Number of unique wilful defaulters rose by 286 in pandemic, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The number of wilful defaulters has increased from 2,208 to 2,494 at the end of March 31, 2021, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman informed Parliament on Tuesday.

As per RBI data on global operations, during the last three financial years, public sector banks (PSBs) have effected recovery of Rs 3,12,987 crore in non-performing assets (NPAs) and written-off loans.

“RBI has further apprised that the total number of unique wilful defaulters reported by PSBs was 2,017 as on March 31, 2019, 2,208 as on March 31, 2020 and 2,494 as on March 31, 2021,” she said.

Bank NPAs

Sitharaman said that the RBI has apprised that as per data reported by banks to the Central Repository of Information on Large Credits (CRILC), the total funded amount outstanding of borrowers whose sector code is private and whose loans are classified as NPAs in the PSBs as on March 31, 2019, March 31, 2020, and March 31, 2021, is Rs 5,73,202 crore, Rs 4,92,632 crore and Rs 4,02,015 crore respectively.

Banks are required to take steps to initiate the legal process, wherever warranted, against the borrowers or guarantors for recovery dues, she said. They may also initiate criminal proceedings against wilful defaulters, wherever necessary, she added. In reply to another question, the Finance Minister said public sector banks have done a write-off of Rs 1,31,894 crore during 2020-21 as compared to Rs 1,75,876 crore in the previous year. As a result of the government’s strategy of recognition, resolution, recapitalisation and reforms have led to decline in gross NPAs as a percentage of total advances to 9.11 per cent as of March 31, 2021, from 11.97 per cent on March 31, 2015.

Top 100 wilful defaulters

The total size of the top 100 wilful defaults rose 5.34% in FY20 from Rs 80,344 crore as of March 2019.
Mehul Choksi-owned Gitanjali Gems topped the wilful defaulters’ list with Rs 5,693 crore dues, followed by Jhunjhunwala brothers’ REI Agro with Rs 4,403 crore and Jatin Mehta’s Winsome Diamonds & Jewellery with Rs 3,375 crore.

The top 10 wilful defaulters include another jewellery maker Forever Precious Jewellery, and Vijay Mallya’s Kingfisher Airlines Punjab National Bank had the highest exposure to Gitanjali Gems with Rs 4,644 crore of non-performing assets (NPA) as of March 2020. PNB also had Rs 1,447 crore exposure to Gili India and Rs 1,109 crore to Nakshatra Brands.

Write-offs

State Bank of India had Rs 1,875 crore dues from top 10 wilful defaulter ABG Shipyard with the bank writing o the entire amount. Uco Bank had Rs 1,970 crore exposure to REI Agro with half of it being written off.

Write-offs are accounting entries for shifting NPAs from the active balance sheet to off-balance sheet accounts. These are backed by 100% provision and therefore any recovery from these accounts adds to net profit.
RBI collects credit data from banks monthly, with data on defaults being collected on a weekly basis. The regulator has mandated banks to provide fully against NPAs older than four years and allowed to write these old NPAs.

The reduction in NPAs during FY20 was largely driven by write-os, RBI had said in its report on Trend & Progress of Banking in India. Banks’ total gross NPA reduced to 8.2% at the end of March 2020 from 9.1% a year earlier.



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Banks tag more borrowers as wilful defaulters during IBC suspension, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Banks slapped more borrowers with a wilful defaulter tag during April-December 2020 when the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code was under suspension.

They classified loans of over Rs 28000 as wilful defaults during the first nine months of last fiscal as against around Rs 23,000 a year ago, according to a report.

A borrower is labelled wilful defaulter if the loans is not repaid despite having the means to repay or it is diverted for use other than the purpose.

A wilful defaulter tag borrower then faces a ban on bank funding the total outstanding wilful default as of December 31 at Rs 2.4 lakh crore with State Bank of India accounting for Rs 62,000 crore, of which Rs 18,000 crore were added in the first nine months of the last fiscal, according to data from credit bureau TransUnion Cibil.

The largest share of wilful defaulters is Maharashtra at over Rs 80,000 crore, followed by Delhi at Rs 32,000 crore and West Bengal at Rs 23,000 crore.

Fearing investigations, audit and vigilance inquiries, bankers generally do not want to opt for resolution and go for full recovery from the defaulter.

Top borrowers

The country’s top 100 wilful defaulters owe Rs 84,632 crore to banks as of March 2020, with the top 10 including, Winsome Diamonds & Jewellery and accounting for 32% of it, data from the Reserve Bank of India shows.

Banks tag more borrowers as wilful defaulters during IBC suspension

While banks wrote off nearly three-fourth of it to clean their balance sheet and get tax benefits, the default borrowers continue to appear in RBI’s internal CRILC database till they clear the default.
The total size of the top 100 wilful defaults rose 5.34% in FY20 from Rs 80,344 crore as of March 2019, according to data shared by RBI in response to an application under the Right to Information (RTI) Act.

Mehul Choksi-owned Gitanjali Gems topped the wilful defaulters’ list with Rs 5,693 crore dues, followed by Jhunjhunwala brothers’ REI Agro with Rs 4,403 crore and Jatin Mehta’s Winsome Diamonds & Jewellery with Rs 3,375 crore.

The top 10 wilful defaulters include another jewellery maker Forever Precious Jewellery, and Vijay Mallya’s Kingsher Airlines.

The stack-up

Punjab National Bank had the highest exposure to Gitanjali Gems with Rs 4,644 crore of non-performing assets (NPA) as on March 2020.

PNB also had Rs 1,447 crore exposure to Gili India and Rs 1,109 crore to Nakshatra Brands.

State Bank of India had Rs 1,875 crore dues from top 10 wilful defaulter ABG Shipyard with the bank writing o the entire amount. Uco Bank had Rs 1,970 crore exposure to REI Agro with half of it being written off.

Write-offs are accounting entries for shifting NPAs from the active balance sheet to off-balance-sheet accounts. These are backed by 100% provision and therefore any recovery from these accounts adds to net profit.

RBI collects credit data from banks monthly, with data on defaults being collected on a weekly basis. The regulator has mandated banks to provide fully against NPAs older than four years and allowed to write these old NPAs.

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