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Saturday, October 5, 2013

Rajan to Set Right School of Defaulters Banks will be told to follow uniform loan classification rules & share defaulter info

 RBI Governor Raghuram Rajan is leaving no stone unturned in his efforts to end promoter abuse of the benign loan restructuring regime and is soon poised to mandate all banks to stick to uniform loan classification norms. 

Three people familiar with the idea said the governor, who has been meeting bank chairmen over the past two to three weeks independently and some in groups, has said lenders should share information about defaulting clients. Rajan is building a repository of information about defaulters that could help banks ensure they do not get duped by unscrupulous promoters. 
"Promoters do not have a divine right to stay in charge regardless of how badly they mismanage an enterprise, nor do they have the right to use the banking system to recapitalise their failed ventures," he had said at his first press conference after taking charge. 
Repository Could Prevent Losses 
The Indian banking system, especially state-run banks, is facing a continuous downgrade by ratings companies such as Standard & Poor's and Fitch because of rising bad loans and concerns that many restructured loans could turn bad. 
The absence of a repository is believed to have led to some of the biggest losses to banks. Kingfisher Airlines and Deccan Chronicle Holdings, which together inflicted losses of more than Rs 11,000 crore, might have 
been prevented if the banks had shared information and a repository was in place. Deccan Chronicle Holdings, which went public in 2004, took loans from several banks to expand the circulation of Deccan Chronicle newspaper in several cities and started a new business newspaper, Financial Chronicle. However, the slowdown affected the company's expansion plan and profitability. 
"Nobody knew how much Deccan had borrowed from the banking system. Today, 
Cibil has information on all borrowers. However, if banks share this information with RBI, it would get information on the banking system's indebtedness to companies," said Romesh Sobti, managing director and chief executive officer, IndusInd Bank. 
Numbers compiled by the Corporate Debt Restructuring Cell shows loans worth Rs 2,29,013 crore of 401 companies have been restructured as of March 2013. 
Indian banks' stressed assets rose to 9.1% of total 
loans (NPL ratio: 3.4% and restructured loans ratio: 5.7%) in fiscal 2013, from 6.1% a year before, says Fitch Ratings 
The latest RBI initiative comes after the banking system had to write off loans worth Rs 12,000 crore given to Deccan Chronicle and Kingfisher. 
"The move to set up a repository is a proactive step to prevent fraud," said SK Kalra, executive director of Andhra Bank. "Second
ly, this will make it difficult for borrowers to conceal from lenders the loan they have taken from other banks in case the loan is availed through multiple banking routes." 
Currently, under the consortium banking route, each lender is mandated to inform all lenders about the loans on their books. However, in case of multiple banking facility, lenders are unaware of loans a borrower has availed from other banks. 
Conflict between private and public sector lenders and qualification of assets are also delaying the recovery process. 
"If one bank treats it as a standard asset, the company can always approach that bank for fresh funding," said a state-run banker who did not want to be identified. "In the case of Kingfisher, since the company is nonoperational now, that risk is not there."





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