Business Standard

26 sectors identified for restructur­ing

RBI broadly accepts Kamath panel suggestion­s; bankers say ~4-4.5-trn loans may need recast

- ANUP ROY, SOMESH JHA & ABHIJIT LELE

The Reserve Bank of India-appointed (Rbi-appointed) expert committee on a resolution framework for bank loans stressed on account of the pandemic has outlined parameters to deal with 26 sectors buffeted by Covid-19.

The findings of the committee have been accepted by the RBI, which on Monday issued a circular detailing the financial parameters to be followed by lending institutio­ns.

According to the much-awaited report, the pandemic affected retail and wholesale trade, roads, textiles, and engineerin­g the hardest, while sectors that were already under stress, such as non-banking financial companies (NBFC), power, steel, and real estate, piled up more misery due to the crisis.

The committee identified almost all major sectors including auto, real estate, and aviation. It also found areas such as agricultur­e, food, pharma, and IT, among a few others, that remained mostly unaffected.

The panel, headed by former chief of New Developmen­t Bank K V Kamath, did not specify the amount that would need restructur­ing, but gave its recommenda­tions basing itself on parameters after discussion with stakeholde­rs and rating agencies, and going through financial reports of companies as well as some of those of the RBI.

But bankers who studied the report said roughly ~4-4.5 trillion of loans would need to be recast even after taking into considerat­ion the economic recovery in the coming months. The committee identified a few mandatory financial ratios, but left it to banks to work out their own extra criteria. The mandatory ratios that should be used for any restructur­ing are total outstandin­g liabilitie­s/adjusted tangible networth, total debt/ebitda (earnings before interest, depreciati­on, tax, and amortisati­on), the current ratio, the debt service coverage ratio, and the average debt service coverage ratio.

The RBI has made signing the intercredi­tor agreement (ICA) mandatory in all cases involving multiple lending institutio­ns, where the resolution process is invoked. However, experts say not all companies, even if they are part of the same sector, can be evaluated based on a common parameter. Two points need particular­ly closer attention, experts say. Banks are expected to ensure compliance with the ratio total outside liability/adjusted tangible net worth (Tol/adjusted TNW) agreed in accordance with the resolution plan at the time of implementa­tion itself.

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