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Bad Loans To Touch 10.5% By March As Banks Recognise Entire Stress: CRISIL

Estimated bad loan ratio to rise by 1 percentage point to 10.5 percent by March 2018.

A person  signs documents at a rural office of ICICI Bank in Chincholi, India (Photographer: Santosh Verma/Bloomberg News)
A person signs documents at a rural office of ICICI Bank in Chincholi, India (Photographer: Santosh Verma/Bloomberg News)

CRISIL Report

  • Banks have only recognised two-thirds of their stressed loans as non-performing assets.
  • Estimated bad loan ratio to rise by 1 percentage point to 10.5 percent by March 2018.
  • Faster resolution of stressed accounts through the IBC is critical to improving the asset quality of banks.
  • Recoveries have been poor and the bulk of the reduction in gross NPAs has been because of higher write-offs, in the recent years.

Banks have only recognised two-thirds of their stressed loans as non-performing assets, and the bad loan ratio is likely to rise by 1 percentage point to 10.5 percent by March 2018, according to a CRISIL report.

The 9.5-percent NPA figure for March 2017 includes only two-thirds of the overall stressed assets, it said.

The agency said it estimates the total amount of stressed loans, which includes NPAs and standard assets that are under pressure currently, and could deteriorate into NPAs, to be at Rs 11.5 lakh crore, or 14 percent of the system.

Assets under pressure comprise the not-yet-recognised bad loans, which are recognised as NPAs in one bank, but not in others, restructured standard accounts, and stressed assets structured under schemes, such as the strategic debt restructuring, the 5/25 and the S4A, it said.

"Gross NPAs will be 10.5 percent of advances by March 2018, up from 9.5 percent in March 2017,” it said, adding that infrastructure, power, engineering, and construction sectors contribute bulk of the stressed assets.

Faster resolution of stressed accounts through the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code and various structuring schemes, is critical to improving the asset quality of banks, the agency said.

The report, however, said over the medium-term, a big increase in stressed loans is unlikely on factors like higher commodity prices, lower interest rates, improved capital structure, and efficiency gains for corporates.

With the majority of stressed assets now recognised as NPAs, rest of the corporate loan portfolio of banks can be expected to perform better over the medium-term.
Gurpreet Chhatwal, President, CRISIL

He said there will be asset quality deterioration in loans to small businesses and farmers, which are impacted due to introduction of the goods and services tax and demonetisation, and debt waivers, respectively.

But Chhatwal said this is unlikely to put pressure on bank balance-sheets the way large exposures are doing. Fresh NPA creation will decelerate this fiscal, but the overall stock would continue to rise because slippages would still outpace recoveries.

“In the past couple of years, recoveries have been poor and the bulk of the reduction in gross NPAs has been because of higher write-offs,” CRISIL Senior Director Krishnan Sitaraman said.

He blamed sluggish economic growth, continued stress in some sectors, and slow place of resolution proceedings as the factors hindering the recovery efforts.