The quantum of bad loans hidden in the balance sheets state-run banks 
appears to be much bigger than originally anticipated.

On Wednesday, public sector lender Punjab national Bank (PNB) reported a 
record Rs 5,367 crore loss for the March-quarter on account of a sharp rise 
in bad loans and subsequent provisions (Rs 10,485 crore). In total, nine 
PSBs that have announced their March earnings have posted cumulative losses 
of over Rs 14,000 crore. PNB sold Rs 1,832 crore bad loan to ARCs in the 
last six months.

It shows the extent of the bad loan problem that has gripped PSBs and a 
strong reminder to finance minister Arun Jaitley about the huge capital 
requirement of PSBs, much more than what he originally promised to infuse 
(Rs 70,000 crore by 2019).

What is more worrying is this. The pain will likely continue until the 
economic recovery takes firm hold and since banks have to adhere to the 
March 2017 deadline set by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) to clean up 
their books.
Take a look at PNB’s numbers: The bank has Rs 11,000 crore of loans under 
the special mention accounts-2 (SMA-2) category, which means these loans 
are overdue for 60 days and is on the watch list to become non-performing 
assets (NPAs). This is something Firstpost had highlighted earlier. PNB 
also have a restructured loan book of Rs20,000 crore.

“This is by far the highest ever increasing in NPA by any bank which has 
reported numbers so far. The point of worry is that the bank believes the 
cleaning up exercise of balance sheet is not over. We believe pain to 
continue in FY17 also,” Angel Broking said in a note on Wednesday.

Higher chunk of SMA-2 loans would mean that the chunk of loans that are on 
the verge of turning bad has risen substantially this year. One reason why 
SMA-2 has swelled to this extent is there are several habitual late payers 
in the banking sector, including state-run discoms.

Technically, these loans are standard but not far from falling in to the 
NPA category. Under the RBI norms, a loan is tagged as NPA only when 
interest payments are overdue on the 91st day.

Other PSBs which have reported numbers have been hit by high NPAs. Bank of 
Baroda posted loss of Rs 3,230 crore in the March-quarter as compared with 
Rs 598 crore in the year-ago period. UCO Bank’s quarterly loss stood at Rs 
1,715 crore as against Rs 209 crore, Allahabad Bank’s loss rose to Rs 581 
crore from Rs 203 crore and that of Dena Bank stood at Rs 326 crore as 
against Rs 56 crore in the corresponding period last year.

Until December end, of the total Rs 4 lakh crore GNPAs in the banking 
sector, Rs 3.6 lakh crore was on the books of state-run banks. About 10-11 
percent of total bank loans given are estimated to be stressed assets. More 
trouble can come if restructured accounts, which are currently standard, 
turn NPAs in the absence of strong economic recovery.

The gross non-performing assets (GNPAs) of banks could rise to 6.9 percent 
by March 2017 in a “severe stress scenario” due to sluggishness in the 
economy, according to a finance ministry report that cited RBI data. An 
amount of Rs 1,30,156 crore was classified as NPAs in public sector banks 
for borrowers exceeding Rs 500 crore as on December 2015, according to the 
finance ministry data.

In the event of the economic recovery getting delayed further, the pain 
will persist on the books of banks. This is something the PNB management 
has highlighted while announcing the March-quarter earnings.

One thing is sure. Finance minister Arun Jaitley will have to rethink its 
strategy to recapitalise banks. The government’s current capital infusion 
plan will prove to be inadequate given the worsening bad loan situation.

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