Banks gear up for due diligence ahead of loan recast programme

Industry:    2020-09-07

Lenders preparing to implement a loan restructuring programme for companies hit by the Covid-19 pandemic are conducting a detailed study of cash flows and the viability of businesses, bankers aware of the thinking said.

The KV Kamath committee, which was tasked by the Reserve Bank of India to provide sector-specific recommendations on a one-time loan recast package it had announced for borrowers, has identified six problem sectors, including aviation, realty, automobiles, infrastructure and power.

The committee is likely to suggest separate restructuring rules for the top six stressed sectors and has suggested solutions for 29 of the 307 sectors it assessed. The panel has also suggested that the two-year cut-off for restructuring should begin after implementation of the resolution plan, ET reported on September 4.

“The committee has assessed those sectors which have been worst affected by the pandemic and suggested remedies; it is not delving deeply into those sectors which were already in trouble prior to March,” said a banker who is aware of the deliberations of the committee.

“The committee has taken at least 20 representations from lenders and many of those suggestions could be a part of the final report,” the banker said on condition of anonymity.

 

Stressed sectors could either benefit from easier repayment terms or a much deeper restructuring, based on the analysis of their sustainable and unsustainable debt. The recommendations will aim to ensure that businesses overcome the current difficulties and grow as the economy goes back to normal, bankers said.

Finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman has, separately, asked banks to frame a scheme by September 15, according to which banks can restructure all retail loans with board approval.
Lenders say that the ongoing loan moratorium case in the Supreme Court could have some impact on their plans to restructure stressed assets. The apex court last week ordered that no account should be declared as non-performing after August 31 till further orders. The next hearing in the case is scheduled for September 10. “The latest interim order could pose a challenge because it’s still not known what the apex court will decide; this could delay restructuring for those companies who wish to rely on the final judgment in this case,” said another executive with a public-sector bank.

According to Macquarie Capital, if interest-on-interest during the moratorium period is waived off, the impact on the banking system could be about ₹15,000-20,000 crore, leading to a single-digit basis point impact on margins, which is manageable.

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