New chief of India’s biggest bank faces rising bad debts

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Bloomberg

Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government tapped Rajnish Kumar to helm State Bank of India (SBI), handing him the task of curtailing a surge in bad debts at the nation’s biggest lender.
Kumar, who has headed the state-run bank’s domestic lending business since November 2015, was elected chairman on Saturday as Arundhati Bhattacharya’s four-year term ends, the government said in a statement. The 59-year-old Kumar will have the role for three years.
“Resolving stressed assets will be a priority,” Kumar told reporters in Mumbai. The bank is considering segregating soured debt from the rest of its loan book, he said, adding that details of the plan will be ironed out in a week.
As the most senior executive at the 211-year-old behemoth, Kumar will need to tackle a soured-loan ratio that swelled to the highest since at least 2005 in the quarter ended June and contributed to a slumping share price. Compounding his challenge, a slowing economy may erode debtors’ capacity to repay loans.
Kumar said the bank will focus on expanding loans to consumers as well as small and medium-sized enterprises. India’s economy is expected to expand 6.8 percent in the 12 months ending March, the slowest pace in four years, according to the median estimate of economists surveyed by Bloomberg. Kumar, who has a master’s degree in physics, joined State Bank in 1980. He is an avid traveler and a badminton player, according to the bank’s website.
In her four years at the helm, Bhattacharya oversaw a merger with smaller lenders, raised $2.3 billion of additional capital this year and listed a life insurance unit.
State Bank, which accounts for more than a fifth of India’s banking assets, broke into the ranks of the world’s top 50 lenders in April after its merger with five units and Bharatiya Mahila Bank Ltd.

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