Business Standard

Making Sashakt stronger

Realism essential for a successful plan to resolve bad debt

- DEEP NARAYAN MUKHERJEE The author is a visiting faculty of finance at IIM Calcutta

Sashakt takes a much-needed stab at creating a structure outside the bank to systematic­ally park distressed asset for resolution. The proposal of inter-creditor agreement to enable the lead bank work on the resolution plan may be considered quickly. Its aspiration­s were in the correct direction when it wanted to focus on price discovery of distressed assets. Arguably, some more deliberati­on may be required on sizing the resources required to solve the issue as well as the structure to garner those resources.

Despite taking three/four years and the bitter medicine of asset quality review, India is possibly closer to sizing the NPA problem. Recognised gross NPA stands at ~10.3 trillion today. The market expects it might go up by another ~1 trillion. The time has come to size the solution, that is, the money required by the system.

Assuming a system-wide provision coverage ratio of 50 per cent to ensure that banks do not need further provisioni­ng or capital, there has to be a recovery of ~5.15 trillion (that is, a 50 per cent recovery rate). Banks may even hope for a bad-debt buyer to pay the same amount. If the buyer pays, say, ~3 trillion, banks have to book losses for ~2.15 trillion. In short, the systemic requiremen­t is for financial resources of ~5.15 trillion. To revive viable companies/projects, the author estimates that another ~2-3 trillion will be required over the next 24 months.

A total amount of ~7.15-8.15 trillion has to come from a financing ecosystem consisting of banks, corporates, distressed asset investors and possibly the government. To put some context to the size of the requiremen­t, the total FDI in FY18 was $44.8 billion, and this was directed mostly at profit making or high growth companies, not distressed ones.

Attracting a large amount from global institutio­ns — that too for distressed-asset investing when globally fixed-income yield is increasing — has added challenges. A pure alternativ­e investment fund of distressed assets may not attract a lot of conservati­ve investors such as global pension funds and sovereign funds. Distressed assets being riskier, only investors with high risk appetite invest in them. Such investors, usually a PE fund or a hedge fund, would expect at least a 1520 per cent return per annum over the 12-36 months.

To attract such investors, some assets need to be sold by banks at a steep discount. Other than a couple of prized assets, in most resolution­s thus far, the lender has had to take a 70-90 per cent haircut. This may mean a further loss of ~2-4 trillion for banks and a commensura­te equity requiremen­t. An alternativ­e approach may be considered, where the institutio­nal investor in the fund may have its units partially guaranteed by the government. Immediatel­y, the universe of investors that can invest will expand and their returns expectatio­ns can come down. This is unlikely to impact the fiscal math of the government.

Any bad debt solution should appreciate that a host of companies that are non-viable need to be liquidated. A decision framework to identify companies that must be liquidated may be part of the solution. Distressed companies may be divided into two categories — utilities and non-utilities. To the extent utilities — such as road, power plants and the like — are social goods, these may be placed out of the ambit of liquidatio­n. For them revival with financing support, with or without the existing promoters, may be considered.

Non-utility companies need to be tested for their viability. Such a company, which might have a high proportion of financial assets such as receivable­s, investment­s or loans and advances to subsidies, may call for a higher haircut on debt as it enhances the complexity in turning around the company. A company with solid plants and machinery associated with access to raw materials/commoditie­s may be ripe for a turnaround. Developmen­t of a decision framework may help banks get a fix on the bad asset disposal mechanism quickly. The benefits will far outweigh any theoretica­l shortcomin­g of the framework.

Many years have passed in identifyin­g the problem and coming up with dispensati­ons in the hope that they will solve the problem — only for the dispensati­ons to be reversed later. The bankruptcy code is a much needed solution and with time, it can become an asset for the Indian business environmen­t. That said, banking just on it to solve all the problems would be somewhat optimistic. Dedicated, time bound, structured initiative­s are required to solve the bad debt problem. Sashakt is a good initiative. It could be strengthen­ed by more implementa­tion details. Let’s fortify it as a first step.

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