Indian lenders burdened with the world's worst bad-loan ratio are stepping up effort to recover delinquent debt after the Reserve Bank of India announced tougher rules.
IDBI
Bank Ltd, the lender with India’s worst-bad loan ratio, is
seeking to curtail its soured debt by selling Rs 100 billion ($1.4
billion) of stressed assets and stepping up efforts to recover dues
from delinquent borrowers.
“We
have set up a war room to focus on recovering the non-performing
loans while another team is keeping a check on loans showing early
signs of stress,” Rakesh Sharma, chief executive officer of IDBI
Bank said by phone. The lender wants to sell stressed loans “by
June-end to quicken the pace of clean-up exercise.”
Indian
lenders burdened with the world’s worst bad-loan ratio are stepping
up effort to recover delinquent debt after the Reserve
Bank of India announced tougher rules. The Mumbai-based lender’s
turn-around efforts gathered pace after Life Insurance Corp. of
India, the nation’s largest insurer, bought a controlling stake in
the bank from Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government. The
insurer has infused more than 210 billion rupees into IDBI to bolster
its risk buffers and bring it out of the regulator’s emergency
program that restricts lending.
IDBI
Bank will be out of the Reserve Bank’s prompt corrective action
framework by September as bad-loan ratio narrows and profits rise,
Sharma said. Banks sanctioned by the regulator are restricted from
lending and expanding their network while they mend their balance
sheets. IDBI’s gross bad loan ratio stood at about 30 percent as of
Dec. 31, exchange filing shows.
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