[<<Whether or not there were plans to close down select government banks is
not the question here. The question is, why have such rumours acquired so
much force that the central bank and the Centre feel it necessary to issue
an official denial? Behind the susceptibility to rumours lies a series of
policy measures by the two authorities in recent years. After nearly five
decades of relative stability and security following bank nationalisation,
these measures have injected a new uncertainty and growing sense of panic
into India’s financial system.>>

There has arisen a clear and present threat to the very credibility of the
Indian banking system.
Because of the policies of the incumbent regime.

The reckless act of demonetisation has clearly shown up what sort of chaos
it is ready to trigger in the economic sector for some anticipated
(uncertain) "political" gains.
The way the GST implementation is being handled has raised serious doubts
about the regime's competence. The collections continue to fall.
The fiscal deficit target for the current fiscal year, despite all tall
talks, has already been breached. (Ref.: <
https://scroll.in/latest/863204/government-exceeded-its-fiscal-deficit-target-for-2017-18-in-november>
and <
http://indianexpress.com/article/business/economy/govt-elbow-room-shrinks-at-112-of-estimate-fiscal-deficit-breaches-years-target-5004426/
>.)]

https://thewire.in/208132/india-banks-public-private-2017/

In Indian Banking, Separate But Related Crises Plague Private and Public
Sector Banks

BY HEMINDRA HAZARI
ON 29/12/2017

A strange picture of India’s financial system is being drawn, where
privatisation is being pushed even as critical analysis and reporting on
private sector entities is slowly being discouraged.


As we bid farewell to 2017, The Wire looks back at some of the markers of
disruption that affected different spheres, from politics and economics to
technology and films.

Sometimes a denial is revealing. On December 22, the Reserve Bank of India
(RBI) and the Union secretary for financial services felt it necessary to
clarify that there were no plans afoot to close down some public sector
banks. This development followed the RBI’s decision to initiate Prompt
Corrective Action (PCA) on Bank of India (BoI), a large and prominent
government bank, on December 20.

BoI joined the ranks of nine other government banks whose operations were
restricted in the last ten months.

Whether or not there were plans to close down select government banks is
not the question here. The question is, why have such rumours acquired so
much force that the central bank and the Centre feel it necessary to issue
an official denial? Behind the susceptibility to rumours lies a series of
policy measures by the two authorities in recent years. After nearly five
decades of relative stability and security following bank nationalisation,
these measures have injected a new uncertainty and growing sense of panic
into India’s financial system.

In 2008-09, India, and particularly its central bank, won praise worldwide
for having protected the country’s financial system against the types of
excesses which elsewhere had engendered a global financial crisis. However,
since then, in the name of economic reforms and to stimulate private sector
investment in the economy, the government, with implicit RBI approval, has
followed a reckless course.

Firstly, it pushed government banks to lend to private-public partnerships
(PPPs) in infrastructure with their eyes closed. In doing this, it ignored
the red flags of unrealistic PPP bids (often marked by moral hazard, gold
plating etc), to the extent that India became a global leader in PPPs.



When this bubble finally burst, the Indian government did not resolve
non-performing assets (NPAs) decisively with aggressive recovery and
recapitalisation. The government also left several public banks headless
for long periods, with the newly-formed Bank Board Bureau rendered more or
less irrelevant.

A recapitalisation of banks was belatedly announced in October, but since
then there has been little clarity on how it will be implemented, and how
much capital the government will allocate for specific banks.

In the last year, the government’s disastrous demonetisation, followed by a
poorly implemented Goods and Services Tax (GST) regime, created a sense
among people that the NDA government is capable of implementing illogical
decisions with devastating effects on the general public. What adds to this
no doubt are the regular, semi-official ‘leaks’ to the media on
‘consolidation’ of government banks – i.e, takeovers or mergers. This
generates insecurity among existing clients of the banks targeted for
consolidation.

This insecurity has also been greatly heightened by the bail-in clause of
the Financial Resolution and Deposit Insurance Bill, whereby creditors’
money, including that of depositors will be used to recapitalise distressed
banks.

What is particularly confusing is that even after the Centre announced a
bank recapitalisation plan, which should have addressed the capital
requirements of the banks, the RBI has now initiated a PCA on a large
government bank.

Nifty PSU Bank Index – 1 Year Performance

[Graph]

Source: Moneycontrol

All these measures by the government, with the full support of the central
bank-cum-banking regulator, have created a sense of disquiet among
depositors and investors, notwithstanding the surge in share prices post
the government’s announcement of a recap on October 24. The belated manner
in which the government has addressed the NPA issue, the huge provisions
banks had to provide upfront for cases referred to the National Company Law
Tribunal and the lack of specific details on the recapitalisation have
cumulatively had a significant negative impact on the financial position of
government banks. With 10 out of a total of 21 government banks under the
PCA regime, and with stressed (NPA plus restructured) loans for all of them
at 16.2% as on September 30, government banks’ market share is declining,
while that of private sector banks has been increasing.

Also read: Auditor Extraordinaire: The Curious Case of NPA Underreporting
in India
Whether this is a deliberate strategy by the government under the influence
of the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank to forcibly contract
government banks’ market share and allow private banks to increase theirs,
or is mere bungling by the government, remains uncertain.

Air India, the government-owned airline, is an example of how the
government deliberately undermined a state-owned entity. It withdrew from
profitable routes and handed these over to private airlines; under-invested
for a long period while private sector airlines were expanding; then
suddenly took on huge debt to finance a wild excess of aircraft
acquisition; forced an ill-planned merger with the erstwhile Indian Airline
and eventually used the results of this mismanagement to justify the
privatisation of India’s national carrier. Whether a similar fate awaits
government banks remains to be seen.

                                              NIFTY Private Banks Index – 1
Year Performance
[Graph]

Source: Moneycontrol

Are private sector banks really any more prudent, as the secular rise in
the Nifty Private Bank Index would seem to suggest? Despite not having the
handicap of being dictated to by the government, the new private sector
banks like ICICI Bank and Axis Bank have been imprudent, with stressed
loans at 8.8% and 7.7% respectively as on September 30.

Worse, most of them (Yes, Axis, ICICI, Indusind and even HDFC Bank) have
been caught by the regulator trying to deceive the public, by significantly
under-reporting their NPAs. Yes Bank and Axis Bank reported NPA divergence
for two consecutive years, revealing systemic issues at both the banks. The
sheer scale of the under-reporting of NPAs by the new private sector banks
should have resulted in stringent action by the board of directors on the
banks’ chief executive officers (CEOs) and chief financial officers (CFO),
who bear the final responsibility along with the audit committees and the
auditors for the integrity of the accounts. In contrast, in IDBI Bank,
which also reported NPA divergence for FY 2016, the government, as the
majority owner, acted swiftly, and prior to the declaration of the bank’s
4Q FY 2017 results removed the bank’s CEO and transferred him to another
smaller bank. But bizarrely, Yes, Axis, Indusind and ICICI Bank, not only
retained their same CEO and CFO who had certified FY 2016 accounts but also
rewarded them with increments, bonuses and additional stock options. To
date, the RBI has nominally fined some of the new private sector banks for
fudging their accounts and no stringent action against the senior
management or their auditors has been undertaken.

Misreporting of accounts is a serious offense, as the credibility of the
entire accounts is at stake. Yet this has not created a crisis of
confidence in the private sector banks, because of the near-unanimous media
plus analysts saying all is well. The refusal of analysts and the media to
highlight negative developments in banks that are the market favourites is
not surprising. Analysts’ remuneration is influenced by arranging meetings
with their companies under coverage for their institutional clients and
hence any critical analysis of companies will entail the concerned
corporate blocking access to that analyst.

Similarly, India’s business media is dependent on corporates for exclusive
interviews with CEOs and CFOs and hereto critical reporting will result in
a denial of corporate access. The business model of media is also dependent
on corporate advertising. As a result, when it comes to prominent and large
companies, the media and sell-side research, instead of being watchdogs,
have become lapdogs. Thus, critical analysis and reporting is deliberately
ignored.

The public’s confidence in government banks has undergone a sea change from
the past. In FY 1996 when Indian Bank reported a huge loss of Rs 1,727
crores rendering the bank insolvent, retail depositors did not panic as
they had faith in the government that their deposits were safe. However,
ICICI Bank, under the leadership of K.V. Kamath had not one but to two runs
on its deposits in 2003 and 2008 revealing the public’s perception, despite
the bank reporting profits and being the largest private sector bank by
assets.

A strange picture of India’s financial system is being drawn. Where there
should be no crisis because of sovereign ownership, a crisis is emerging on
account of government bungling, or a plan to eventually push through
privatisation and assist private sector banks increase their market share.
And where there is a problem of serious misreporting of accounts there is
no panic as there appears to be a cover-up with negligible publicity and
mild regulatory disapproval.

Hemindra Hazari is an independent market analyst.
-- 
Peace Is Doable

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