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Top Banker Bonuses Are Said to Be Delayed Amid India Frauds

The RBI is delaying year-end bonuses to the heads of top private banks amid asset quality concerns.

Top Banker Bonuses Are Said to Be Delayed Amid India Frauds
Chanda Kochhar, managing director and chief executive officer of ICICI Bank Ltd., left, talks to Shikha Sharma, managing director and chief executive officer of Axis Bank Ltd., at the FIBAC banking conference in Mumbai. (Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- India’s banking regulator is delaying year-end bonuses to the heads of top private banks as it questions the size of the payouts citing the lenders’ performance issues, said people familiar with the matter.

Chief executive officers at HDFC Bank Ltd., ICICI Bank Ltd. and Axis Bank Ltd. -- the nation’s largest private lenders by assets -- are among bankers yet to receive bonuses for the financial year ended March 31, 2017, as the Reserve Bank of India hasn’t signed off on the proposed payments, the people said, asking not to be identified as the information is private. They declined to give further details. Business Standard newspaper had previously reported the delays.

ICICI’s board had approved a bonus of 22 million rupees ($340,000) for CEO Chanda Kochhar while Axis Bank’s Shikha Sharma was set to receive 13.5 million rupees and HDFC Bank’s Aditya Puri about 29 million rupees, exchange filings show. A spokesman for Axis Bank declined to comment. Spokesmen for HDFC Bank and ICICI didn’t reply to emails and phone calls. An email to the RBI wasn’t immediately answered.

Long considered healthier than their government-run peers, India’s private banks have had a tough time over the past year, plagued by revelations of hidden bad loans and alleged lapses in corporate governance. Rising defaults have enraged the public, piling pressure on Prime Minister Narendra Modi to act against the perpetrators and reinforce his anti-graft image before elections next year.

Going by historical evidence, the RBI should have approved the bonuses well before March 31, 2018, said Asutosh Kumar Mishra, a Mumbai-based banking analyst at Reliance Securities Ltd. “We have never noticed such delay in approving the payouts, but then we haven’t seen a year in which so many skeletons were brought out of the closet -- from under-reporting
of bad loans to serious governance issues.”

Top Banker Bonuses Are Said to Be Delayed Amid India Frauds

In the year ended March 2017 -- for which the bonuses are under contention -- an RBI audit showed Axis hadn’t disclosed bad loans worth about 56 billion rupees. HDFC Bank also reported a divergence and ICICI said it isn’t required to make disclosures on the topic even as provisions for bad loans climbed.

Axis Bank shares rose about 10 percent and ICICI 17 percent in Mumbai trading during the year ended March 2017, while the 10-member Bankex Index added 33 percent. HDFC Bank shares jumped had 35 percent during the period.

“Private banks will likely report sharp rise in slippages, led by ICICI Bank and Axis Bank,” said analysts led by M.B. Mahesh at Kotak Institutional Equities, referring to higher delinquent loans. They predict January-March 2018 results would confirm a quarter of “pain” for Indian lenders.

--With assistance from Karthikeyan Sundaram

To contact the reporter on this story: Anto Antony in Mumbai at aantony1@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Marcus Wright at mwright115@bloomberg.net, Jeanette Rodrigues, Karthikeyan Sundaram

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