Bloomberg
A deadline set by India’s central bank to restructure an estimated $52 billion of stressed loans may push dozens more companies into bankruptcy.
The Reserve Bank of India in February introduced new rules and a 180-day timeline for banks to recast loans once payments are missed, scrapping previous methods that could take an indefinite amount of time.
Companies that were delinquent when the norms came into force were expected to run out of time on Monday, after which lenders must start moving court to admit the cases under India’s Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code.
This marks the latest attempt by the RBI to clean up banks that are suffering from the world’s worst bad-loan ratios after Italy, and have more than $210 billion of stressed debt on their balance sheets. The central bank has already asked lenders to take about 40 large defaulters to bankruptcy court as overdue borrowings hamper fresh investment.
In May, the nation’s first big success under the new insolvency law handed about $5 billion to lenders after Tata Steel Ltd. bought insolvent Bhushan Steel Ltd.
“There’s no doubt this circular will clean up the banking system,†said Prabal Banerjee, group finance director for conglomerate Bajaj Group. There could be “serious consequences†for the economy if the bankruptcy process fails to throw up buyers and many companies are forced into liquidation, he said.
Debt Burden
India has one of the worst bad-loan ratios among the world’s 10 largest economies, with the central bank predicting an increase to 12.2 percent by March 2019 from 11.6 percent in the previous year. That’s just behind Italy, where 14.4 percent of gross loans are non-performing, according to data compiled by the International Monetary Fund.
A solution needs to be found either under the bankruptcy law or outside it, said R.K. Bansal, chief executive officer at Edelweiss Asset Reconstruction Co. “If there is no interest in such assets, they will go into liquidation.â€
About 70 large companies with debt of approximately 3.6 trillion rupees risked being taken to bankruptcy court following the RBI’s directive, Ashish Gupta and Kush Shah, Mumbai-based analysts at Credit Suisse Group AG wrote.
Defaulting companies have been working with lenders to restructure their loans ahead of the deadline, according to bankers familiar with the discussions.