HomeNewsBusinessBanks finally get to tag bad loans as bad as SC lifts interim stay on asset classification

Banks finally get to tag bad loans as bad as SC lifts interim stay on asset classification

The SC had put a stop on the NPA clock on September 3 last year to help COVID-hit borrowers. But, this created difficulties for industry in terms of asset classification.

March 23, 2021 / 15:15 IST
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Supreme Court (Shutterstock)
Supreme Court (Shutterstock)

The Supreme Court has finally lifted the interim stay on banks for classifying loans that were standard as on August 31 as NPAs (non-performing assets). Passing the judgment on the interest waiver case, the SC said, “Interim relief granted earlier not to declare the accounts  of   respective borrowers as NPA stands vacated. However, there shall be no order as to costs.”

With the SC lifting the stay, banks have now more clarity on asset classification. As per RBI norms, a loan account becomes NPA if there is no repayment till 90 days. It was on September 3, 2020, that the apex court put a stop on the NPA clock of Indian banks. The SC then ruled that banks cannot classify loan accounts as NPAs that were standard (not in default) as on August 31. This ruling came as a blessing to the borrowers but a pain for the banking system.

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So far, banks have been treating bad loan accounts in two different ways since the SC order. With respect to the accounting part, banks treat these bad loans as bad loans and show proforma gross NPAs while announcing their quarterly financial results. But, when it comes to the banks’ relation with the defaulted customer, the loan continues to be treated as standard.

Most banks have been reporting higher proforma NPA number compared with the reported NPA figures.