The Asian Age

RBI ends old debt rejig plans

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Mumbai, Feb. 13: RBI's new norms for overhaulin­g the existing mechanism to deal with bad loans — bringing them line with Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code ( IBC) — will help ensure speedy resolution of stressed assets in the banking system, officials said on Tuesday.

The revised framework has specified norms for “early identifica­tion” of stressed assets, timelines for implementa­tion of resolution plans, and a penalty on banks for failing to adhere to the prescribed timelines.

In a late night notificati­on on Monday, the Reserve Bank of India ( RBI) has also withdrawn the existing mechanisms which included corporate debt restructur­ing ( CDR) Scheme, Strategic Debt Restructur­ing ( SDR) scheme, Scheme for Sustainabl­e Structurin­g of Stressed Assets ( S4A).

The Joint Lenders' Forum ( JLF) as an institutio­nal mechanism for resolution of stressed accounts also stands discontinu­ed, it said, adding that “all accounts, including such accounts where

any of the schemes have been invoked but not yet implemente­d, shall be governed by the revised framework”.

Commenting on the RBI move, financial services secretary Rajiv Kumar told PTI that last night's notificati­on is a “wake up call” for defaulters.

“The government is determined to clean up things in one go and not

defer it. It is a more transparen­t system for resolution,” he said.

The RBI's decision would not have much impact on provisioni­ng norms for banks, he said.

Last year, the government had given more powers to the RBI to push banks to deal with nonperform­ing assets ( NPAs) or bad loans.

The gross NPAs of public

sector and private sector banks as on September 30, 2017 were ` 7,33,974 crore, ` 1,02,808 crore respective­ly.

“In view of the enactment of the IBC, it has been decided to substitute the existing guidelines with a harmonised and simplified generic framework for resolution of stressed assets,” the RBI notificati­on said.

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