Khaleej Times

Indian bad loans hit 14-year high

- Anirban Nag

mumbai — Bad debts at Indian lenders, especially those in the dominant state-run sector, have climbed to a 14-year high and could swell further, putting a strain on their capital buffers and profitabil­ity, a central bank study showed.

The industry’s gross bad-loan ratio jumped to 9.1 per cent in September, from 7.8 per cent in March, according to the Reserve Bank of India’s Financial Stability Report released on Thursday. That’s the highest since the year ended March 2002. Stressed assets, including soured debt and restructur­ed loans, rose to 12.3 per cent of outstandin­g lending from 11.5 per cent, the report showed.

Under a “macro stress test,” the gross non-performing loan ratio may rise even further by March 2017, the deadline set by the RBI for banks to clean up soured credit.

“The performanc­e of the Indian banking sector remained subdued during 2015-16 amidst rising proportion of banks’ delinquent loans, consequent increase in provisioni­ng and continued slowdown in credit growth,” the RBI said in the study, which is released every six months.

Weakness in the Indian banking system would be a blow to Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who is seeking to revive credit growth from near a two-decade low, in order to maintain a robust pace of expansion among the world’s major economies. His plans to revitalise the cash-driven economy hit a roadblock after his sudden decision to ban high-denominati­on notes.

“The withdrawal of specified bank notes will impart far-reaching changes going forward,” Governor Urjit Patel wrote in a foreword to the report. He added it will “significan­tly transform the domestic economy” and boost efficiency and transparen­cy as India moves to a less cash-dependent society.

State-run lenders underperfo­rmed their peers in the private sector, according to the report, which measures risks to the banking system by tracking factors such as profitabil­ity, asset quality and liquidity. The public-sector banks showed the lowest ratio of capital to risk-weighted assets among bank groups with negative returns on their assets.

Analysts said a slowing economy is likely to make it harder for banks to recover loans. “The asset quality-related pressures in the banking system are likely to continue for some time as recovery in the current environmen­t remains challengin­g,” said Karthik Srinivasan, group head, financial sector ratings at ICRA, the local unit of Moody’s Investors Service.

 ?? — AFP ?? The Indian banking industry’s gross bad loan ratio jumped to 9.1 per cent in September from 7.8 per cent in March.
— AFP The Indian banking industry’s gross bad loan ratio jumped to 9.1 per cent in September from 7.8 per cent in March.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates