HomeNewsBusinessAnalysis | Banks have a long way to go in reducing NPAs

Analysis | Banks have a long way to go in reducing NPAs

The reduction in bad loans is largely owing to write-offs. More troubles lie ahead

October 03, 2019 / 14:22 IST
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Shshank Saurav

The CEO of Punjab & Maharashtra Cooperative Bank (PMC Bank) confessed that 73 percent of the bank’s loans were advanced to a single borrower bypassing regulatory guidelines. That it went undetected and unreported for so many years shows the rot in India’s banking system.

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The mess at PMC Bank came to light when the non-bank finance (NBFC) sector is plagued with liquidity issues. Multiple NBFCs have defaulted in recent times. The government has promised to capitalise banks, but their additional provisioning requirement for sour loans will erode capital.

A deep dive into the finances of banks shows that the non-performing assets (NPA) crisis is far from over. Indeed, data from the Reserve Bank of India show that the gross NPA ratio for banks declined from 15.52 percent at the end of March 2018 to 12.25 percent a year later.

Asset quality of public sector banks (Amounts in Rs crore)  
However, the primary reason for this reduction is the huge loans written off during financial year 2018-19, data sourced from the central bank under the Right to Information Act show. Public sector banks collectively wrote off Rs 1.72 lakh crore of bad assets in FY19 compared to Rs 1.24 lakh crore in the previous year. The chart below has the details.