Business Standard

Chanda Kochhar report in 2mths: ICICI chairman

- INDIVJAL DHASMANA

ICICI Bank Chairman G C Chaturvedi said on Thursday the decision on the continuanc­e of Managing Director (MD) and Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Chanda Kochhar ( pictured) would be taken after the Justice B N Srikrishna panel report — probing certain allegation­s against her — is finalised, which is likely in two-and-a-half months. The former Supreme Court judge is heading the panel probing the allegation­s of quid pro quo by Kochhar in sanctionin­g of a loan by the ICICI Bank. Chaturvedi said pending the report, Kochhar will remain the CEO of the ICICI Bank.

Kochhar, however, is on indefinite leave following the conflict-ofinterest allegation­s.

On the latest quarterly losses posted by the bank, Chaturvedi said they were due to the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) norms. However, slippages have ended, he added. Posting its first quarterly loss, ICICI Bank reported a net loss of ~1.19 billion for the three months to June due to higher provisioni­ng for bad loans. It had posted a net profit of ~20.49 billion in the year-ago period. On a consolidat­ed basis, the group posted a meagre profit of ~49.3 million, compared to ~26.04 billion a year ago.

Chaturvedi batted for reviewing the controvers­ial one-day default norm by the RBI as the deadline for resolution of power assets approaches.

“I think the RBI should reconsider (oneday default norm),” he told reporters on the sidelines of a banking event, organised by the Centre for Economic Policy Research, a think tank close to the Sangh Parivar and the NITI Aayog.

He said the RBI itself has come out with so many schemes in the past to settle bad debts. “This (one-day norm) is one of them. May be some of the issues are resolved, but if some persist, the RBI should reconsider,” Chaturvedi said.

A controvers­ial RBI circular, issued in February, asked banks to identify power projects with even one day’s default as stressed assets, and conclude their resolution proceeding­s within 180 days. Chaturvedi hoped the issue would be resolved by the August 27 deadline. When asked what the ICICI Bank strategy for it was, he said it was not an issue specific to the bank.

At the event, he said the RBI circular was trying to cure the disease the wrong way. “It is like curing the legs when I have a headache,” he said. Elaboratin­g, he said the problem of bad debt lay elsewhere. But since the RBI is the regulator for banks, it is trying to find solutions within that constraint.

“Solutions are to be found elsewhere. Say if there is delay in land acquisitio­n, environmen­tal clearances or power purchase agreement not being signed by the state government­s, these problems need to be tackled.”

The issue of the RBI’s contentiou­s circular is subjudice in the Allahabad High Court.

Chaturvedi further said the government should consider reducing equity stake in select public sector banks below 51 per cent. He said this may not be considered for all banks. It is for the government to take this call, he said.

Economist and former principal economic advisor in the finance ministry Ila Patnaik said a review should be made whether nationalis­ation of banks has achieved its desired objective.

UCO Bank MD & CEO Ravi Kishan Takkar said the current minimum capital norms are stricter than Basel III. “We have to relook these norms,” he said.

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