HomeNewsBusinessCOVID-19 crisis: Banks may beef up provisions to year-ago level in April-June quarter, say analysts

COVID-19 crisis: Banks may beef up provisions to year-ago level in April-June quarter, say analysts

While banks have so far been cautious about forecasting credit costs, analysts see the fresh provisioning burden at around Rs 56,000 crore.

June 02, 2021 / 18:08 IST
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Provisions refer to the money set aside to cover the likely losses on loans when customers fail to pay back on time.
Provisions refer to the money set aside to cover the likely losses on loans when customers fail to pay back on time.

Hit by the second wave of COVID-19, banks are preparing to aggressively increase provisions for the April-June quarter to guard against the potential losses on their loan books due to the pandemic resurgence. Provisions refer to the money set aside to cover the likely losses on loans when customers fail to pay back on time. A loan becomes an NPA if there is no repayment of interest or principal in 90 days.

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Though lenders have so far refrained from offering guidance on the quantum of provisions, analysts estimate that the quantum of fresh provisioning for the banking sector could stand at around Rs 56,000 crore in the backdrop of the impact of COVID second wave.

While COVID cases in India have started declining in the last few weeks, April and May have been bad months for collections in the financial system. Lockdowns across many states and the fear of catching the virus did not allow many collection staff to do their job.