Live
- India Capitals appoint Ian Bell as captain for LLC season 3
- MP CM to visit Kolkata to attend Global Business Summit on Friday
- 49th All India Music & Dance Competitions Begin Today with Inaugural Ceremony
- Popular auctioneer Richard Madley to helm SA20 player auction on October 1, 2024
- President Murmu wins hearts in MP, seeks blessing of Mahakaal
- Israel puts forward new Gaza ceasefire deal: state media
- Over 100 Chakma houses & shops set on fire in B’desh, claims rights body
- MAHE Researchers Ranked Among the Top 2% Globally for 2024 in Prestigious Citation Database
- Woxsen University Secures 6th Spot in Asia-Pacific in the prestigious Bloomberg Best B-School 2024 Rankings
- Yamaha launched ‘The Call of The Blue’ Version 4.0 brand campaign for the young and dynamic customers
Just In
The finance ministry expects three to four more lenders to come out of weak bank list of the Reserve Bank in the next six to eight months on account of improvement in financial health amid capital infusion and falling bad loans
Bad loans of public sector banks declining by over Rs 23,860 crore in the first half of the current fiscal.
​New Delhi: The finance ministry expects three to four more lenders to come out of weak bank list of the Reserve Bank in the next six to eight months on account of improvement in financial health amid capital infusion and falling bad loans.
The recent capital infusion of Rs 48,239 crore in 12 public sector banks (PSBs) will help Corporation Bank and Allahabad Bank to come out of the Prompt Corrective Action (PCA) framework in the next few weeks, sources said.
Corporation Bank is the biggest beneficiary of this round of capital infusion with Rs 9,086 crore of funding, followed by Allahabad Bank with Rs 6,896 crore. This infusion will help these two lenders meet requisite capital thresholds of 7.375 CET-1 ratio, 8.875 per cent Tier I ratio, 10.875 per cent of capital-to-risk weighted assets ratio (CRAR) and the net NPA ratio threshold of below 6 per cent.
The RBI may in the next few weeks take a decision to remove these two lenders out of PCA supervision as they had done in the case of Bank of India (BoI), Bank of Maharashtra (BoM) and Oriental Bank of Commerce (OBC) last month after capital infusion in December, sources said.
With the removal of three banks on January 31, the list has already come down to 8 from 11.
Dena Bank, which is among eight entities under PCA, will cease to exist from April 1, 2019. So, the list will further shorten with the bank merging with Bank of Baroda beginning next fiscal, sources said.
IDBI Bank, now majority owned by LIC, is also improving its financial health and bringing down its net non-performing assets (NPAs) in a bid to come out of the PCA supervision.
If the bank continue to improve its health, it is anticipated that the RBI would lift the curb from IDBI Bank after September numbers.
Besides, Central Bank and UCO Bank are trying to improve their parameters on mission mode.
So, sources said, four more banks are likely see curb lifted by RBI on them in 6-8 months.
Last month, Financial Services Secretary Rajiv Kumar had said: "Government's sustained 4R's (Recognition, Recapitalisation, Resolution, and Reform) strategy for banking transformation delivers again. 3 better-performing PSBs (BoM, BoI & OBC) exit PCA. Banks need to be more responsible, adopt high underwriting & risk management standards to avoid recurrence".
Kumar, who has been credited with undertaking multiple reforms in the banking sector, provided record amount of capital infusion in the public sector banks (PSBs).
Since commencement of clean-up in 2015-16, the recapitalisation has crossed over Rs 3 lakh crore through mix of budgetary support and market raising helping banks to make adequate provisions for the bad loans. As a result, there has been reversal in the deteriorating bad loan situation and there has been record loan recovery during the current fiscal.
Various initiatives taken by the government have yielded results, with the bad loans of public sector banks declining by over Rs 23,860 crore in the first half of the current fiscal.
At the same time, PSBs have also made a record recovery of Rs 60,726 crore in the first half of the current financial year, which is more than double the amount recovered in the corresponding period last year.
© 2024 Hyderabad Media House Limited/The Hans India. All rights reserved. Powered by hocalwire.com