Business Standard

Foreign lenders review counter-party limits on PNB

- ABHIJIT LELE

Foreign banks have begun to review bilateral sanction limits with Punjab National Bank (PNB), after rating agencies Moody’s and Fitch placed their earlier assessment of the government- owned lender’s under watch for a possible downgrade.

This had followed the ~114-billion fraud revelation at PNB, involving some of its own employees fraudulent­ly issuing Letters of Understand­ing (LoUs), a trade finance instrument, for entities controlled by jeweller Nirav Modi.

An LoU is a type of guarantee a bank gives a customer, to allow the latter to raise money from another Indian bank’s foreign branch, in the form of shortterm credit.

PNB held a meeting with foreign banks on Friday. It assured them it was robust enough to meet any legitimate claims from other banks for the issued LoUs. And, that it had taken steps to improve the earlier risk management systems.

The fraudulent LoUs were transmitte­d via the SWIFT ( Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommun­ications) messaging network used by banks globally but without approval of PNB’s competent authority and legal documentat­ion. They were also not entered into the bank’s Core Banking System.

Foreign bank executives said PNB told them its core banking platform, Finacle, and the SWIFT link would be completely integrated by the end of next month. Already, SWIFT messages are being routed through a three-layered — maker checker and verifier — structure for the entire bank. All smaller branches will now use its central processing centre, PNB said.

J Akilan, executive director and chief representa­tive in India of Spanish bank BBVA, said well-rated and well-managed lenders would have no issue in adequate counter-party limits with global banks, to ensure bilateral trade was smooth and their clients well- serviced. Ill-managed ones might not find it easy.

Global rating agencies Fitch and Moody’s had said last Tuesday that they were placing PNB under watch for a possible downgrade. Moody’s placed the bank’s Counterpar­ty Risk Assessment under review for a downgrade. It cited the risk of a weakening of the standalone credit profile, due to discovery of the fraudulent transactio­ns. Fitch has placed PNB’s viability rating of ‘BB’ on ‘Rating Watch Negative’. It is waiting for more clarity on the extent of control failures and the impact on PNB’s financial position.

 ??  ?? Fitch has placed Punjab National Bank’s viability rating of ‘BB’ on ‘Rating Watch Negative’
Fitch has placed Punjab National Bank’s viability rating of ‘BB’ on ‘Rating Watch Negative’

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