Business Standard

RBI may take up one-time loan restructur­ing today

The virtual meeting of the central board will be its first since the outbreak of Covid-19

- RAGHU MOHAN

Aone-time restructur­ing of loans for India Inc may figure in discussion­s at the Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI’S) central board meeting on Friday — the first since the outbreak of the Covid-19 pandemic.

While the central bank has not decided its position on the merit of such a scheme in the current situation, the affidavits to be filed in the Supreme Court by the Centre, the RBI, and the Indian Banks’ Associatio­n with regard to the loan moratorium scheme may have a bearing.

A relaxation in the delinquenc­y period for classifica­tion of non-performing assets (NPAS) to 180 days from the current 90 days had found mention in internal meetings of the finance ministry as well, a source said.

Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman said on Thursday that a one-time loan restructur­ing facility for non-msmes (medium, small and micro enterprise­s) was under active considerat­ion. “An intense engagement is on with the RBI to come up with such a scheme. There is a lot of stress now,” she said at a webinar organised by the Chennai Internatio­nal Centre.

The need for such a loan restructur­ing has gained urgency after the central bank last month said the country’s gross domestic product (GDP) growth would be in negative territory in FY21. The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund expects India’s GDP to contract by 4.5 per cent this financial year.

The RBI had allowed a one-time loan restructur­ing scheme for India Inc in the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis. The banking regulator ’s August 27, 2008 circular allowed for the restoratio­n of standard asset classifica­tion to accounts that had turned NPAS during the restructur­ing approval process, provided that the restructur­ing package was implemente­d within 90 days from the date of receipt of applicatio­n by the bank taking it up. The two conditions imposed were that the restructur­ing could not be repeated and that the dues to the bank were fully secured.

What is now being speculated is that a new scheme may have to be suitably tweaked as the ground realities are completely different as no business can go to the pre- Covid levels anytime soon. Therefore, the 2008 circular’s stance that no account is to be taken up for restructur­ing by banks unless financial viability is establishe­d, and there is a reasonable certainty of repayment from the borrower, may not be practical in the current context.

It had further held that accounts not considered viable should not be restructur­ed and banks should accelerate the recovery measures in respect of such accounts. Any restructur­ing done without looking into cash flows of the borrower and assessing the viability of the projects or activity financed by banks would be treated as an attempt at evergreeni­ng a weak credit facility and would invite supervisor­y concern and action.

In 2008, there was no Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code. As of today, there are several cases where a resolution plan is in place. Some of them were crafted just a few months ago, and a one-time restructur­ing may include reworking these plans as well.

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