1,100 crore in bank guarantees and Rs.750 crore payable to vendors, the minister said.
The takeover of the board was unanimously agreed upon by all stakeholders including major lenders like State Bank of India, IDBI and ICICI Bank.
'It's a common consensus between shareholders that this was the best approach for revival and preservation of Maytas. All the lenders are comfortable with this,' said Khurshid.
As per the existing shareholding pattern, the existing promoters control about 23 percent of the shares, while Sicom, a Maharashtra government-owned institution and foreign institutional investors hold about 6-7 percent each, mutual funds another 3-4 percent, with the rest owned by the public.
Earlier Monday, the company in a regulatory statement said it had posted a net loss of Rs.489.79 crore last fiscal compared to a profit of Rs.99.64 crore in the previous year.
Khurshid, however, said that during the first quarter of the current fiscal, the company had started showing signs of a turnaround by registering a cash profit of Rs.5 crore, compared to a loss of Rs.500 crore last fiscal.
'The company is no longer in actual loss,' he said.
IL&FS now has to go for an open offer to acquire a further 20 percent under takeover guidelines of market watchdog Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI).
Khurshid during his interaction with reporters also said that prima facie evidence indicated that funds had been transferred from Maytas Infra to Satyam Computers.
'When the accounts are stated, this will become clear as to where the money has gone. But there is prima facie some evidence that about Rs.390 crore has gone from Maytas to Satyam,' the minister said.