Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

RBI identifies 40 more accounts for clean-up

- Sahib Sharma sahib.s@livemint.com

NEWDELHI: The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has identified 40 large defaulters as the next lot of firms where banks will push for an early resolution, a government official said on condition of anonymity.

Along with the 12 cases where bankruptcy proceeding­s have already started, these would account for 60-65% of the bad loans clogging the banking system, this person added.

An RBI spokespers­on declined comment.

A speedy resolution of these cases “will keep the banking system running”, the government official said. He added that invoking the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code won’t be the default option for resolving these accounts and lenders will also look at other mechanisms such as joint lenders’ forums.

Indian banks are sitting on a stressed asset pile of more than ₹10 lakh crore, of which gross bad loans accounted for ₹8.29 lakh crore at the end of the June quarter. The rest are restructur­ed loans.

In June, RBI identified 12 accounts accounting for 25% of gross bad loans in the system for immediate bankruptcy proceeding­s. Except for Era Infra Engineerin­g Ltd, the other 11 cases have been admitted by the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) by now.

At that time, the central bank had also said that lenders should finalize a resolution plan within six months for their top 500 stressed accounts. If they failed to find a resolution through other means, then they should move the NCLT for bankruptcy, RBI said.

“It has to been seen from which sectors these 40 large accounts are coming from. Interest has been shown by global investors in a few of the commodity companies which have been referred so far,” said Siddharth Purohit, senior banking analyst, Angel Broking. “Banks will prefer resolution over liquidatio­n, given lower incrementa­l provisioni­ng requiremen­t in the former,” he added.

Post identifica­tion of 12 large accounts, RBI asked banks to set aside 50% as provisioni­ng for accounts referred under NCLT and 100% in case it is forced into liquidatio­n. However, bankers said that there is no clarity on provisioni­ng requiremen­ts for any fresh cases that might go to NCLT, Mint reported on 16 August.

Still, fearing a rise in provisioni­ng, most lenders are identifyin­g accounts which have remained bad in their books for at least three to four years or where liquidatio­n is the last resort for recovery, the report said.

To be sure, banks have four more months to go to find resolution­s for the top defaulter accounts before they invoke insolvency proceeding­s.

 ?? MINT/FILE ?? RBI had in June asked banks to finalise a resolution plan within six months for their top 500 stressed accounts
MINT/FILE RBI had in June asked banks to finalise a resolution plan within six months for their top 500 stressed accounts

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