Business Standard

Banking stocks take a hit on provisioni­ng worries

Lenders may have to take an additional provisioni­ng of ~40,000-50,000 cr on 12 bad loan accounts referred to NCLT; large banks better-placed

- HAMSINI KARTHIK Mumbai, 27 June

The Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI’s) mandate instructin­g banks to make higher provisions for accounts referred to the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) for resolution under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC) came as a jolt for banking stocks on Tuesday. While the overall trading condition was also weak, the news was particular­ly negative for public sector banks (PSBs). Syndicate Bank, Punjab National Bank, Canara Bank and Andhra Bank took 4-5 per cent hits in their stock prices, while that of State Bank of India, Bank of Baroda, and Union Bank corrected by 2.8-3.7 per cent on Tuesday. Even private banks with relatively high corporate exposure, such as ICICI Bank and Axis Bank, saw their share price fall 1.2 per cent and 2.3 per cent, respective­ly.

According to the RBI’s latest directive, banks have to provide 50 per cent for secured loans and 100 per cent for unsecured loans referred to the NCLT, clearly suggesting that provisioni­ng towards bad loans may remain elevated for corporate banks and PSBs in FY18. Given that the Street was expecting moderation in loan loss provisioni­ng in FY18 going by the trend in FY17, the RBI’s latest mandate is clearly negative.

“Based on CRISIL’s assessment of embedded value in the top 50 NPA (non-performing assets) cases, we estimate a 60 per cent haircut would be needed on these loan assets. That would mean banks will have to increase provisioni­ng by another 25 per cent this fiscal year, compared with 9 per cent in FY17,” said Krishnan Sitaraman, senior director, CRISIL Ratings.

Nonetheles­s, not all banks may be impacted in the same manner. The CRISIL study indicates that banks have already provisione­d about 40 per cent for these NPAs totalling ~2 lakh crore, or equal to a quarter of the NPAs in the banking system, even before the RBI’s move (thus, the remaining 20 per cent provisioni­ng works out to ~40,000 crore). Also, analysts at Motilal Oswal point out that a majority of the 12 accounts referred to under IBC were recognised as NPAs according to the RBI’s asset quality review (AQR) mandated in September 2015.

The AQR exercise required banks to make an accelerate­d 20 per cent provisioni­ng on each account mentioned in the list. “Since there have been no resolution­s in FY18, based on portfolio ageing, banks would have provided an additional 10-15 per cent on such accounts in FY18. Hence, outstandin­g provisions on accounts referred to IBC should be around 40 per cent for most large banks. Thus, even without the RBI mandating provisions, by the end of FY19, these accounts would have had a provision coverage ratio of at least 50 per cent or higher, depending on a bank’s prudent provisioni­ng policy,” the analysts explain. This is why the impact of the RBI’s latest directive may be more on mid-sized PSBs where provisioni­ng is relatively low compared to that of private banks and the larger PSBs.

State Bank of India and Bank of Baroda, in (as of June 27,'17) % change SPOOKING THE MARKETS Price in ~ 1-Day Year to date | Lenders’ stocks took a hit on Tuesday, on the RBI’s Syndicate Bank 72.7 -5.0 18.2 mandate instructin­g banks Punjab National Bank 137.1 -4.7 18.6 to make higher provisions for accounts referred to the Canara Bank 324.2 -4.5 26.8 NCLT under the Insolvency Indian Bank 276.1 -4.5 25.1 and Bankruptcy Code Andhra Bank 53.6 -4.0 12.7 | Syndicate Bank, Punjab National Bank, Canara Allahabad Bank 67.0 -3.9 11.1 Bank & Andhra Bank fell Vijaya Bank 71.9 -3.8 51.6 4-5%, while State Bank of India, Bank of Baroda, Bank of Baroda 154.8 -3.6 1.3 and Union Bank fell by Punjab & Sind Bank 51.1 -3.3 8.8 2.8-3.7% | According to the RBI’s latest State Bank of India 279.4 -3.3 11.9 directive, banks have to Axis Bank 492.8 -2.3 9.5 provide 50% for secured loans & 100% for unsecured ICICI Bank 288.0 -1.2 24.1 loans referred to the NCLT Compiled by BS Research Bureau Source: Exchange the March quarter earnings call, mentioned that provisioni­ng on the top 50 NPAs was over 40 per cent, while most large banks have provided for 40-45 per cent of top 50 NPAs. This, to some extent, reduces the Street’s concerns on elevated provisioni­ng in FY18.

But Nitin Aggarwal of Antique Stock Broking said it may still be too early to quantify the pain ahead. “FY18 loan loss estimates may require upward revision. But, we will get a sense of how much revision is required in the next few days as details emerge,” he said. This is why he believed that banking stocks, particular­ly the PSBs, may continue to remain under pressure. The recent rally would also encourage investors to book profit in these counters. Analysts, thus, do not rule out another 10-15 per cent correction from Tuesday’s levels as more details emerge.

“But, don’t rush into the correction,” Aggarwal said. He urged investors to wait for all the news to be absorbed by the Street. Once a proper assessment is available, long-term investors could use lower stock prices to accumulate stronger names in this space, analysts said.

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