How flour mill businesses actually resolve stressed loans — OTS, restructuring, SARFAESI and DRT — with the sector-specific twists that determine the outcome.
Flour Mill businesses live and die by the crop cycle, government procurement policy and cold-chain economics. Even efficient operators can face 90–120 day cash-cycle mismatches during procurement season — long enough for the account to slip into irregular territory.
The lender profile is unique: a mix of PSU banks (priority-sector-driven), NABARD refinance lines and, sometimes, NBFCs that specialise in the segment. Each has a different appetite for restructuring versus settlement.
This guide walks through the Flour Mill distress cycle end-to-end — what triggers it, how banks respond, and where the practical settlement window opens.
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• Waiver band estimate for your case
• Best-fit authority / branch to file at
• Risk of SARFAESI / auction escalation
• Documentation checklist
How Flour Mill businesses typically borrow
The flour mill sector uses a specific mix of facilities. Understanding which facility is stressed matters because each has a different resolution surface.
Warehouse Receipt Finance
Cash Credit against stock
Term Loan for plant
Machinery loan (cold storage / processing)
Pledge / hypothecation of stock
NABARD-refinanced term loans
Government-scheme-linked loans (PMEGP, CGTMSE)
Cash flow and working-capital risks in Flour Mill
Flour Mill operations lock cash into paddy / raw / stock during procurement season and release it over the following two quarters. Any disruption — MSP change, storage failure, downstream buyer default — freezes the release. Working-capital lines then run above sanctioned limit for months.
Why Flour Mill businesses default — the recurring patterns
Across the files we have handled in this sector, the same 5–7 causes drive most of the distress. Recognising them early is the difference between restructuring and OTS.
Procurement season cash lock-in
MSP / procurement policy change
Storage / power tariff shock
Delayed subsidy or export incentive receipt
Regulatory / FSSAI compliance capex
Buyer default in downstream FMCG channel
Industry-specific challenges we see on Flour Mill files
These are the sector-level headwinds that consistently shape how a bank underwrites, monitors and recovers on a distressed file.
Crop-cycle and procurement-policy dependence
Seasonal cash lock-in during procurement
Storage loss and quality-degradation risk
Power tariff shocks in energy-heavy operations
MSP / export policy volatility
FSSAI / regulatory compliance intensification
Delayed government subsidy releases
How banks recover on Flour Mill exposures
On Flour Mill exposures, banks factor in seasonality when deciding recovery timing. SARFAESI moves are common but banks are also open to restructuring around the next procurement cycle if the borrower brings credible cash-flow projections. NABARD-refinanced accounts have an additional layer of policy discipline.
Settlement approach that works for Flour Mill
For Flour Mill settlements, the working formula is: reconcile to the bank's RVS working, structure a down-payment the promoter can actually fund, and stage the balance in tranches aligned to expected inflows. Waiver bands typically run 40–70% depending on stage and security cover. The proposal must be filed with the SAM / SARB (not the origination branch) once the file has migrated, and must include the source-of-funds annexure. On flour mill files specifically, the operating-continuity narrative matters — banks are more willing to close when the business can point to a credible go-forward plan.
This page is educational and is not legal or financial advice. Settlement approval depends on each bank's individual assessment and internal policy.
Restructuring — when it is the better route for Flour Mill
Restructuring is the better route for Flour Mill files where the business is fundamentally viable and the distress is a liquidity issue, not a solvency issue. Under the RBI MSME framework, a well-timed restructuring — filed before the account is downgraded from SMA to sub-standard — can extend tenor, provide principal moratorium and reset EMIs without NPA downgrade. For flour mill accounts already in NPA, restructuring becomes harder and typically requires a fresh promoter contribution or additional collateral. In such cases, OTS often becomes the cleaner route.
OTS opportunities for Flour Mill businesses
OTS opportunities for Flour Mill businesses depend on NPA vintage, RVS cover and the promoter's source-of-funds credibility. In our experience: sub-standard NPAs settle at 45–60% waivers; doubtful at 55–70%; loss assets at 60–80%. Post-SARFAESI 13(4) files close at 55–75% depending on how well the proposal reconciles to the bank's RVS. The key on flour mill files is preparing the proposal with the right level of financial substantiation — bank committees do not sanction on sentiment, they sanction on documentable math.
SARFAESI, possession and auction — practical realities
On Flour Mill exposures, SARFAESI moves through the standard ladder: Section 13(2) notice, 60-day representation window under 13(3A), 13(4) possession, 30-day sale notice, e-auction. On flour mill files specifically, the collateral profile shapes the timeline — factory / warehouse / hotel property enforcement is slower than fleet or stock enforcement. A well-structured OTS filed inside the 13(3A) window typically freezes further escalation while the bank's committee evaluates. Post-13(4), the RVS floor becomes harder — but auction can still be stayed with a filed proposal at committee review stage.
Flour Mill — Facility mix and settlement dynamics
Facility Type
Typical Structure
Enforcement Path
Settlement Approach
Cash Credit
Working capital against stock / book debts
Book-debt assignment; SARFAESI on collateral
Front-load in OTS proposal
Term Loan
Amortising loan for capex
SARFAESI on hypothecated / mortgaged asset
Sequenced tranches
Machinery / Equipment Loan
Hypothecated equipment
Repossession under loan agreement
Included in aggregate OTS
LAP
Property-secured business loan
SARFAESI on mortgaged property
Anchored to RVS of property
BG / LC
Non-fund based, contingent
Debit on invocation / devolvement
Handled as devolved exposure in OTS
Eligibility
Account classified as SMA-2, NPA sub-standard, doubtful or loss asset
Not tagged as wilful default or fraud
Realistic source of funds for at least the down-payment tranche
Willingness to sign a full and final settlement with the bank
Promoter/guarantor cooperation in documentation and negotiation
No parallel criminal / recovery proceedings that block settlement
Standard Documentation
• Latest sanction letter and all amendments / renewals
A mid-sized flour mill operator with ~₹5.5 Cr exposure across a PSU bank slipped into NPA after a marquee customer payment stretch. Filed a structured OTS at 58% waiver with 20% on sanction and balance in 5 tranches; auction stayed on filed proposal; sanction in 118 days.
Flour Mill — small business, ~₹1.8 Cr CC line
A small flour mill business with ~₹1.8 Cr CC line went sub-standard after two quarters of buyer default. Settlement at ₹95 lakh (~47% waiver) with 15% down and 4 monthly tranches. NDC and CIBIL update in 42 days after final payment.
A flour mill unit at SARFAESI 13(4) stage with ~₹9.2 Cr aggregate exposure across two lenders. Inter-creditor OTS negotiated at ~63% aggregate waiver with staged tranches; auction stayed; sanction in 165 days from filing.
Client Voices
"Filed clean OTS with the right authority. Sanctioned in 4 months at 62% waiver."
"Timely SARFAESI reply and structured OTS saved the shop unit. Closed with No Dues in 5 months."
"Post-13(4) proposal filed with SAM branch — auction stayed and settled at 68% waiver."
Frequently Asked Questions
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