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Facing insolvency, Byju's hit with new challenge from lendersByju's is facing insolvency proceedings after India's cricket board said it was not paid $19 million in sponsorship dues. Its former billionaire CEO Byju Raveendran wants the insolvency quashed as his co-founder brother decided to pay the cricket board, settling the matter.
Reuters
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<div class="paragraphs"><p>Illustration shows Byju's logo</p></div>

Illustration shows Byju's logo

Credit: Reuters File Photo

New Delhi: US-based Glas Trust is asking an Indian court to not quash insolvency proceedings for ed-tech giant Byju's as lenders the trust represents are owed $1 billion, posing a new challenge for the Indian startup that was once the nation's biggest.

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Byju's was valued at $22 billion in 2022 before being hit with many setbacks including boardroom exits, an auditor resignation and a public spat with foreign investors over mismanagement. The company has denied any wrongdoing.

Byju's is facing insolvency proceedings after India's cricket board said it was not paid $19 million in sponsorship dues. Its former billionaire CEO Byju Raveendran wants the insolvency quashed as his co-founder brother decided to pay the cricket board, settling the matter.

But Glas Trust is saying Byju and his brother Riju used money owed to lenders to clear the Indian cricket board's dues and that the insolvency proceedings should continue, according to a 1,111-page court filing from Glas that is not public and arguments it has made in court.

Byju Raveendran hasn't commented on the matter. But Riju in a separate court filing dated August 1 and seen by Reuters, said he paid the cricket board's settlement amount from "personal funds" and the liquidation of personal assets.

A judge is likely to rule on the matter on Friday.

Raveendran and a spokesperson for Byju's did not respond to a request for comment. Glas Trust also did not respond.

Byju's, which operates in more than 21 countries, became popular during the Covid-19 pandemic by offering online education courses.

A ruling by the Indian court in favour of Glas could renew problems for the ed-tech company despite the settlement with the cricket body and means its assets would remain frozen.

Raveendran has warned that insolvency would lead to "a total shut down of services" and could trigger an employee exodus.

Byju's has around 27,000 employees, including 16,000 teachers.

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(Published 02 August 2024, 12:59 IST)