Hindustan Times (Delhi)

1,000 bad loan accounts under lens in ICICI probe

NPA CHECK List of cases that may involve breach of norms being prepared

- Anirudh Laskar anirudh.l@livemint.com

MUMBAI: ICICI Bank Ltd is preparing to submit details of at least 1,000 loan accounts that turned sour since April 2010 to an independen­t panel, as part of a boardinsti­tuted probe into alleged wrongdoing­s by the lender’s top executives, including its off-duty CEO Chanda Kochhar, two people aware of the developmen­t said.

The panel, headed by former Supreme Court judge B N Srikrishna, has started investigat­ing, among other issues, three of the most serious allegation­s made by a whistleblo­wer—impropriet­y in lending decisions; conflict of interest in loans made to business groups; and t hat Kochhar favoured certain borrowers.

“Since June 26, ICICI Bank’s central risk management department has started gathering details of non-retail loan accounts that turned NPAS (nonperform­ing assets) since fiscal 2010, which are suspected to involve potential breach of banking norms or code-of-conduct by the bank and its top management or key vertical heads,” said the first of the two people on condition of anonymity.

reviewed copies of the communicat­ion between the bank’s risk management department and loan department­s, which indicate that the loan divisions have been asked to furnish details of loans that have turned bad since 2010.

The findings of the Srikrishna panel will decide the fate of Kochhar, who is now on indefinite leave pending the completion of the investigat­ion. Kochhar, who became the bank’s CEO on May 1, 2009, will have to resign if the ICICI Bank’s risk department has asked its loan divisions to provide details of all loan accounts that have become since April 2010

A majority of the belong to firms that got loans through ICICI Bank’s SME loans division

The loan department­s have been asked to

including sanction notes, dates of default and the amounts in the accounts

The details will be shared with the B.N. Srikrishna panel to assist the board-instituted probe into

by the bank’s top executives A whistleblo­wer has alleged that ICICI Bank’s top executives, including CEO and executive director Vijay Chandok, wilfully breached rules to avoid classifyin­g some loans as bad

panel finds that the whistleblo­wer’s allegation­s are true.

The bank allegedly delayed impairment in 31 loan accounts between fiscal 2008 and March 2016 allegedly to save on provisioni­ng costs and inflate its profits by a total of $1.3 billion in a span of eight years, on June 25, citing the whistleblo­wer’s complaint. The bank also delayed provisioni­ng by a quarter to as long as five years for 31 loan accounts worth at least $3 billion, according to the complaint.

ICICI Bank denied that the lender’s risk management department has sought details of the loan accounts.

“The risk management department of the bank has not sought details of loan accounts, as mentioned in your e-mail. We would like to inform you that this does not fall under the scope of the Justice Srikrishna enquiry,” said an

ICICI Bank spokespers­on.

ICICI Bank on May 29 decided to institute a probe by an independen­t panel to verify the charges made by the whistleblo­wer. The Srikrishna panel’s investigat­ion runs parallel to the probes by government authoritie­s into an alleged nexus between Videocon Group, a local conglomera­te, and Kochhar’s husband Deepak Kochhar. The whistleblo­wer has also alleged that ICICI Bank’s top executives, including CEO Kochhar and executive director Vijay Chandok, wilfully breached rules to avoid classifyin­g the loans as bad.

“The Srikrishna committee will verify the whistleblo­wer charges by comparing the disclosure­s made by the bank, its board, audit committee, compliance division and so on,” the second person said, also requesting anonymity. In response to a query by

on June 24 , ICICI Bank admitted that in certain accounts, transactio­ns were observed that may have delayed the classifica­tion of the account as non-performing under Indian GAAP (generally accepted accounting principles) in earlier years. The panel’s probe will also examine the whistleblo­wer’s allegation­s that top executives wilfully breached rules.

“There have been several meetings held at the bank by the senior management to discuss the modus operandi of trying to save certain loan assets in other countries by funding a group company in India. The bank’s discussion­s in such cases indicate the involvemen­t of Chanda Kochhar in negotiatio­ns with the client,” reads the whistleblo­wer’s letter.

Following the whistleblo­wer’s complaint, RBI began a second probe into the dealings of the bank during Kochhar’s tenure, according to a June 26 report. The RBI probe began on March 25 with a list of at least 26 of the 31 loan accounts named in the whistleblo­wer’s complaints. However, following ICICI Bank’s response to its first set of queries on April 11 , the banking regulator decided to expand its probe to 55 of ICICI Bank’s borrowers. ICICI Bank said, “RBI in the normal course of its supervisor­y activities seeks informatio­n from the bank from time to time.”

The 55 loan accounts being probed by RBI include Essar Global Ltd, Essar Power Ltd, Assam Oil Co. Ltd, Bhushan Steel Ltd, Essar Steel India Ltd, Videocon Oil Ventures Ltd, Shree Renuka Sugars Ltd, ABG Shipyard Ltd, IVRCL Ltd, Bhushan Power and Steel Ltd, Bhushan Energy Ltd and Gammon India Ltd.

 ??  ?? submit details Chanda Kochhar non-performing NPA accounts alleged wrongdoing­s
submit details Chanda Kochhar non-performing NPA accounts alleged wrongdoing­s

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