Business Standard

Govt nudges PSBS to take non-ibc route

- SOMESH JHA

The Union government has directed public sector banks (PSBS) to look for an alternativ­e resolution mechanism outside the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC). The government has further told them to build “resilient credit risk control systems” for high-value loans, and has set a deadline of 45 days to decide upon consortium lending proposals.

These measures are part of a second round of reforms under the Enhanced Access and Service Excellence programme, known as EASE 2.0, sent by the finance ministry to all PSBS. PSBS will be bound to follow EASE 2.0 because the 64-point measures will be part of the annual performanc­e appraisal of bank executives of the deputy general manager and above level.

Banks have also been asked to promote the disburseme­nt of Mudra loans, which will be taken into account in the performanc­e review of high-level executives.

The government has asked banks to enhance the cash recovery rate in non-performing asset (NPA) accounts outside the IBC process and told them to secure the recovery of at least 10 per cent of NPAS within 12 months in non-ibc cases and within 18 months in

IBC cases “in a high proportion of NPA accounts”.

As part of EASE 2.0, banks should be “exploring alternativ­e avenues of NPA resolution in a time-bound manner and thereafter initiate the Corporate Insolvency Resolution Process (CIRP)”. The government is looking at revising the threshold for accounts to be taken to the insolvency court by lenders, from ~1 lakh at present.

On Monday, following a review meeting with PSBS, Corporate Affairs Secretary Injeti Srinivas flagged a high number of cases going through the IBC as a cause of concern and said the government would like banks to go to the insolvency court as a last resort. Corporate loans of over ~50 crore and micro, small and medium enterprise­s (MSME) loans above ~10 crore will need to be highly scrutinise­d by PSBS, which will set up a “comprehens­ive data-driven, codified and audited scorecard and categorisa­tion of risk” for such accounts. The new risk framework will closely look at business accounts where at least 26 per cent stake is held by related parties of the promoter.

Top six PSBS, in terms of business, including State Bank of India, Bank of Baroda and Punjab National Bank, have been told to deploy dedicated, industrysp­ecific risk-scoring teams to cover at least 60 per cent of the corporate and MSME loan books.

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