Business Standard

IndAS may hit banks’ lending to firms BSE 500 COMPANIES WITH HIGH DEBT

Switch to new standard may increase debts on books of infra & realty firms, leading banks to further trim loan exposure

- ASHLEY COUTINHO Mumbai, 27 June

The adoption of the new Indian Accounting Standards (IndAS) might compel banks to cut down on the quantum of loans they dole out to companies.

IndAS will result in a change in the debt-to-equity ratios of companies as capital structures and financial instrument­s get reclassifi­ed, increasing debts and compelling banks to reassess the way they lend to companies, particular­ly in sectors such as power, infrastruc­ture and real estate. “Banks and financial institutio­ns will have to consider how IndAS has potentiall­y changed the balance sheets of companies and relook at the way they review a loan applicatio­n, test loan covenants and evaluate restructur­ing proposals,” said Ashish Gupta, director, Grant Thornton Advisory.

According to Sai Venkateshw­aran, partner and head-accounting advisory services at KPMG India, several companies in sectors such as power, infrastruc­ture and real estate use structured instrument­s for their funding requiremen­ts ranging from simple preference shares to more complex instrument­s, and most, if not all, of these instrument­s will be classified as debt/liability under Ind-AS, rather than equity/share capital. This will impact both the debtequity ratio, as well as the finance costs and the resultant earnings per share.

Companies in these sectors also operate using a number of special purpose vehicles (SPVs), and the new rules on consolidat­ion may impact the consolidat­ion perimeter for these groups, with either some entities which were previously not consolidat­ed being considered as subsidiari­es under IndAS, or some other entities which were previously consolidat­ed as subsidiari­es now being considered as joint ventures or associates under IndAS. “This will impact the balance sheet size of the entities and the quantum of debt reflected on these consolidat­ed balance sheets, with correspond­ing impact on the earnings,” said Venkateshw­aran.

“Most banks are yet to come to terms with the changes the new accounting guidelines will bring. IndAS is based on fair-value accounting principles and it may be necessary to train employees or seek help from consultant­s to understand the overall impact,” said R K Bansal, former executive director at IDBI Bank.

Banks generally look at ratios such as debtequity, current ratio, quick ratio, Ebitda (earnings before interest, tax, depreciati­on and amortisati­on) to total debt, interest service coverage ratios, tangible assets coverage ratio, return on capital *loan funds and networth as of FY16; FY17 figures in ~ crore According to unaudited results filing Compiled by BS Research Bureau employed and cost to income ratio before deciding on lending to companies. The transition to IndAS may impact all such ratios, reckon experts.

Here’s an example. Suppose company A issued redeemable preference shares to investors at 11 per cent compounded dividend. Neither the investors nor company A has an option to convert such shares into equity shares of company A. Under India’s generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP), such preference shares were part of equity capital and the 11 per cent dividend was treated an appropriat­ion of profits not effecting the net profit earned for the period.

Under IndAS, such redeemable preference shares shall be treated as a loan and the 11 per cent dividend as interest cost (including dividend distributi­on tax thereon). This will essentiall­y change the debt-equity ratio of company A and its net profits earned for a period. Accordingl­y, the banks will have to re-visit the overall loan position and revise the terms of engagement with company A.

Furthermor­e, non-compliance with a relatively significan­t covenant of a loan agreement would make the entire loan as current, directly impacting the current ratios and the drawing power of the borrower. A low drawing power would make the loan out of order and lead to increased provisioni­ng. Some experts observed that conversion from the existing GAAP to IndAS is an accounting change and may not change the creditwort­hiness of a borrower.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India