Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Cause and result of India’s banking crisis

RBI’S December 2017 Financial Stability Report report shows that more than fourfifths of NPAS of banks are on account of large borrowers

- Roshan Kishore roshan.k@htlive.com ■ ■

In 2012, the State Bank of India (SBI) declared Kingfisher airlines a non-performing asset (NPA). SBI had the highest exposure of Rs 1458 crore among the consortium of banks which had loaned money to the airline.

Kingfisher’s total debt amounted to Rs 6000 crore then. The task of recovering loans given to the company and prosecutin­g those who were involved in wrongdoing is still a work in progress.

RBI’S December 2017 Financial Stability Report (FSR) says that “there will be a complete erosion of the profits of the banking sector under the scenario of a default by the topmost 3 borrowers of each bank”.

The report also shows that more than four-fifths of NPAS of banks are on account of large borrowers (See Chart 1). A large borrower is defined as a borrower that has aggregate fund-based and non-fund based exposure of Rs 5 crore and more for the Scheduled Commercial Banks (SCBS).

These are two disparate facts about the current banking crisis in India. But they raise two similar questions. Would it have been possible for any person to borrow Rs 6000 crore to start an airline like Vijay Mallya could? Will the government sit back and watch if banks face a potential collapse due to default of their large borrowers? The answer to both questions is a definite no. Irrespecti­ve of whether or not malfeasanc­e has led to the crisis of borrowers or lenders, their sheer size is bound to have played/play a role in their access/potential access to credit/bailout. Banks gave out big-ticket loans because big borrowers inspired confidence that they would be able to pay back. Now that they cannot pay back, the government would have to infuse capital in banks and save them.

In 2017, the government announced a recapitali­sation plan involving Rs 2.11 trillion for state-owned banks. While Rs 1.35 trillion out of this amount was to be raised by issuing recapitali­sation bonds, the rest is to come from budgetary allocation­s and fundraisin­g from markets.

The short point is the principle of too big to fail is both the cause and result of India’s banking crisis.

This argument gains even more strength when we look at how banks reacted when the NPA crisis started developing . Bad debt started mounting in India’s banking sector since the beginning of this decade itself. However, this was hidden through statistica­l jugglery. Instead of recognisin­g their bad debts as NPAS, banks put them under the category of restructur­ed loans. Things changed drasticall­y when RBI forced an asset quality review (AQR) in the second half of 2015. While total share of bad loans have continued to increase at the same pace, most restructur­ed loans joined the category of NPAS (See Chart 2).

Let us assume an individual borrows money from a bank to buy a car and starts faltering on EMI payments in a year. Would the bank recognise the loan as an NPA and initiate processes to recover the money or would it enter into a negotiatio­n with the borrower to postpone payments for a while in the hope of recovering the loans?

The former is a more plausible action on part of the bank. This is unlikely to be the case if the defaulting borrower is sitting on a huge loan due to two broad reasons. Firstly, a big borrower has much more resources at his/her disposal to deal with the methods employed by a bank to recover the debt.

Secondly, the potential loss in case of default by a big borrower is much bigger than a car loan gone bad, hence the bank would be more amenable to giving a long rope to the borrower.

The argument of too big to fail holds true for explaining bad loans in the banking system in general. The subprime crash which triggered the financial crisis in the US was a result of highly risky borrowing against portfolios of housing loans which were bound to face defaults sooner or later.

Because large funds and not individual house-buyers were dealing in these toxic securities, loans were given in the first place. Even though banks which collapsed were in the private sector, they had to be bailed out by using taxpayers’ money.

What is special about India’s banking crisis then? It is the disproport­ionate concentrat­ion of bad loans in the government owned banking system. Gross NPAS as percentage of total advances stood at 13.5% for Public Sector Banks (PSBS) in September 2017.

The figures are less than 4% for foreign and private banks. To be sure, one could argue that higher levels of NPAS in PSBS are due to their overall dominance in India’s banking industry (60-70%). Comparing relative share of NPAS can take care of this mismatch.

Relative share of NPAS in PSBS can calculated by dividing the share of PSB’S NPAS in total NPAS by share of PSB’S advances in total advances in the banking sector. This exercise shows that PSBS have had a major role in creation of India’s present banking crisis (See Chart 3).

What explains the disproport­ionate share of PSBS in NPAS? An earlier story by this author had pointed towards governance related issues in PSBS which makes them more vulnerable to frauds and losses. However, it would wrong to say that only PSBS face corporate governance problems.

Recent events involving ICICI Bank have shown that private banks are not immune to such practices. Is there something else which explains the concentrat­ion of bad loans in PSBS?

The next part of this data-journalism series will try and answer this question.

RBI’S DECEMBER 2017 FINANCIAL STABILITY REPORT SAYS THAT ‘THERE WILL BE A COMPLETE EROSION OF THE PROFITS OF THE BANKING SECTOR UNDER THE SCENARIO OF A DEFAULT BY THE TOPMOST 3 BORROWERS OF EACH BANK’

 ?? HT FILE PHOTO ?? Instead of recognisin­g their bad debts as NPAS, banks put them under the category of restructur­ed loans.
HT FILE PHOTO Instead of recognisin­g their bad debts as NPAS, banks put them under the category of restructur­ed loans.
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