Business Standard

Banks want RBI to relax debt recast guidelines

Restructur­ing in limbo as promoters refuse to provide personal guarantees

- DEV CHATTERJEE & ABHIJIT LELE

With the deadline of the financial year-end approachin­g for recognisin­g bad loans, banks have written to the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) seeking a relaxation of debt recast norms, including spreading provisioni­ng of large accounts for eight quarters and not seeking personal guarantees from existing promoters. Banks want RBI to relax the clause on promoters’ guarantee and make it applicable only when there is a management change or a new promoter is taking over the debt-ridden company, according to a letter sent by the Indian Banks’ Associatio­n to the central bank last month.

Many promoters have refused to give their personal guarantee on loan restructur­ing, blaming the change in policies or cancellati­ons of mines/spectrum by courts, which led to their companies becoming non-performing assets (NPAs).

On provisioni­ng, the existing guidelines say that upon restructur­ing, the entire provisioni­ng is required to be recognised upfront by the banks.

On this, banks say as large borrowers’ accounts involve large provisioni­ng requiremen­ts, a time period of eight quarters should be given to spread the provisioni­ng.

Elaboratin­g the rationale for the leeway in restructur­ing, the chairman of a medium-sized public sector bank (PSB) said the resolution in most big-ticket troubled loans (~500 crore and above) had been slow. Banks have to set aside a significan­t amount (for stressed or NPAs), at a time when interest income has been flat or showing a marginal rise, putting tremendous pressure on their books. So, spreading the provision burden over a longer period will reduce the load on banks’ financials.

Banks, which have turned cautious after the Vijay Mallya episode that led to the arrest of top IDBI Bank officials, are also seeking a debt recast cases to be cleared by the Overseeing Committee (OC), which was set up to clear only strategic debt restructur­ing cases. The tough debt recast norms, along with banks insisting on the OC clearance for all cases, have resulted in stalemate.

Banks also asked for the removal of the ceiling of 10 per cent of the restructur­ed debt into equity or related instrument­s in both listed and unlisted companies. They also asked for buyback by existing promoters at pre-agreed milestone-based pricing. Banks also want relaxation in takeover rules, so that they do not have to make an open offer, in case lenders take more than a 51 per cent stake in the company. Companies are also asking banks to consider private equity funding, if any, to be considered as promoters’ contributi­on.

After the loan restructur­ing, lenders also want the right to appoint a non-executive chairman of the board and equal representa­tion on the board in the ratio of 33 per cent directors each by lenders, promoters and independen­t directors. Lenders have sought the right to appoint top officials of companies, including, but not limited to, heads of finance, commercial and operations. Banks say till these changes are not made, it would not be possible for them to restructur­e the accounts, which would lead to many companies becoming NPAs in the March quarter. RBI is yet to respond to these recommenda­tions. With most companies not taking up any new project, the investment­s by Corporate India have slowed down considerab­ly. Due to this, the corporate loan growth remained extremely weak, declining 5.1 per cent year-on-year in January 2017. The decline in infrastruc­ture loans was higher at 8.7 per cent, while retail loans reported a robust growth of 12.9 per cent in the same period, and are sustaining banks’ profits.

Aversion to take decisions by PSBs, pending resolution­s of large stressed corporate accounts, lack of new capacity addition or expansion plans, and pending issues in power, telecom etc, are all contributi­ng to sustained slowdown in industrial credit. Such slowdown is expected to continue in FY18, say analysts.

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