HomeNewsOpinionOpinion | Hope trumps reality in new NPA resolution framework

Opinion | Hope trumps reality in new NPA resolution framework

A committee of bankers from state-owned lenders will hope that there is a large market of private investors waiting to buy stressed assets.

July 25, 2018 / 16:49 IST
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Ravi Krishnan
Moneycontrol News

Hope is the operative word in the new bad loan resolution plan drawn up by a committee of bankers from state-owned lenders. Hope that there is a large market of private investors waiting to buy stressed assets, hope that bankers will quickly arrive at a consensus on pricing distressed assets, and hope that banks will clean up their act in dealing with smaller stressed loans in a time-bound manner.

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The panel has recommended classifying bad loans in three buckets: The first category is loans below Rs 50 crore. Here, the onus of resolution lies on individual banks. The solutions proposed here are prescriptive in nature. They consist of good-to-do things like setting up a separate vertical for SME loan resolution, a monitoring and review mechanism, and a standard operating procedure. But there are no operational guidelines. There is nothing radical here to resolve the Rs 3.1 lakh crore stressed assets in this bucket. If banks haven’t already done some of these things, they should be taken to task.

In case of larger loans (between Rs 50 crore and Rs 500 crore) where the exposure is held by multiple lenders, banks will have to get together to resolve the loans. What’s new here? Banks will have to enter into a so-called inter-creditor agreement to arrive quickly at joint decisions. Debt resolution plans will have to be approved by 66 percent of creditors by value of exposure. That sounds similar to the erstwhile joint lenders forum (JLF) mechanism, which didn’t exactly have a great track record.