[Those who indulge and are complicit in this robbery are also those who'll
scream loudest against any welfare measure by the state for the benefit of
the poor and will dub it as useless waste of public money.]

http://www.millenniumpost.in/NewsContent.aspx?NID=45497

The great bank robbery

*2 December 2013, New Delhi, Nantoo Banerjee*

*Corporate defaulters run away with billions*


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Print]  PRINT <http://www.millenniumpost.in/NewsContent.aspx?NID=45497#>Bank
robbery always makes big news. But, not when it is craftily conducted by
clever corporates. Corporate robbery of banks even carries a fashionable
nametag called ‘non-performing asset’. It refers to loans that have gone
sour and are not recoverable. Banks simply write them off. Unlike other
categories of bank thieves who, if caught, face prosecution under a host of
sections and sub-sections of the Indian Penal Code, big-time corporate bank
robbers mostly go scot-free although several of them are even known to be
habitual loan defaulters.

Banks, mostly in the public sector, have restructured or written off loans
worth over Rs 3 lakh crore to favour large loan defaulters in less than
last two years of the UPA regime. The scale and depth of the recent loan
write-offs and debt restructuring by banks have embarrassed even the union
finance minister, Reserve Bank and Parliamentary standing committee on
finance. Thanks to judicial protection received by those large corporate
loan defaulters, stakeholders don’t even get to know the names of the
concerned corporate promoters and their guarantors.

The rise of PSU bank NPAs, led by the State Bank of India, has been
phenomenal since last financial year assuming almost a scandalous
proportion seemingly vying with such mega scams as 2G and ‘Coalgate’ in
terms of amounts involved and the number of high-profile business houses
blowing up bank funds. According to Crisil, a top rating agency, banks’
gross NPAs this fiscal may grow by
Rs 1 trillion to Rs 4 trillion in March 2014. The amount is really big if
compared with RBI’s estimate of gross bank NPAs since 2001 at Rs 6
trillion. Data collected by RBI over last one year blew the lid off what
goes as banks’ loan classification.

The gross bank NPAs was 3.3 per cent in March, this year. It rose to 3.7
per cent by the end of June. Crisil predicted it could grow to 4.4 per cent
by March 2014 turning almost Rs 1 trillion worth bank credit as NPAs within
such a short span.  Gross NPAs of PSU banks have risen from Rs 71,080 crore
as of March 2011, to Rs 1.55 lakh crore by the end of December 2012. Bulk
of the NPAs was on account of only some 30 top loan defaulters, stated by
Union Finance Minister P Chidambaram himself. Admittedly, a key reason
behind the sudden spurt in bank NPAs is the economic slowdown. But, it
would be naïve to believe that banks and large corporate borrowers did not
notice the early warning.

Yet, what was the government doing about it? Who are those 30 top loan
defaulters?  What are their business profiles? How could they access to
such large bank funds despite the risk factors linked with their businesses
in view of the current economic slow down and their past loan repayment
records? And, who are their guarantors? These are some of the questions
long bugging stakeholders, including depositors and ordinary shareholders.
They would like to have some convincing answers from those big NPA-hit
banks or the government. Government banks are bleeding. Taxpayers money is
being doled out to recapitalize these public sector banks. The depositors
and general public are in the dark. Even the Parliamentary standing
committee on finance had expressed concern over the phenomenal rise in PSU
banks’ NPAs in less than 18 months.

Notably, the impression one gets from recent statements-to-strictures by
Finance Minister P Chidambaram, financial services sector secretary Rajiv
Takru and RBI deputy governor K C Chakrabarty on the alarming rise of PSU
banks’ NPAs caused mainly by some three dozen large loan defaulters that
they are helpless about the way the public funds are openly stolen or taken
away by some smart corporate cookies. Takru wants banks to ‘act tough with
willful defaulters.’ Why are those banks not paying heed to the top finance
ministry bureaucrat? Could it be because of some high-level political
interference? Who are they? It is a common knowledge that several of the
top loan defaulters are builders and real estate developers, all boasting
top political connections in Delhi.

RBI deputy governor Chakrabarty’s frustration over the massive increase in
bank NPAs is even more telling. At a recent bankers’ meet, he spoke about
how banks sacrificed over Rs 1,00,000 crore by writing off ‘bad loans’ to
corporates which, he said, was much higher than Finance Minister
Chidambaram’s farm loan waiver in 2008 before lok Sabha polls that invited
strong criticism by big industries and their apex bodies. What is
preventing Chakrabarty, himself a former chairman of Punjab National Bank,
from wielding his stick against the truant PSU bank management as a deputy
governor of the country’s central bank? Why aren’t the government and RBI
naming the defaulters and attaching all their assets along with their
credit guarantors’? Bad loans are being recast like never before to save
large corporate defaulters and bank themselves from public criticism in the
name of corporate debt restructuring (CDR), mostly with retrospective
effect, ignoring its impracticability and risk factors in many cases. CDR
is often misused to temporarily window-dress balance sheets by both banks
and loan defaulters. According to a Ficci report banks have cumulatively
recast loans to the tune of Rs 2.5 trillion under the CDR exercise, mostly
during the last few months. Last year, banks had restructured loans worth
Rs 75,000 crore, almost double the 2011-2012 figure. Bankers privately fear
that a good chunk could turn unproductive.

CDR provides relief to companies which are unable to repay existing loans
by extending the payback period, reducing or partly waiving the interest
rate, giving a repayment holiday and the option to convert a part of loan
into equity. During last April-June alone, PSU banks had restructured loans
of some one dozen companies for a total amount of Rs 20,000 crore. How many
of the PSU banks do proper diligence before sanctioning credit and how
fewer of them approve CDR on merit?

In the RBI deputy governor’s own admission, a majority of the write-offs
involve big accounts, underscoring the need to hold the senior management,
which clears the big loan proposals, accountable for its decisions. ‘Wrong
appraisal is leading to diversions, leading to over- leverage, leading to
fraud, leading to NPAs…they are all inter-related,’ he said.

Large bank NPAs in the last two years, the huge loan write-offs and sudden
spate of CDRs before the Lok Sabha election are far worse than occasional
bank robbery.

They rob depositors and shareholders of better return and the government of
tax revenue to shield large corporates who have been traditionally running
away with bank funds turning companies sick and throwing workers out of
job, all with consent and connivance of bank management.

*IPA*


-- 
Peace Is Doable

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