MUMBAI: In a move that will ease pressure on bank profits, Reserve Bank of India
has said that an earlier guideline requiring additional funds to be set
aside for bad loans will not apply to loans that turn bad after
September 2010.
This move will benefit all lenders as RBI
has now specified the end point for setting aside additional provisions
on bad loans. These guidelines on additional provisions were issued in
October 2009 after banks turned in large profits following a bounce back
from the global financial crisis.
At that time, the central
bank had said that the idea was to build up a capital buffer during good
times so that it could be used ifthe outlook for the economy changes.
suddenly
State Bank of India will gain directly from this
measure as RBI has said that even for those banks that have not achieved
the prescribed provision coverage ratio, the target date continues to
be September 30, 2010. SBI has been struggling to meet the 70% PCR and
was expected to meet the target in the current fiscal. "Some of the
banks that had been granted extension of time beyond the stipulated date
for achieving the PCR of 70% on their request should calculate the
required provisions for 70% PCR as on September 30, 2010 and compute the
shortfall there from," said RBI "What this means is that after making
provisions for NPAs as on September 2010, banks will only need to make
the normal provisions for bad loans and the additional burden on the
balance sheet will cease. But going forward, provision requirement could
get stiffer as regulators move towards advanced accounting standards,"
said the chairman of a public sector bank.
But banks that have
already made a provision will need to keep it aside as an additional
buffer. "The surplus of the provision under PCR vis-Ã -vis as required
according to prudential norms should be segregated into an account
styled as countercyclical provisioning buffer. This buffer will be
allowed to be used by banks for making specific provisions for NPAs
during periods of system-wide downturn with the prior approval of RBI,"
the central bank said.
In a recent report on the banking
sector, Care ratings had said that banks had improved its provision
coverage ratio to 58.31% by end-December 2010 from 52.85% a year back.
Private banks have already crossed RBI's prescriptions by achieving a
PCR of 74% as against 70% mandated by RBI but public sector banks
continued to lag with a PCR of 54.41%. "On an overall basis,
provisioning expenses rose by 54.48% on y-o-y basis in 9MFY11 on back of
higher NPA provisioning by banks to achieve the RBI mandated 70% NPA provision coverage," Care said.
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11 years ago
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