
NCLAT Dismisses Venugopal Dhoot's Plea to Include Foreign Oil Assets in Videocon Insolvency Resolution
National Company Law Appellate Tribunal Rejects Videocon Founder's Request for Inclusion of Foreign Assets in Insolvency Proceedings
The National Company Law Appellate Tribunal (NCLAT) has dealt a blow to Videocon founder Venugopal Dhoot, rejecting his request to include the group's Brazilian and Indonesian oil and gas assets in the ongoing insolvency proceedings of Videocon Industries and its 12 affiliates.
A bench led by Justice Yogesh Khanna upheld the lenders' stand that the foreign assets belonged to separate entities such as Videocon Oil Venture Ltd (VOVL) and could not automatically be a part of Videocon Industries' corporate insolvency resolution process (CIRP). The dispute centered around overseas oil and gas assets held through VOVL and its subsidiaries in Brazil and Indonesia.
Dhoot had argued that since lenders connected to those overseas businesses had already filed claims in Videocon Industries' insolvency proceedings through corporate guarantees, the corresponding foreign assets should also be included in the insolvency estate. However, the NCLAT's latest ruling reaffirmed that the foreign oil and gas assets could not be merged with the CIRP of Videocon Industries and its domestic group companies.
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| Entity | Admitted Claims (₹ Crore) |
|---|---|
| Videocon Industries | 64,838 |
| Videocon Oil Venture Ltd (VOVL) | - |
| Other Group Companies | - |
The appellate tribunal held that the overseas assets belonged to separate corporate entities and that the lenders' commercial decision to keep them outside the consolidated insolvency process could not be interfered with lightly. The tribunal also highlighted contradictions in Dhoot's previous position, noting that in 2016 and 2017, he had written to lenders requesting that the overseas oil and gas business be "ring-fenced" from the financial stress affecting Videocon Industries' domestic operations.
"The entire journey by Mr Dhoot has been of flip-flops," the tribunal observed, referring to the promoter's changing stand over the years. Videocon Group, once a leading consumer electronics and energy conglomerate, entered insolvency after years of debt-driven expansion across appliances, telecom, and overseas oil and gas businesses.
Heavy borrowing, weak cash flows, mounting losses, and the collapse of its telecom venture pushed the group into default. In 2017, RBI identified Videocon among the first 12 large corporate defaulters for insolvency action under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC). In June 2018, the NCLT admitted SBI's insolvency plea against Videocon Industries. Later, insolvency proceedings of Videocon Industries and 12 group companies were consolidated, with admitted claims of about ₹64,838 crore. Separately, personal insolvency proceedings were initiated against Venugopal Dhoot in April 2026.
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Investor Takeaway
Lenders' stand on foreign assets may impact Videocon Industries' insolvency resolution process.
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