Explained: What RBI expert panel has recommended for one-time loan recast
The Indian Express
Dated 11.09.2020
By George Mathew and Sunny verma
The Kamath
committee noted that corporate sector debt worth Rs 15.52 lakh crore has come
under stress after Covid-19 hit India, while another Rs 22.20 lakh crore was
already under stress before the pandemic.
A five-member expert committee headed by K V Kamath, former Chairman of ICICI Bank, recently came out with recommendations on the financial parameters required for a one-time loan restructuring window for corporate borrowers under stress due to the pandemic. It sets the stage for the banking sector’s biggest ever loan restructuring programme.
The Reserve Bank of India set it up last month. While the RBI provided the broad contours of the one-time loan restructuring plan, the committee was tasked to recommend the sector-specific benchmark ranges for financial parameters to be factored into each resolution plan for borrowers with an aggregate exposure of Rs 1,500 crore or above at the time of invocation. The process and conditions are being announced to ensure there is no evergreening of bad loans, and only genuine cases directly hit by Covid-19 stress are provided the facility of one-time restructuring. The programme is being implemented as a six-month moratorium on repayments ended on August 31 and the economy faced contraction amid a continuing lockdown in several states.
The Kamath committee noted that corporate sector debt worth Rs 15.52 lakh crore has come under stress after Covid-19 hit India, while another Rs 22.20 lakh crore was already under stress before the pandemic. This effectively means Rs 37.72 crore (72% of the banking sector debt to industry) remains under stress. This is almost 37% of the total non-food bank credit. The Kamath panel has said companies in sectors such as retail trade, wholesale trade, roads and textiles are facing stress. Sectors that have been under stress pre-Covid include NBFCs, power, steel, real estate and construction.
The RBI has broadly accepted the
committee’s recommendation to take into account five financial ratios and
sector-specific thresholds for each ratio in respect of 26 sectors while
finalising the resolution plans. These ratios are: total outside liabilities to
adjusted tangible net worth; total debt to earnings before interest, taxes,
depreciation, and amortisation (EBIDTA); debt service coverage ratio (DSCR);
current ratio; and average debt service coverage ratio (ADSCR).
The RBI has now finalised sector-specific ceilings for each of these ratios that should be considered by lending institutions. The parameters have been specified depending on severity of the impact of the pandemic. The hardest-hit sector real estate, for instance, has been provided the highest permissible debt-to-EBIDTA ratio for a resolution plan.
Banks will present their
board-approved resolution policies taking into account the RBI final
guidelines. Broad guidelines will also be put in place for restructuring of
retail loans. The RBI has allowed banks to recast loans which were classified
as standard as on March 1, 2020. For implementing resolution plans, signing of
an inter-creditor agreement (ICA) is mandatory in all cases involving multiple
lending institutions.
The resolution framework will be
invoked before December 31, 2020 and will be implemented before 180 days from
the date of invocation. The process has to be approved by lenders with 75% in
value and 60% in numbers. Lenders signing ICA will have to make a 10% provision
and non-signing lenders at 20%. Restructuring can be done via the extension of
residual tenor by a maximum of two years with or without moratorium and may
include conversion of loan into equity. Any default by the borrower with any of
the lenders that signed an ICA during the monitoring period would trigger a
review period of 30 days. If the borrower remains in default at the end of the
period, all lenders would downgrade the account as a non-performing asset
(NPA).
Pharma, telecom, IT, FMCG, brokerage
services, agri and food processing, sugar and fertiliser are among the sectors
least impacted by the pandemic. Tourism, hotels, restaurants, construction,
real estate, aviation, shipping, media and entertainment are among the sectors
most impacted. Of the Rs 15.5 lakh crore loans impacted by the pandemic, the
biggest ones are retail trade and wholesale trade as banks loan worth Rs 5.42
lakh crore have been impacted. Loans worth Rs 1.94 lakh crore to the roads
sector and Rs 1.89 lakh crore to the textile sector have also been impacted.
Other major industries impacted, and to which banks have sizeable exposure, include engineering (Rs 1.18 lakh crore), petroleum & coal production (Rs 73,000 crore), ports (Rs 64,000 crore), cements (Rs 57,000 crore), chemicals (Rs 54,000 crore) and hotels & restaurants (Rs 46,000 crore) among others.
Reference
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