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RBI's Financial Stability report: Is devil in the details?

The real scary statement in the FSR, the first one put out after Raghuram Rajan became RBI Governor, is the one which points out that the failure even one large company or a large corporate group could danger the entire Indian banking system.

January 01, 2014 / 12:45 IST
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R JagannathanFirstpost.com

The Reserve Bank of India’s latest Financial Stability Report (FSR), released yesterday (30 December 2013), makes for chilling reading. It shows the extent to which the UPA government (and, to a lesser extent, the regimes before that), has allowed the banking system to be debauched, increasing systemic risks by encouraging crony capitalism.

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The real scary statement in the FSR, the first one put out after Raghuram Rajan became RBI Governor, is the one which points out that the failure even one large company or a large corporate group could danger the entire Indian banking system. The report said: “Failure of a major corporate or a major corporate group could trigger a contagion in the banking system due to exposures of a large number of banks to such corporates. The analysis shows that interconnectedness in the banking sector could cause losses due to contagion, over and above the direct losses on account of the failure of large corporate groups.”

The FSR puts a figure to the potential crisis scenario: if one major corporate group goes belly-up as a result of which none of the money lent to it can be recovered (ie, a 100 percent default), it could wipe out “over 60 percent of the banking system’s capital.” If only 40 percent of the money lent is salvageable, “over 50 percent of the banking system’s capital” can be erased in one shot.