THE GREAT ₹5,750 CRORE HOUDINI ACT OF SUBBARAMI REDDY & CO.
By C Subrahmanyam | Hyderabad | September 22, 2025
THE HOUDINI ACT IN HYDERABAD
Step into the National Company Law Tribunal, Hyderabad. Curtains rise. Enter the promoters of Gayatri Projects Limited, the empire of ex-Congress strongman T. Subbarami Reddy.
- Debt owed to banks: ₹8,100 crore
- Dragged into insolvency by SBI: over ₹600 crore dues
But wait — abracadabra! Instead of liquidation or justice, a “One-Time Settlement” is conjured.
- Settlement amount: ₹2,400 crore
- Vanished debt: ₹5,750 crore
- Lender approval: 97%
The banks clap in approval, blessing this Houdini act.
A TALE OF TWO INDIAS
In the India of Bharat’s farmers and small shopkeepers, loans mean:
- Humiliation
- Seizure of assets
- Jail and even death
Miss an EMI, and recovery agents bang at your door.
In the India of corporate titans, loans mean:
- Negotiations
- Settlements
- Write-offs that would make even a pickpocket blush
Scoop has seen this before:
- 2008: UPA waived ₹71,680 crore for farmers
- Telangana (today): Congress boasts of ₹31,000 crore farmer loan waiver
Yet, RBI studies warn:
👉 Waivers breed defaults.
👉 Defaults breed disaster.
But when corporates default, they are rewarded with sweetheart deals, political nods, and a fresh lease of life.
CRONY CAPITALISM, THE INDIAN WAY
Let’s stop pretending. This is not “IBC reform.” This is crony capitalism in a legal robe.
- Studies show: Politically connected firms are 17% more likely to get waivers.
- Subbarami Reddy, a Congress stalwart, sees his company’s sins laundered with blessings from the same banks that hound small borrowers.
THE PEOPLE’S FURY
On X (Twitter), outrage is volcanic:
- “Why do banks suck the blood of the poor but forgive the rich?”
- “Financial crime in daylight!”
And they are right. Because when taxpayers’ money props up these bailouts, the people are robbed twice:
- Once by the defaulting corporate
- Again by the banking system
THE FINAL RECKONING
Let the truth ring out from Bombay to the banks of the Krishna:
India runs two debt systems:
- For the poor: merciless, brutal, unforgiving
- For the rich: indulgent, generous, politically perfumed
This duality is not an accident — it is the design of a system that serves the powerful first, and the powerless last.
THE VERDICT
This is not merely about Subbarami Reddy.
This is about the soul of Indian banking.
Every time ₹5,750 crore is written off for a corporate baron, and every time a farmer dies for ₹50,000, the Republic is mocked.
Until this dual debt raj is demolished, until bankers treat both big fish and small fry alike — India’s tryst with justice will remain unfulfilled.

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