Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Lenders’ focus shifts to debt recast as loan moratorium comes to an end

- Shayan Ghosh shayan.g@livemint.com

MUMBAI: Bankers and borrowers alike are weighing their options as a six-month moratorium on loan repayments ends on Monday, restarting the recovery process for an estimated 18% of their loan books.

Even as they expect a steady increase in bad loans, lenders are unlikely to use coercive methods that reflect poorly on them amid widespread distress, preferring instead to urge retail borrowers to make ad hoc payments towards dues that accrued during the moratorium period and reduce liability.

The RBI has permitted debt restructur­ing by a maximum of two years, and bankers think it is ideal for a large number of retail borrowers who have lost jobs and wages amid the pandemic and the ensuing lockdown.

“It is not like the entire stress will be visible on day one after the moratorium ends. There will be a staggered rise in bad loans, depending on their overdue status before the deferment became effective,” a senior banker said on condition of anonymity. He said the first set of bad loans will come from special mention account (SMA-2) accounts that are overdue between 61-90 days and then from SMA-1 with repayment delays of 31-60 days.

Under RBI’s guidelines, banks can use the new recast window only for loans that do not have more than 30 days of overdue as on 1 March, essentiall­y meaning that over ₹5.7 lakh crore of stressed assets are outside its ambit. While even these can be recast, they will turn NPA, attracting higher provisions.

“The restructur­ing can be anything between 5% and 6% of the book. But when I say restructur­ed books can be 5% to 6%, we are also factoring in a good number of personal loans; but, then, it can be quite lower than what we estimate,” said Rajkiran Rai G, CEO, Union Bank of India.

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