Millennium Post

NPAS: RBI raps i-bankers for faulty loan appraisals

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MUMBAI: The Reserve Bank has blamed conflicts of interest among merchant bankers as one of the prime reasons for faulty project appraisals that has led to the piling up of huge non-performing assets in the system which has crossed 10 per cent or over Rs 10 trillion as of the September quarter.

“The impairment crisis in the banks has also highlighte­d certain basic deficienci­es with regard to the appraisal of long-term projects with a significan­t gestation time,” the central bank said in the Financial Stability Report (FSR) for the first half of the current financial year.

The Reserve Bank has blamed conflicts of interest among merchant bankers as one of the prime reasons for faulty project appraisals that has led to the piling up of huge non-performing assets in the system which has crossed 10 per cent or over Rs 10 trillion as of the September quarter.

"The impairment crisis in the banks has also highlighte­d certain basic deficienci­es with regard to the appraisal of longterm projects with a significan­t gestation time," the central bank said in the Financial Stability Report (FSR) for the first half of the current financial year.

"A significan­t part of such projects undertaken were consortium lending with appraisals being carried out by profession­al merchant bankers with built-in conflicts of interest (since they are paid by the borrowers)," the half-yearly report released late Thursday evening said.

It can be noted that since the public sector banks dominate the credit space, lead by the market leader SBI, lenders have been engaging SBI Caps, the merchant banking arm of SBI, for both loan appraisals as well as loan restructur­ing and even project appraisals.

With a gross non-performing assets ratio which increased by 19.3 per cent, the corporate sector contribute­d highest to dud assets among all segments, and was primarily led by metals, power, engineerin­g, infrastruc­ture and constructi­on sectors, which involve project appraisals.

The GNPAS in basic metals and metal products were 44.5 per cent, that of constructi­on stood at 26.7 per cent, infrastruc­ture (19.6 per cent) and engineerin­g GNPAS zoomed to 31 per cent, the report said.

The report has projected GNPAS to jump to 10.8 per cent by the March quarter and to 11.1 per cent by September 2018 and blamed the spike to primarily to private sector banks which had been under-reporting their dud loans. In the September quarter, the GNPAS had spike to 10.2 per cent from 9.6 per cent six months earlier.

"The banking stability indicator (BSI) shows that the risks remain at an elevated level weighed down by further asset quality deteriorat­ion," the FSR noted.

Overall, the stressed assets, including restructur­ed loans and dud loans increased marginally to 12.2 per cent during the same period from 12.1 per cent. The state-run banks' GNPA shot by 100 bps to 13.5 per cent while the same for their private sector peers jumped to 3.80 per cent.

The report, significan­tly noted that private sector lenders, considered more prudent are the ones reporting the most stress reporting a whopping 40.8 per cent spike in their GNPAS as against 17 per cent by the state-run ones whose lazy banking has been blamed primarily for the mess in the system.

It can be noted that all the top private sector lenders, including ICICI Bank, Axis Bank and Yes Bank, and even HDFC Bank, have been found to have under-reported their dud assets in the recent RBI" supervisio­n, results of which were recognised over the first two quarters of the fiscal.

The FSR said public private partnershi­p (PPP) projects involving high leverage were also undertaken.

"The exact implicatio­ns of such risky projects implemente­d through the special purpose vehicle (SPV) route were sometimes not clear to bankers," it said.

The RBI said PPP contracts of long-term duration are complex due to involvemen­t of multiple stakeholde­rs and there is a "need to align their objectives for mutual benefit."

"Successful implementa­tion of PPP projects calls for more due diligence by all stakeholde­rs, including public sector contractin­g agencies, private concession­aires, and bankers," it added.

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