The Pak Banker

Depositors at India's PMC Bank survive on loans, charity

- NEW DELHI -APP

In February, 82-year-old Kishan Lal appealed to India's finance minister for help, saying in a Twitter message he was ready to donate his kidney and eyes if someone could help arrange funds to treat his daughter, who had a brain tumour.

The Lals had enough savings to tide over the medical crisis - more than 2.5 million rupees ($33,450) in Punjab & Maharashtr­a Cooperativ­e (PMC) Bank. But withdrawal­s were capped at 50,000 rupees from each account at the time because authoritie­s were investigat­ing fraud at PMC.

The withdrawal cap is now at 100,000 rupees per depositor. "I just borrowed money from wherever I could, I had to save my daughter," said Lal. "If I had access to my own money, I'd not have been ashamed."

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) took control of PMC last September after it was accused of fraud and concealing non-performing loans. PMC's top officials and the owners of a realty company that received the bulk of the loans were arrested. The withdrawal cap has left many of PMC's over 900,000 depositors in deep difficulty. Some say they are struggling to clear loans or pay their children's school fees, while others say they depend on friends for their groceries.

The situation at PMC has also amplified concerns about the health of India's tens of thousands of cooperativ­e banks, which often serve communitie­s in the rural interior and have assets worth around $220 billion, about 11% of India's total banking sector assets.

These banks, many of which are tiny, are subject to less stringent regulation than commercial banks and currently, more than two dozen of them are facing lending or withdrawal restrictio­ns by the RBI because of financial irregulari­ties.

The coronaviru­s has hit the broader banking sector hard, raising concerns about soaring bad loans as household and corporate debt rise. Liquidity risks have increased for non-bank financial companies and the state banking system needs to be recapitali­sed.

But some analysts are concerned that the pandemic is likely to have a more pronounced effect on the fragile co-operative banks. "They lend to riskier borrowers who have higher chances of defaulting due to the pandemic," said Jignesh Shial, a banking analyst at brokerage

Emkay Global.

Asked about the delay in resolving PMC's problems, Jai Bhagwan Bhoria, an administra­tor appointed by the RBI to revive the bank, told Reuters: "The recovery is an ongoing process and it takes time in actual realisatio­ns due to legal steps and hurdles faced." The PMC crisis has also sparked courtroom battles. In one of them, Sandeep Bhalla, whose parents have nearly 10 million rupees blocked in PMC, has told the Delhi High Court that depositors of PMC were "discrimina­ted against" compared to those from commercial lender Yes Bank. In March, the RBI imposed a cap of 50,000 rupees on withdrawal­s from Yes Bank, then India's fifthlarge­st bank in terms of assets, after its finances deteriorat­ed.

But less than 24 hours later, the finance minister announced that India's top state-run bank, SBI, would infuse funds into Yes Bank and the withdrawal curbs were subsequent­ly lifted. The finance ministry told the court the government had not infused any funds in Yes Bank but it was investors and the SBI who came to its rescue, according to court documents. SBI is 57% government owned. The judge wasn't convinced.

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