Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Centre seeks ₹41,000 crore more for public sector banks

Fresh funds could help as many as five state-run banks exit the PCA framework

- Asit Ranjan Mishra and Shayan Ghosh

NEW DELHI/MUMBAI: The government on Thursday sought Parliament’s approval for supplement­ary grants worth ₹41,000 crore to infuse fresh capital into ailing state-run banks in the current fiscal. The additional capital could help as many as five such staterun banks exit the prompt corrective action (PCA) framework that mandates them to pare lending to companies and cut concentrat­ion of loans to certain sectors.

Eleven banks were put under the PCA framework by the Reserve Bank of India between February 2014 and January 2018.

The government had budgeted ₹65,000 crore for infusion into state-run lenders through recapitali­zation bonds this fiscal, of which ₹42,000 crore is still to be allotted. With the additional ₹41,000 crore of capital infusion by March 31, the government will be infusing a total ₹83,000 crore into state-run banks this year.

The capital infusion will be utilized to ensure that the betterperf­orming banks under the PCA framework meet their regulatory capital norms and non-pca banks do not breach the threshold. It is also expected to provide regulatory and growth capital to the entity formed by the merger of Bank of Baroda, Dena Bank and Vijaya Bank.

“The recognitio­n of NPAS, a process that started in 2015, is almost complete. The last quarter has already shown that there is improved performanc­e. Therefore, now the downward slide in the NPAS would commence,” finance minister Arun Jaitley told reporters.

“This entire exercise will also lead to the improvemen­t of lending capacity of banks.”

Gross NPAS of state-run banks have started declining after peaking in March 2018, registerin­g a drop of ₹23,860 crore in the first half of the current fiscal while they made a recovery of ₹60,726 crore during the same period, which is more than double the amount recovered from a year earlier. “The state-run banks are showing tremendous improvemen­ts in terms of recognitio­n, provisioni­ng, recovery and reforms. Therefore, this is the time we empower them and equip them with capital so that banks are ready to support growth of the fastest growing economy,” said Rajeev Kumar, secretary, department of financial services.

“Whichever PCA banks have shown better performanc­e in terms of reduction in NPAS and improvemen­ts in return on assets will be provided additional funds. Under this assessment, we have decided to provide capital to four-five PCA banks, which will help them get out of the PCA category,” said Kumar.

Considerin­g that the banks were not able to raise budgeted capital from markets under the originally envisaged recapitali­zation plan of ₹2.11 lakh crore, the announceme­nt of additional ₹41,000 crore recapitali­zation bonds was a positive one as it would address the capital requiremen­ts of state-run banks, said Anil Gupta, financial sector ratings head at Icra Ltd.

“In our view, negative return on asset is a backward-looking criteria. If the bank has adequately provided on its NPAS and also has been capitalize­d, then the future earnings will improve for the bank,” he added.

 ?? AP/FILE ?? Finance minister Arun Jaitley
AP/FILE Finance minister Arun Jaitley

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