Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Banks stare at spike in NPAS as Covid relief loans turn sour

- Shayan Ghosh

MUMBAI: Banks are facing a fresh spike in bad loans, with close to 9% of the debt restructur­ed under the Reserve Bank of India’s pandemic relief plan turning sour in the last six months of 2021-22, data compiled by Mint showed.

Although overall bad loan numbers are improving, analysts are cautious about future delinquenc­ies arising out of the restructur­ed book. Over ₹18,500 crore of such loans has slipped into the non-performing asset (NPA) category after borrowers were unable to repay despite an extension of the repayment period and easier payment terms. While some small businesses are yet to find their feet after the Covid onslaught, a section of individual borrowers have also failed to repay, showed data from 27 banks who have declared their earnings for the year to March.

Loans recast under Covid-19 schemes declined to ₹1.9 lakh crore as of March 31 from ₹2.17 lakh crore six months earlier because of repayments, slippages into bad loans and write-offs.

Analysts said banks that have reported lower repayment and slippage numbers may have allowed borrowers a longer repayment moratorium. Some public sector banks have also scheduled staggered exits from moratorium­s for borrowers so that repayment delays and recoveries could be managed better. Data showed that borrowers have started exiting their moratorium periods, and more will exit the moratorium in the coming months.

“As some of the restructur­ed loans across lenders could be under moratorium, the slippages from the restructur­ed book should be seen in relation to the book that has exited moratorium and not the entire restructur­ed loan book,” said Anil Gupta, vice-president, financial sector ratings, Icra Ratings.

Gupta said that despite some loans being under moratorium, some borrowers repay as banks continue to persuade them to clear their dues to avoid an accumulati­on of interest and higher debt servicing burden later.

However, only a handful of banks have indicated how much of their restructur­ed loans are no longer under moratorium. For instance, at SBI, half of the restructur­ed book or ₹15,000 crore of loans has exited moratorium, and some borrowers are repaying despite the availabili­ty of a moratorium. Cashflows of SBI’S borrowers would be somewhat better than the rest of the industry since a large chunk of its retail loans is to government employees who have not faced salary cuts like their private-sector peers during the pandemic.

BORROWERS HAVE STARTED EXITING MORATORIUM PERIODS, AND THE NUMBERS ARE LIKELY TO RISE, THE DATA SHOWED

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India