Parliamentary panel suggests capping ‘haircuts’ after furore over Videocon, Siva settlements, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


A parliamentary panel has suggested having a benchmark for the “quantum of haircut” in an insolvency process amid instances of financial creditors taking steep haircuts on their exposure to stressed companies.

Besides, the committee has pitched for measures to prevent protracted litigations with respect to an insolvency resolution process.

The Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC), which came into effect in 2016, provides for a market-linked and time-bound resolution of stressed assets.

Emphasising that the fundamental aim of the Code is to secure creditor rights which would lower borrowing costs as the risks decline, the panel said there is a need for greater clarity in purpose with regard to strengthening creditor rights through the mechanism devised in the Code.

On haircuts

The committee flagged that “the low recovery rates with haircuts as much as 95 per cent and the delay in resolution process with more than 71 per cent cases pending for more than 180 days clearly point towards a deviation from the original objectives of the Code intended by Parliament”.

The committee particularly mentioned about the “disproportionately large and unsustainable ‘haircuts’ taken by the financial creditors over the years”.

In some insolvency resolution processes, the haircuts taken by creditors were more than 90 per cent.

“As the insolvency process has fairly matured now, there may be an imperative to have a benchmark for the quantum of ‘haircut’ comparable to global standards,” it noted.

A haircut refers to losses incurred by creditors on resolution of a stressed asset.

The suggestions have been made by the Standing Committee on Finance in its report on the ‘Implementation of Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code – Pitfalls and Solutions’. The report was tabled in Parliament on Tuesday.

On delays

It is a matter of grave concern for the committee that the insolvency process has been stymied by long delays far beyond the statutory limits. It is disconcerting that even admission of cases in NCLT has been taking an unduly long time, which thus defeats the very purpose of the Code, the panel noted.

After about half a dozen amendments in five years, the IBC seems to have deviated from its original objectives, thanks to inordinate delay in resolution and the low recovery rate with haircuts running up to 95% in few cases, the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Finance said in a report.

As many as 13,170 insolvency cases involving claims of Rs 9 lakh crore are awaiting resolution before the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT), the report tabled in the Lok Sabha on Tuesday said.

The committee also pointed out that there have been instances of frivolous appeals, which further drags the resolution/ recovery process leading to severe erosion of asset value.

Abuse of provisions

The panel said it would therefore recommend that misuse/ abuse of well-intended provisions and processes should be prevented by ensuring an element of finality within the statutory stipulated period without protracted litigation.

There have been six amendments to the Code so far.

According to the committee, any legislative enactment and implementation need to constantly evolve to meet the challenges in the ever-changing ecosystem.

However, the panel said it is of the opinion that “the actual operationalisation of amendments made so far may have altered and even digressed from the basic design of the statute and given a different orientation to the Code not originally envisioned”.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Transfer assets at book value, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


A parliamentary panel has recommended the transfer of stressed loans of banks to the proposed bad bank at book value amid the calls for an asset quality review.

The panel feels that the more time such assets are left on the lenders’ balance sheet the more is the chances of their value eroding.

“RBI can play an instrumental role in the success of Bad Bank if they issue an order or notification which makes the entire process crystal clear, defining each step of the procedure, thus removing any ambiguity or discretion from the bank’s side,” said the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Finance.

The move will help in saving time and avoiding delays in resolving soured loans through consolidated decision making, the panel said

It also asked the Reserve Bank of India to clearly define every step of the procedure to remove any ambiguity or discretion from the banks’ side. “The RBI needs to demonstrate why their proposed rules for loss transfer to the ARC-AMC is in fact the best approach,” the panel said, adding that their rules should reflect both administrative clarity as well as economic logic,..

The RBI should intervene as soon as possible to unlock value from non-performing assets, it said.

Economic survey

Earlier, the Economic Survey 2021 had called for another round of asset quality review when the Covid related forbearance is lifted, the latest edition of the economic survey argued. The survey stated that it was important for the Reserve Bank of India to do a complete clean-up exercise of bank balance sheets after granting every regulatory forbearance.

Information asymmetry

“A clean-up of bank balance sheets is necessary when the forbearance is discontinued,” the economic survey suggested. “Note that while the 2016 AQR exacerbated the problems in the banking sector, the lesson from the same is not that an AQR should not be conducted. Given the problem of asymmetric information between the regulator and the banks, which gets accentuated during the forbearance regime, an AQR exercise must be conducted immediately after the forbearance is withdrawn.”

The survey had also suggested that the banking regulator should strengthen its early warning signal systems to figure out cracks in bank balance sheets early on. “The asset quality review must account for all the creative ways in which banks can evergreen their loans,” the economic survey noted.

“In this context, it must be emphasized that advance warning signals that do not serve their purpose of ageing concerns may create a false sense of security. The banking regulator needs to be more equipped in the early detection of fault lines and must expand the toolkit of ex-ante remedial measures.”

Why fresh AQR?

After the debt binge of 2008-10, the banks had piled up huge NPAs but were not revealing them while resorting to ever-greening of loans. This led to the RBI ordering an AQR in 2015, which brought out the massive pile of bad loans. This time too due to moratorium and subsequent SC order to not tag bad loans as NPAs has led to a situation that banks may be hiding similar stress in the book.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY