Business Standard

Govt backs NARCL with ~30,600-cr guarantee for 5 yrs

Stressed assets of about ~2 trn to be acquired in phases

- NIKUNJ OHRI New Delhi, 16 September

Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman on Thursday said the National Asset Reconstruc­tion Company Ltd (NARCL) would be operationa­l soon, and it had to ensure resolving bad loans within five years, beyond which the guarantee to be issued by the government would expire.

The Cabinet on Wednesday had approved a government guarantee of ~30,600 crore to be provided for the security receipts issued by the NARCL to buy bad loans of lenders.

“Within five years we expect to clear (resolve) it, and the sooner they (NARCL) do it, the better they are placed because of the charges which they otherwise will have to pay,” Sitharaman said.

The NARCL will acquire stressed assets of about ~2 trillion in phases, and these soured loans would be transferre­d by paying 15 per cent cash to lenders and the remaining 85 per cent would be paid through security receipts.

These security receipts issued by the NARCL would be backed by a government guarantee of up to ~30,600 crore. This guarantee will be valid for five years, and the condition for invoking the guarantee will be either resolution or liquidatio­n. These security receipts will be tradeable.

A government guarantee can be invoked to cover the shortfall between the amount realised from the underlying assets and the face value of the security receipts issued for such assets, subject to an overall ceiling of ~30,600 crore.

As the guarantee provided by the Centre is a contingent liability for the government, immediatel­y there won’t be any fiscal outgo, Financial Services Secretary Debasish Panda said.

Sitharaman said: “The backstop (guarantee) gives some credibilit­y for these non-performing assets (NPAS) for which the banks have been repeatedly provisioni­ng, whereas once you take them out, manage and reevaluate them ... they certainly have a better prospect of getting a higher value.”

Beyond the five years, if the NARCL delays the resolution process, the guarantee cannot be invoked, Panda said.

“The idea is to ensure that these assets, for which this setup is being created, and the value locked in these assets are realised by banks and they use it for their growth capital,” Panda said.

To disincenti­vise delays in

resolution, the NARCL has to pay a guarantee fee, which will increase with time. The fee has been proposed at 0.25 per cent of the outstandin­g guarantees from the second year of the NARCL’S incorporat­ion, and will increase to 0.5 per cent, 1 per cent, and 2 per cent in the third, fourth and fifth year, respective­ly. The NARCL has been incorporat­ed under the Companies Act and has applied to the Reserve Bank of India for an asset reconstruc­tion company (ARC) licence. Public sector banks will hold 51 per cent in the NARCL.

About 16 public and private sector banks have put in ~5,0006,000 crore in the bad bank. That will be utilised by it to pay 15 per cent cash to the lenders while purchasing their bad loans. The government guarantee on security receipts issued by the NARCL is a positive stepping stone towards value unlocking in stressed assets, said Anil Gupta, vice-president, ICRA Ltd.

The move will free capital locked in the form of bad assets,

which can be leveraged for lending and spending on other priority areas, said Sanjay Aggarwal, president of the PHD Chamber of Commerce and Industry. “Since the guarantee is in the form of contingent liability, it will not lead to immediate cash outflows and therefore is unlikely to affect the fiscal position in the near future.” In the last six financial years, because of recognitio­n, resolution, recapitali­sation and reforms (4Rs), banks have recovered ~5.01 trillion, Sitharaman said.

 ?? PHOTO: PTI ?? Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman said the government guarantee will give confidence to lenders to sell their assets to NARCL
PHOTO: PTI Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman said the government guarantee will give confidence to lenders to sell their assets to NARCL

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