Even as banks have written off more loans than before, recovery of bad loans has also improved substantially in the past couple of years.
India’s
42 scheduled commercial banks (SCBs) collectively wrote off Rs 2.12
trillion worth of loans in 2018-19, according to figures given by the
finance ministry in Parliament. Not only was this 42 per cent higher
than the Rs 1.5 trillion written off the previous year, but also
about 20 per cent of all their non-performing assets (NPAs).
Banks
generally take NPAs off their books to make their balance sheets look
cleaner — with reduced liabilities and potential losses. According
to Reserve Bank of India (RBI) guidelines, "non-performing
loans, including, those in respect of which full provisioning has
been made on completion of four years, are removed from the balance
sheet of the bank concerned by way of write-off."
Since
2014-15, when the Narendra Modi-led government first came to power,
India’s banks have written off Rs 5.7 trillion worth of bad loans.
So
far as the country’s 21 public-sector
banks (PSBs) are concerned, the amount of bad loans taken off
their balance sheets has increased progressively over the years. In
2018-19, these banks wrote off Rs 1.9 trillion worth of bad loans —
about 90 per cent of the total for all SCBs, and four times their own
write-offs in 2014-15. Only a third of SCBs reported lower write-offs
in 2018-19 than the previous year; and only three of those that did
were PSBs, show government statistics.
State
Bank of India (SBI) reported the biggest jump in write-offs, to Rs
56,500 crore. The significant increase in SBI’s write-offs in the
past couple of financial years has been on account of a merger of
five other banks — State Bank of Bikaner and Jaipur, State Bank of
Travancore, State Bank of Patiala, State Bank of Hyderabad and State
Bank of Mysore — with it.
For
India’s SCBs, an increase in write-offs has occurred concurrently
with a rise in NPAs. Bad
loans on the books of all banks have tripled in four years —
from Rs 3.2 trillion in 2014-15 to Rs 9.4 trillion in 2018-19.
The
massive rise in write-offs by India’s PSBs and some crisis-hit
private lenders assumes more significance in view of a higher rate of
bad-loan recoveries under the country’s new insolvency resolution
process, which came into force through a legislation in 2016.
According to an RBI report, in 2018-19, banks were able to recover Rs
74,500 crore from companies under the resolution process — at a
recovery rate of 43 per cent. This was significantly higher than
recovery rates for other forums like Lok Adalats, debt resolution
tribunals (DRTs) and procedures initiated under the Securitisation
and Reconstruction of Financial Assets and Enforcement of Securities
Interest Act (Sarfaesi).
No comments:
Post a Comment