Business Standard

RBI’s message to banks

By acting against Rana Kapoor, the central bank has signalled nothing is sacred

- ANDY MUKHERJEE

By denying a full three-year term to Yes Bank Chief Executive Officer Rana Kapoor, the banking regulator has sent stern messages to not one or two, but five constituen­cies.

The first wake-up call is for the CEOs themselves: To preserve their equity interest in a bank, they’re free to chase higher price-to-book multiples, but not by pumping up what I’ve called the price-to-truth ratio.

Kapoor earned the ire of the Reserve Bank of India by wrongly classifyin­g loans he should have counted as non-performing. Yes wasn’t the only bank to do this. RBI’s asset-quality reviews showed problems at Axis Bank Ltd — and sure enough, the regulator refused to extend CEO Shikha Sharma’s reign, too. But while Sharma, who’ll leave at the end of the year, was a profession­al manager, Kapoor is a co-founder of Yes and a shareholde­r. The central bank wants him to step down after January 31.

That’s the RBI’s second message: The regulator won’t accept skin in the game as a proxy for good behaviour. Since banks are licensed to create money out of thin air, the advice Spider-Man received from his uncle — “with great power comes great responsibi­lity” — is the yardstick from now on.

And so to the third message, directed at Yes Chairman Ashok Chawla and ICICI Bank Ltd Chairman Girish Chandra Chaturvedi, both of whom are former civil servants. Their previous boss, the Indian government, may not have cared much about good governance; the RBI expects better from them and their boards. Chaturvedi’s predecesso­r had rushed to give ICICI CEO Chanda Kochhar a clean record when allegation­s of conflict of interest first arose against her. The board ordered an independen­t inquiry only later. Such CEO worship must now stop.

RBI Governor Urjit Patel’s fourth message is to the government. When New Delhi tried to deflect the blame for an unpreceden­ted $2 billion fraud at Punjab National Bank towards the regulator, Patel objected, saying he didn’t have the same powers over state-run lenders such as PNB as he had over private institutio­ns. Wielding that authority — with Axis, and now with Yes — is a reminder to the government to give Patel free rein with his tough-love doctrine. For instance, allowing state-run banks latitude to accept losses from dud loans to stranded power plants is a bad idea. The RBI is dead against it, even though that’s what the bankers want.

All of India’s finance industry ought now to feel the RBI’s regulatory heat, including Infrastruc­ture Leasing & Financial Services Ltd and its empire of 169 subsidiari­es, associates and joint ventures. The IL&FS Group is systemical­ly important, though it doesn’t take public deposits. Now that the infrastruc­ture lender is defaulting on debt, it’s become painfully clear that the RBI hasn’t done enough to rein in that institutio­n’s freewheeli­ng ways.

So the fifth and final message from the RBI is to itself: After acting against Kapoor, the regulator will be forever held to that high standard. Any compromise­s now would damage the credibilit­y the central bank is trying so hard to win.

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