[So:
I. The wilful default amount rose to a tad or two less than 4 times as of
September 2017 since 2013, mostly, under the watch of the "Chowkidar".
II. While total loan write-off was "Rs 228,253 crore in nine years — from
fiscal 2007-08 to 2015-16", it is "Rs 132,659 crore in 2016-17 and the
first six months of 2017-18."
Again, a phenomenal rise in rate.

<<State-owned banks have reported wilful defaults of Rs 93,357 crore
involving 7,564 borrowers as of September 2017, according to data available
with the Credit Information Bureau of India Ltd (CIBIL). This is a 340 per
cent surge in less than five years as total wilful defaults were just Rs
25,410 crore in 2013.
...
The total loan writeoff by banks in the last ten years is now over Rs
360,000 crore. Banks had written off Rs 228,253 crore in nine years — from
fiscal 2007-08 to 2015-16. ICRA said that writeoffs amounted to Rs 132,659
crore in 2016-17 and the first six months of 2017-18.>>]

http://indianexpress.com/article/business/banking-and-finance/rs-111738-crore-thats-what-9339-wilful-defaulters-owe-psu-banks-hit-most-5072032/

Rs 111,738 crore: That’s what 9,339 wilful defaulters owe, PSU banks hit
most
The RBI is yet to disclose the full list of defaulters. In 2017, the RBI
had told the Supreme Court that it was not in favour of publishing the list
of loan defaulters who owe more than Rs 500 crore to public sector banks.

Written by George Mathew | Mumbai | Updated: February 21, 2018 7:19 am

This is a 340 per cent surge in less than five years as total wilful
defaults were just Rs 25,410 crore in 2013. (Illustration: C R Sasikumar)

Indian banks have reported wilful defaults of over Rs 111,738 crore
involving 9,339 borrowers who have the capacity to pay up but refuse to
repay loans.

State-owned banks have reported wilful defaults of Rs 93,357 crore
involving 7,564 borrowers as of September 2017, according to data available
with the Credit Information Bureau of India Ltd (CIBIL). This is a 340 per
cent surge in less than five years as total wilful defaults were just Rs
25,410 crore in 2013.

The RBI is yet to disclose the full list of defaulters. In 2017, the RBI
had told the Supreme Court that it was not in favour of publishing the list
of loan defaulters who owe more than Rs 500 crore to public sector banks.

The RBI has defined wilful default as one where the unit or borrower has
defaulted in meeting payment or repayment obligations to the lender despite
the capacity to honour these commitments. It also includes those who have
siphoned off or not utilised funds for the specific purposes for which
finance was availed of.

Borrowers who have disposed of or removed movable fixed assets or immovable
property given for the purpose of securing a term loan are also wilful
defaulters. “Most of these cases are fund diversion by promoters using the
companies promoted by them,” banking sources said.



The Punjab National Bank, which is reeling under the impact of the Rs
11,400-crore alleged fraud by firms of diamantaire Nirav Modi, has wilful
defaults of Rs 12,574 crore involving 1,018 borrowers as of December 2017,
according to the latest data available from CIBIL.

PNB has listed Winsome Diamond (Rs 899 crore), Nafed (Rs 224 crore) and
Apple Industries (Rs 248 crore) as major defaulters.

State Bank of India (SBI) leads the list with wilful defaults of Rs 27,716
crore by 1,665 borrowers. Major wilful defaulters of SBI include Kingfisher
Airlines (Rs 1,286 crore), Calyx Chemicals (Rs 327 crore), J B Diamond (Rs
208 crore), Spanco Rs 347 crore), Zenith Birla (Rs 139 crore), Shreem Corp
(Rs 283 crore), Zoom Developers (Rs 378 crore), First Leasing (Rs 403
crore) and GET Engineering (Rs 406 crore), according to the CIBIL data.

IDBI Bank has 83 wilful defaulters who owe Rs 3,659 crore to the bank.
Major defaulters include Reid & Taylor (Rs 206 crore), S Kumar Nationwide
(Rs 834 crore) and Deccan Chronicle (Rs 269 crore).

Bank of India has 314 wilful defaulters who owe Rs 6,104 crore — the major
ones being Reid & Taylor (Rs 236 crore), Forever Precious Diamond (Rs 158
crore) and Mohan Gems (Rs 158 crore). Bank of Baroda’s top wilful
defaulters are Kingfisher Airlines (Rs 432 crore) and ABC Cotspin (Rs 362
crore).

The RBI has allowed credit information bureaus such as like CIBIL to
disclose the identity of wilful defaulters and those borrowers against whom
banks have filed suits for recovery of loans. Regular suit-filed NPA
(non-performing assets) accounts of banks involve loans of Rs 259,991 crore
involving 16,844 borrowers. SBI leads with Rs 74,649 crore of 3,684
borrowers. Other nationalised banks have filed cases against 9,507
borrowers for recovery of Rs 129,636 crore, according to CIBIL data as of
September 2017.

In 2017, the central bank told the Supreme Court that “the disclosure might
involve the statutory, contractual and fiduciary rights of the defaulters”
and argued that the grant of loans was covered by various statutes and
contractual obligations. “Some of the banks and companies were against
disclosing the names,” said an official source.

The Indian Express sought the full list of defaulters under the RTI Act but
the RBI declined it, citing clauses of economic interests of the state,
commercial confidence and information held in fiduciary capacity. The RBI
also cited provisions of Section 45-E of the RBI Act, 1934 which prohibits
disclosure of credit information.

Market regulator Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) last year
told companies to reveal cases of defaults to the stock exchanges. However,
Sebi reversed its directive months later though Sebi’s original proposal
was seen as a significant move as investors have complained about lack of
disclosures on loan defaults and erosion in their wealth as default
information reached them only at the final stage. The Sebi order on August
4, 2017 was contrary to the RBI’s position on loan defaults.

The total loan writeoff by banks in the last ten years is now over Rs
360,000 crore. Banks had written off Rs 228,253 crore in nine years — from
fiscal 2007-08 to 2015-16. ICRA said that writeoffs amounted to Rs 132,659
crore in 2016-17 and the first six months of 2017-18.

Rating firm Crisil has said the stock of gross NPAs in the banking system
is expected to rise to Rs 9.5 lakh crore by the end of this fiscal. NPAs
started rising fast since fiscal 2015, and trebled from Rs 3.2 lakh crore
seen then, after the RBI pushed banks to recognise NPAs on time rather than
kick the can down the road.
-- 
Peace Is Doable

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