The Free Press Journal

Restructur­ing 2.0: A shot in armour? or, a dead fish?

- BY TEJIMANDI

The RBI has announced several liquidity boosting measures under restructur­ing scheme 2.0. These measures focus on individual borrowers and the MSMEs. But will it have the desired impact? Read to know!

RBI's new policy initiative is more in line with the announceme­nts made under the restructur­ing 1.0 scheme last year. Most of the announceme­nts are an extension of the earlier scheme and in continuati­on with the old measures.

They aim to provide liquidity to the stressed sectors. Besides, it also supports individual borrowers and MSMEs facing the financial crunch.

Liquidity Boosting Measures

Under the new policy announceme­nt, the RBI has initiated several steps to increase credit flow to specific sectors. It includes (A) Liquidity of Rs 50,000 crore towards building health infrastruc­ture, classified under priority sector lending; (B) Small Finance Banks (SFBs) would have access to Rs 10,000 crore for fresh lending up to Rs 10 lakh/borrower, and (C) Lending by SFBs to Micro Finance Institutes with AUM of up to Rs 500 crore can be classified as PSL till FY2022.

In support of MSMEs, the RBI has (a) Extended the limit of the restructur­ing 1.0 scheme till Q2FY22 for standard loans; (b) Modificati­on to the restructur­ed loans will also be possible, extending the residual tenor of loans by two years, and (c) Working capital can also be reassessed based on the current business environmen­t.

Loan Restructur­ing

The RBI has also extended a restructur­ing scheme for retail and MSME borrowers to support the affected sectors. The RBI has allowed banks to restructur­e loans of individual borrowers of up to Rs 25 crore. And restricted the benefits of the scheme to only those who didn’t use this facility earlier. Also, the repayment records need to be clear as of March 31, 2021

A Mere Extension of Old Scheme

A close study reveals that the new measures are merely an extension of the restructur­ing scheme 1.0, which was announced last year.

Based on the data from loan restructur­ing scheme 1.0, it can be said that the usage of these schemes has been low. It suggests the reluctance on the borrower's side to take advantage of these schemes. After receiving a tepid response from corporate towards restructur­ing, new incentives are more targeted towards retail borrowers and MSMEs this time around.

Offtake for the ECLG Scheme has been slower than expected. It has prompted RBI to extend the date of closure of this scheme. It has also allowed the expansion of the scheme towards health infra and several other stressed sectors in the MSME space.

Incentives, Not Enough?

A Kotak Institutio­nal report suggests that larger private banks better utilized the restructur­ing 1.0 scheme as compared to mid-tier regional banks, NBFCs. Even public banks have been quite reluctant to use this scheme that possesses the worst asset quality. It largely proves a lack of interest in the restructur­ing scheme.

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