Business Standard

MSMES: Banks want NPA rules eased

Request 180 days overdue for substandar­d classifica­tion

- MANOJIT SAHA

Commercial banks have requested the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) to relax norms regarding the classifica­tion of non-performing loans for micro, medium and small enterprise­s (MSMES), pointing to the stress the sector is facing due to lockdowns imposed by different state government­s following the second wave of Covid-19.

Sources in the banking industry said a request was made to the regulator to extend the non-performing asset (NPA) classifica­tion norms for MSME borrowers to 180 days as compared to 90 days now. At present, a loan becomes substandar­d – the first category of NPA

– if repayment is overdue for more than 90 days.

“There was a demand from some quarters to rework the NPA norms for MSMES,” said a top official of a large public sector bank who wished not to be identified.

Bankers said the MSME sector was already reeling under pressure and now the second wave would make things extremely difficult for it.

According to Basel-iii guidelines, all sovereign countries have the flexibilit­y to do portfolio-wise, sector-wise NPA norms, but the RBI has taken a conservati­ve stand because it probably thinks sovereign rating improves that way. However, there is a provision that says countries can take a view on NPA norms in accordance with their needs, the official said, adding that the norms could be relaxed for two years, or till the situation improves, after which the 90-day rule could be implemente­d again.

On Wednesday, the central bank announced steps to mitigate the economic impact of local lockdowns.

Among other steps, the regulator allowed debt restructur­ing for MSMES, but it would be limited to entities that had not opted for the same scheme last year.

According to Crisil, 3,400 mid-sized companies that are rated (out of 6,800) by the agency will be eligible for debt recast since their loan exposure is less than ~25 crore and standard – the eligibilit­y conditions as prescribed by the RBI. Crisil said the restructur­ing could provide interim liquidity relief to these companies to cope with near-term cash-flow mismatches.

Even if the RBI has allowed the debt recast, it still can relax NPA norms, bankers said.

The issue with debt restructur­ing, as bankers explain, is that banks still have to make 10 per cent provision.

When a loan is restructur­ed, banks need to make a provision of 15-20 per cent — the same as if the account becomes substandar­d. However, in the one-time debt recast scheme that was announced by the RBI last year, banks were asked to provide 10 per cent. Debt recast with 10 per cent provision is not much of a relief, bankers said.

 ??  ?? The MSME sector was already reeling under pressure and now the second wave would make things extremely difficult for it, say bankers
The MSME sector was already reeling under pressure and now the second wave would make things extremely difficult for it, say bankers

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