of the USD 200 million rights issue, a request that the management had
hinted it would not accept even as estranged investors flagged technicalities
that prevented the closure of the issue on Wednesday.
In an interim order dated February
27, the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT), Bengaluru Bench said the funds
received by the company in respect to the rights issue should be kept in a
separate escrow account, and it should not be withdrawn till the disposal of
the matter. The next hearing has been listed for April 4.
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