Business Standard

Most names on RBI’s second list to land in NCLT: SBI chief

- ABHIJIT LELE

Most companies in the Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI’s) second list of stressed accounts will land up in the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) for resolution, according to State Bank of India (SBI) Chairman Rajnish Kumar.

After recommendi­ng 12 large non-performing assets (NPA) in June for resolution under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC), the RBI gave banks time till December 13 to attempt restructur­ing the 29 companies that figure on the second list. If banks and companies fail to finalise the loan recast, the case will have to be referred to the NCLT under the IBC.

“Almost the entire list will go to the NCLT. By March, the directions will be determined for cases in the first list,” Kumar said.

Of the 29 cases on the RBI’s second list, SBI has an exposure to 27 companies with loans amounting to ~26,636 crore. It has more than 50 per cent provision coverage for the bankruptcy cases.

Some of the names from second list that are making the rounds are Visa Steel, Ruchi Soya, SEL Manufactur­ing, Monnet Power, Orchid Chemicals, Shakti Bhog and Jai Balaji Industries.

The 12 accounts in the RBI’s first list that have been referred to the NCLT are Essar Steel, Bhushan Steel, Electroste­el Steels, Amtek Auto, Bhushan Power and Steel, Alok Industries, Monnet Ispat, Lanco Infra, Era Infra, Jaypee Infratech, ABG Shipyard and Jyoti Structures.

In most of these 12 cases, expression­s of interest and bids from prospectiv­e suitors have been called. Bankers expect decisions on resolution or liquidatio­n from the fourth quarter of the current financial year.

The banking sector faces a rise in provisioni­ng for loan losses after a central bank order to cover at least 50 per cent of the loans to companies being sent to the bankruptcy court.

According to rating agency ICRA, the financial results of 12 public sector banks (of a total 21) for the second quarter of 2017-18 reflect a 60 per cent increase in credit provisions over the same quarter of the previous year. The rise was 32 per cent on a sequential basis.

The credit provisions for these 12 banks stood at ~22,800 crore during September quarter against ~17,200 crore during the June quarter and ~14,200 crore during July-September 2016.

A surge in credit provisions resulted in higher pre-tax losses of ~4,740 crore during September quarter against losses of ~2,150 crore in the same period a year ago.

The rise in credit provisioni­ng continues to be driven by higher requiremen­ts for accounts referred by the RBI for initiating proceeding­s under the IBC. This is in addition to provisions for fresh slippages and the ageing of the existing NPAs.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India