Reserve Bank of India – Speeches

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A very good evening to all the distinguished dignitaries and participants at this annual BFSI Summit organised by the Business Standard. The Summit has over the past few days seen excellent discussions on several topical issues related to the Banking and Financial Sector and generated some very useful insights.

2. The topic for today’s discussion is ‘Bank Privatisation: Undoing 1969’, which is one of the most widely debated issues for long. The detailed deliberations on the topic are scheduled separately by a panel comprising of eminent personalities. The Reserve Bank’s regulatory and supervisory approach has largely been driven by ownership neutral approach with focus on ensuring financial stability and resilience of its financial entities. Banking practices evolved rapidly post liberalisation. The ever changing financial landscape of the country and advent of Information Technology posed newer challenges for the banks as well as its regulator and supervisor. Banks being the engine of growth for the Indian economy, quickly adopted to this new reality of competitive environment and resorted to various new practices to maintain their bottom line. The adoption of new business models without adequate risk management and weakness in internal controls at times resulted in weak underwriting standards. The adverse developments in a few regulated entities in the past exposed some fault lines, primarily in terms of inadequate governance, inappropriate business model and weak internal assurance functions. RBI, therefore, undertook a review of its approach towards supervision as well as the existing practices in Supervised Entities (SEs) to identify the root causes for these gaps. Accordingly, the supervisory approach was reworked out in recent period to bring more focus on addressing these weaknesses.

3. In my address today, I would therefore like to talk about the changes in our expectations from financial entities along with the changes we brought about in our supervisory approach . Keeping in mind the overall objective of supervision i.e “Ensuring the safety, soundness and resilience of financial entities, thereby protecting the depositor’s interest and maintaining financial stability”.

Governance

4. I would like to begin with the issue of governance. Corporate Governance is the corner stone for any enterprise, but for banks, it assumes a distinctly different undertone and importance. It is well-known that banks are special in terms of services they render and the segments they touch while rendering these functions. By providing financial intermediation and maturity transformation, payment and settlement services, reducing information asymmetries, and engaging in deposit mobilisation, banks act as catalysts in growth of the economy. Most importantly, they enjoy the privilege of mobilizing uncollateralized public deposits and operating with high levels of leverage. The negative externalities of banks and NBFCs are also much higher than those for any non-financial entity due to their inter-connectedness. That’s why, globally, banks are regulated and supervised very closely.

5. It is also well-acknowledged that shareholders are driven by maximisation of the returns on their capital. But in banks, this objective is realised largely through the resources raised from depositors. Hence, as repositories of public resources, banks need to design appropriate governance standards and implement internal controls to be worthy of the public trust. Being highly leveraged entities and with their inter-connectedness, there must be separation between ownership and management so that they operate on professional lines.

6. Governance reforms have been an area of continued focus for the Reserve Bank. The various regulatory measures including the mandatory listing of private sector banks, composition of the Board and its Committees, guidance on “fit and proper” criteria and on remuneration, separation of chairperson from managing director / chief executive officer have all been driven to improve the corporate governance and internal controls in banks.

Supervisory Initiatives

7. I shall now highlight the various prudential supervisory initiatives taken by Reserve Bank in recent years. The broad objectives of these can be detailed as follows:

(i) Bringing about a unified and more holistic approach to supervision and improving skill and capacity of supervisory staff.

(ii) Improving the governance practices and internal defenses in supervised entities, including an assessment of business model adopted.

(iii) Identifying early warning signals, increasing the focus on root cause of vulnerabilities and initiating corrective actions, as also refining supervisory processes and communications.

Let me elaborate a little on these areas.

(a) Unification of Supervisory Approach, Building Specialisation, Capacity and Skills in Supervision

8. In order to ensure a unified and systemic approach, a unified Department of Supervision (DoS) was created bringing all SEs, namely, Scheduled Commercial Banks, NBFCs and UCBs under one umbrella. Unifying the supervisory functions shall reduce the supervisory arbitrage and information asymmetries across SEs and address the complexities arising from their inter-connectedness. This will also help in the holistic understanding of systemic risks. Steps have been taken to improve the supervisory function through better capacity building and skilling of supervisors and for this purpose a separate College of Supervisors (CoS) has been set-up which is conducting extensive training programs in different areas. Supervisory specialisation is also being reinforced by way of creating specialised divisions for risk-based supervision of KYC / AML risk, data analytics, cyber security and IT examinations, among others.A Supervisory Action Framework has also been put in place which provides for graded early supervisory action depending on the frequency and severity of breaches identified.

(b) Strengthening Sound Governance and Internal Controls

  1. Emphasis on risk culture

9. As banks are in the business of taking risks, sound risk culture lies at the heart of every decision that they take. In alignment with global developments, Reserve Bank too has made risk culture and business model analysis as part of its supervisory assessment. The focus has been to ensure that entities put in place a well-defined risk appetite framework, and business decision making is broadly in alignment with their risk appetite and risk bearing capacity.

  1. Strengthening the assurance function

10. Reserve Bank attaches a lot of importance to the effective functioning of internal assurance functions in its financial entities and has issued revised guidance for concurrent, internal, as well as external audits in banks. The guidelines are expected to ensure that these audits act as an effective early warning, give greater clarity on supervisory expectations, avoid conflict of interest, provide sufficient authority / resources / independence to these functions, among others.

  1. Compliance function

11. The compliance function in a bank is an integral part of corporate governance, as it can affect the bank’s reputation with its shareholders, customers, employees and the markets (BIS, 2005). The recent guidance by the Reserve Bank on compliance function casts responsibility of the compliance culture and management of compliance risk explicitly upon the Board. The guidance advises banks on laying down a Board-approved compliance policy, well-defined selection process for Chief Compliance Officer (CCO), a fixed tenure to CCOs, and requisite authority. Reserve Bank would expect that the standards of regulatory compliance will see considerable improvement going ahead.

(c) Tools for proactive off-site and on-site supervision

(i) Usage of Data and Analytical tools for offsite supervision

12. The offsite supervisory data is currently used in a variety of ways to aid in policy formulation, identify incipient stress, ascertain status of borrowers across lenders and check compliance to regulatory stipulations, among others. In addition to Central Repository of Information on large Credits (CRILC) and Central Fraud Registry (CFR), the data capabilities of RBI are in the process of being further upgraded through the revamped data warehouse, viz. the Centralized Information Management System (CIMS). It will encompass tools and applications for AI-ML, data visualisation and big data analytics.

13. As part of the forward-looking assessment of stress, various supervisory tools have been designed to identify vulnerable borrowers who have less ‘distance to default’ as well as vulnerable banks based on various parameters. Early Warning Systems and supervisory Stress Testing have been made an integral part of prudential supervision. Many Thematic Assessments are also being regularly carried out to identify system-wide issues and assess ‘conduct’ practices for taking corrective actions. Data dump analysis is also much more extensively used as part of our transaction testing exercise.

14. For continuous engagement with SEs, a web-based and an end-to-end workflow automation system has been developed. It has various functionalities including inspection, compliance and incident reporting for cyber security, etc. with a built-in remediation workflow, time tracking, notifications and alerts, Management Information System (MIS) reports and dashboards. This is being launched shortly.

Cyber-Security

15. With the proliferation of digital banking, cyber security has become an extremely important area of supervisory concern. To address this concern, the Reserve Bank has developed a model-based framework for assessing cyber risk in banks using various risk indicators, risk incidents, VA/PT, etc. Cyber drills are conducted based on hypothetical scenarios. Several Advisories and Alerts are issued on various cyber threats. Measures to build better awareness of cyber risks in supervised entities are continuing. The Digital Payment Security Control Guidelines were issued recently by RBI to set up a robust governance structure and implement common minimum standards of security controls. While a lot is being done in the cyber security space, but these risks are continuously evolving in the dynamic environment we operate in, and hence there should be constant vigil and continuous enhancements of IT systems.

(ii) On-site Supervisory Processes

16. Several measures have been taken to improve the rigour and efficacy of on-site processes, including the annual inspection process by adopting a calibrated approach. Focus areas get identified in advance, risk-based scoping is ensured, inspections are completed in time-bound manner, quality review process is strengthened, and supervisory communication is sharper and more focussed with clear outline of time-bound Risk Mitigation Plans (RMPs) to be implemented by the entities, among others. Additionally, direct engagements with the senior management of entities are much more frequent and intense.

Conclusion and the Way Forward

17. Globally, banking is seeing rapid transformations and questions on the traditional bank model are being raised. Technology players are challenging banks with offerings which provide more convenience, better reach and lower cost to customers. Developments in AI/ML, robotics and chat advisory, digitalisation, Distributed Ledger Technology (DLT), quant computing, cloud arrangements, data analytics, new ways of remote working, etc are giving benefits but also generating new risks. Climate change, KYC / AML, cyber security, virtual currencies as well as increasing reliance on outsourcing are some of the other major challenges that will need to be addressed.

18. Agile and creative thinking is going to be essential in staying ahead of the digital curve when it comes to the evolution of financial services. Financial institutions would need to experiment with new technologies and tailor their products and services in alignment with business strategy and competitive considerations as well as in compliance with existing laws and regulations. Leveraging on technology will also require enhanced financial investments, building expertise and capacities, proper resource allocation and further strengthening of the operational capabilities.

19. Lastly, in this ever evolving and challenging environment, ultimately it is the operations of a financial entity in terms of its governance standards, business model, risk culture, and assurance functions that will decide how well it fares in the long run. Reserve Bank would expect all its supervised entities to give due weightage and consideration to these elements.

20. With these words, I conclude my address. I thank the organisers for giving me this opportunity.


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New PCA framework for banks from January

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Stressed banks may be prohibited from expansion of credit portfolio and asked to restrict outsourcing activities, going by the Reserve Bank of India’s revised prompt corrective action (PCA) framework.

A bank prohibited from expansion of credit/investment portfolios under PCA will, however, be allowed to invest in government securities/other high-quality liquid investments.

As per the extant framework, the RBI can ask a bank under PCA to only restrict/reduce credit expansion for borrowers below certain rating grades, reduce exposure to unsecured borrowers, among others. But it does not prohibit expansion of credit/investment portfolios.

The RBI said it would monitor three key areas — capital, asset quality and leverage — in the revised framework and breach of any risk threshold may result in invocation of PCA. Under the extant framework, the RBI also monitors profitability, besides the aforementioned areas.

Exit from PCA

The provisions of the revised PCA framework, which will be effective from January 1, 2022, clearly specify the conditions under which the central bank will allow exit from PCA and withdrawal of restrictions under PCA.

Taking a bank out of PCA framework and/or withdrawal of restrictions imposed will be considered if no breaches in risk thresholds in any of the parameters are observed as per four continuous quarterly financial statements, one of which should be Audited Annual Financial Statement (subject to assessment by RBI).

Further, this will be based on the supervisory comfort of the RBI, including an assessment on sustainability of profitability of the bank.

The revised framework incorporates resolution of a PCA bank by Amalgamation or Reconstruction (under Section 45 of Banking Regulation/BR Act 1949).

This follows amendment to Section 45 of the BR Act, which enables the Reserve Bank to reconstruct or amalgamate a bank, with or without implementing a moratorium, with the approval of the Central government.

Per the extant framework too, a breach of ‘Risk Threshold 3’ of Common Equity Tier I capital by a bank would identify it as a likely candidate for resolution through tools like amalgamation, reconstruction, winding up, etc.

In the case of a default on the part of a bank in meeting the obligations to its depositors, possible resolution processes may be resorted to without reference to the PCA matrix.

The RBI, as part of its mandatory and discretionary actions, may also impose appropriate restrictions on capital expenditure, other than for technological upgradation within Board approved limits, under the revised PCA.

The current provisions relating to imposition of restriction on dividend distribution/ remittance of profits, promoters/owners/parent (in the case of foreign banks) being required to bring in capital, and restriction on branch expansion, domestic and/or overseas, will continue under the revised PCA framework.

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RBI panel favours sale of stressed assets by lenders at early stage

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A committee appointed by the Reserve Bank of India has proposed that sale of stressed assets by lenders must be done at an early stage to allow for optimal recovery by asset reconstruction companies.

The committee also recommended that if 66 per cent of lenders by value decide to accept an offer made by an asset reconstruction company (ARC), it should be binding on the remaining lenders and it must be implemented within 60 days of approval.

“Data shows that the performance of the ARCs has been lacklustre, both in terms of ensuring recovery and revival of businesses. Banks and other investors could recover only about 14.29 per cent of the amount owed by borrowers in respect of stressed assets sold to ARCs during the FY 2004-FY 2013 period. Similarly, data shows that approximately 80 per cent of the recovery made by ARCs has come through deployment of measures of reconstruction that do not necessarily lead to revival of businesses,” the committee said.

Online platform mooted

Recognising the need for transparency and uniformity of processes in sale of stressed assets to ARCs, the Committee feels that an online platform may be created for sale of stressed assets. Infrastructure created by the Secondary Loan Market Association (SLMA) may be utilised for this purpose.

Further, considering the critical role played by the reserve price in ensuring true price discovery in auctions conducted for sale of stressed assets, the Committee recommends that for all accounts above ₹500 crore, two bank-approved external valuers should carry out a valuation to determine the liquidation value and fair market value and for accounts between ₹100 crore and ₹500 crore, one valuer may be engaged.

The panel has suggest that the SARFAESI Act may be expanded to allow ARCs to acquire ‘financial assets’ not only from banks and ‘financial institutions’ but also from such entities as may be notified by the Reserve Bank.

“Under these proposed powers, Reserve Bank may consider permitting ARCs to acquire financial assets from all regulated entities, including AIFs, FPIs, AMCs making investment on behalf of MFs and all NBFCs (including HFCs) irrespective of asset size and from retail investors,” it added.

The committee recommended that ARCs should be allowed to sponsor SEBI-registered AIFs with the objective of using these entities as an additional vehicle for facilitating restructuring of the debt acquired by them.

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Banks need to design appropriate governance standards and implement internal controls: Deputy Governor, RBI

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Banks, as repositories of public resources, need to design appropriate governance standards and implement internal controls to be worthy of the public trust, according to MK Jain, Deputy Governor, Reserve Bank of India.

“It is also well-acknowledged that shareholders are driven by maximisation of the returns on their capital. But in banks, this objective is realised largely through the resources raised from depositors.

“…Being highly leveraged entities and with their inter-connectedness, there must be separation between ownership and management so that they operate on professional lines,” Jain said at an event organised by a financial daily.

He emphasised that banks enjoy the privilege of mobilising uncollateralised public deposits and operating with high levels of leverage.

“The negative externalities of banks and NBFCs are also much higher than those for any non-financial entity due to their inter-connectedness. That’s why, globally, banks are regulated and supervised very closely,” Jain said.

Tools for proactive off-site and on-site supervision

For continuous engagement with supervised entities (SEs), a web-based and an end-to-end workflow automation system will be launched shortly, the Deputy Governor said.

This has various functionalities including inspection, compliance and incident reporting for cyber security, etc. with a built-in remediation workflow, time tracking, notifications and alerts, Management Information System (MIS) reports and dashboards.

Data capabilities

Jain underscored that the data capabilities of the RBI are in the process of being further upgraded through the revamped data warehouse – the Centralised Information Management System (CIMS). This is in addition to Central Repository of Information on large Credits (CRILC) and Central Fraud Registry (CFR).

The data capabilities will encompass tools and applications for AI-ML, data visualisation and big data analytics.

As part of the forward-looking assessment of stress, the Deputy Governor noted that various supervisory tools have been designed to identify vulnerable borrowers who have less ‘distance to default’ as well as vulnerable banks based on various parameters. Early warning systems and supervisory stress testing have been made an integral part of prudential supervision.

“Many thematic assessments are also being regularly carried out to identify system-wide issues and assess ‘conduct’ practices for taking corrective actions. Data dump analysis is also much more extensively used as part of our transaction testing exercise,” he said.

Jain felt that agile and creative thinking is going to be essential in staying ahead of the digital curve when it comes to the evolution of financial services.

The Deputy Governor said, “Financial institutions would need to experiment with new technologies and tailor their products and services in alignment with business strategy and competitive considerations as well as in compliance with existing laws and regulations.”

“Leveraging on technology will also require enhanced financial investments, building expertise and capacities, proper resource allocation and further strengthening of the operational capabilities.”

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Union Bank of India Q2 profit surges 195%

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Union Bank of India’s second quarter standalone net profit soared 195 per cent year-on-year (y-o-y) to ₹1,526 crore against ₹517 crore, supported by healthy growth in non-interest income.

During the reporting quarter, the bank recovered ₹1,650 crore from the resolution of the DHFL account.

The public sector bank made 65 per cent provision towards its ₹2,558 crore exposure to the SREI group.

Net interest income was up 8.52 per cent y-o-y to ₹6,829 crore (₹6,293 crore in the year-ago period).

Non-interest income, comprising core fee-based income, treasury income and recovery in written-off accounts, jumped about 65 per cent y-o-y to ₹3,978 crore (₹2,406 crore).

Credit growth

Rajkiran Rai G, MD & CEO, emphasised that the bank will end FY22 with a credit growth of 6-8 per cent as demand is expected to pick up in the second half of the year.

The bank has about ₹50,000 crore of corporate loan sanctions and unutilised limits, he said.

Domestic advances declined about 2 per cent y-o-y to ₹6,19,137 crore. Overseas advances were down about 18 per cent y-o-y to ₹15,446 crore.

Rai said the bank has upped the NPA recovery target to ₹16,000 crore from ₹13,000 crore as recoveries in the first half of FY22 had already crossed ₹10,000 crore.

GNPA position improved to 12.64 per cent of gross advances as of September-end 2021 against 13.60 per cent in the preceding quarter.

Net NPAs position, too, improved a shade to 4.61 per cent of net advances vis-a-vis 4.69 per cent in the preceding quarter.

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Shiba Inu, Dogecoin most-traded cryptos in India

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Meme coins ruled the roost when it comes to the most-traded cryptocurrencies on Indian crypto exchanges over the past six months. Elon Musk-backed Dogecoin and its trending rival Shiba Inu surpassed the likes of Bitcoin, Ethereum and MATIC, in terms of trading volume in India between April and October.

Overall trading volume

CoinSwitch Kuber told BusinessLine that over the past six months, Dogecoin contributed 13.76 per cent to its overall trading volume, followed by Ethereum at 6.06 per cent, Bitcoin at 6.04 per cent, Internet Computer at 5.08 per cent and Polygon’s MATIC at 4.52 per cent.

The cryptocurrency exchange has not listed Shiba Inu yet.

‘Most-popular coin’

Sharan Nair, Chief Business Officer, CoinSwitch Kuber, told BusinessLine: “Interestingly, Dogecoin, a popular cryptocurrency born out of a meme, has been on an uptrend, rallying in the last six months, even surpassing widely used cryptos, Bitcoin and Ethereum.

“A flurry of tweets by global leaders, including Elon Musk, have helped strengthen Doge’s popularity. People are now starting to look at real-world utility of Dogecoin, leading to it becoming the most-popular coin in the last few months.”

Another top cryptocurrency exchange, WazirX, saw nearly 50 per cent of its trading volume coming in from ‘Dogecoin Killer’ Shiba Inu over the past one week.

On a Change.org petition demanding Shiba Inu to get listed on Robinhood, the cryptocurrency rallied on WazirX, clocking in transactions worth over $320 million over the last few days.

The meme coin founded in August 2020 by pseudonymous Ryoshi started seeing an uptick in global trading volumes when Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin burned nearly 90 per cent of his Shiba Inu holding worth over $6 billion, creating a dearth of supply in May. Apart from this, the other highest traded cryptocurrencies on WazirX included Bitcoin, Dogecoin, WRX (WazirX’s own token), MATIC and Ethereum. Between April and October, WazirX reported $27.12 billion worth of transactions. Shiba Inu started gaining momentum only in the past three to four months.

‘Great investment option’

Speaking on the popularity of Ethereum and Bitcoins, Nair added: “Along with hosting the Ether token, Ethereum is also leading innovation by being a foundation for a variety of applications such as decentralised finance (DeFi) and non-fungible tokens (NFTs), making it a great investment.

“Third in this list is Bitcoin, which, of course, continues to witness high volumes from investors due to it being the biggest and the most trusted crypto asset. Ethereum and Bitcoin’s technological superiority has been a key driver in its ever-growing popularity.”

Nischal Shetty, founder and CEO, WazirX, said: “The growth of Shiba Inu shows the power of being a community-driven project. In recent months, SHIB has been in the news for being listed on more exchanges, thereby increasing liquidity and access to the token.

“Adding to it, Vitalik Buterin also burned over $6 billion worth of SHIB tokens. Even though SHIB has been rallying for the past month, it has reached a new all-time-high price. On WazirX, SHIB has overtaken Bitcoin’s position as the top-traded token in the Indian rupee market this week. In the past 24 hours, over $320 million worth of SHIB has been traded on WazirX. This market movement has also caused WazirX to record an all-time-high 24-hour trading volume of over $560 million.”

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Bank of India standalone net profit almost doubles to ₹1,051 cr in Q2

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Bank of India’s standalone net profit almost doubled to ₹1,051 crore in the second quarter against ₹526 crore in the year ago period on the back of robust growth in other income and a steep decline in loan loss provisions.

During the reporting quarter, there was a reduction in gross non-performing assets (GNPAs) aggregating ₹5,771.50 crore.

NPA position of Indian Banks indicates gradual improvement: CARE Ratings

The Mumbai-headquartered public sector bank’s net interest income (difference between interest earned and interest expended) declined 14 per cent year-on-year (yoy) to ₹3,523 crore (₹4,113 crore in the year ago quarter).

Other income, including profit/loss on sale of assets, profit/loss on revaluation of investments (net), earnings from foreign exchange and derivative transactions, recoveries from accounts previously written off, dividend income, etc., jumped 59 per cent yoy to ₹2,136 crore (₹1,346 crore).

To ease lending, FinMin moves to boost bankers’ morale, growth

GNPA position improved to 12 per cent of gross advances as at September-end 2021 against 13.51 per cent in the preceding quarter.

NPA position

Net NPAs position too improved to 2.79 per cent of net advances against 3.35 per cent in the preceding quarter.

Total deposits edged up by about one per cent yoy to ₹6,12,961 crore. Total advances were up about 5 per cent yoy to ₹3,78,727 crore.

On a consolidated basis, including the results of four domestic subsidiaries, four overseas subsidiaries, one joint venture and six associates, BoI reported a 97 per cent jump in net profit at ₹1,073 crore (₹543 crore).

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Reserve Bank of India – Tenders

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Tender No: RBI/Chandigarh/Estate/146/21-22/ET/200

With reference to the e-tender dated October 07, 2021, it is advised that the last date of submission of the e-tender in the MSTC portal has been extended from November 02, 2021 till 11:00 AM to November 10, 2021 till 11:00 AM.

2. Now the Part-I of the e-tender will be opened on November 10, 2021 at 11:30 AM.

3. Other conditions in the tender remain unchanged.

4. Firms / Companies who have already submitted bids pursuant to the captioned e-tender need not apply again.

General Manager-in-Charge
Reserve Bank of India
Chandigarh

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New management of IL&FS addresses ₹52,200 cr of debt

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The new board and management of Infrastructure Leasing and Financial Services (IL&FS) has addressed debt of ₹52,200 crore, and has maintained its earlier estimate of resolving debt of ₹61,000 crore.

This will represent resolution of 62 per cent of the overall fund-based and non-fund based debt of over ₹99,000 crore as of October 2018.

“The debt of ₹52,200 crore addressed till date represents 86 per cent of the overall estimated resolution value of ₹61,000 crore and 53 per cent of total debt,” it said on Tuesday.

It expects to resolve around ₹57,000 crore debt by March 2022, it further said.

Available cash balance

Uday Kotak, Chairman of the board of IL&FS, said that of the ₹52,200 crore debt addressed, ₹14,100 crore has been discharged and there is an available cash balance of ₹16,700 crore. “In addition to that, we have completed sale and purchase agreements in many cases and have filed applications with the NCLT. These are in stages of completion of transactions and are pending court approval. That amount is ₹21,000 crore,” he told reporters, adding that the balance ₹4,000 crore will be the long tail, including refunds and small matters across the whole host of companies.

He said that there are multiple options for the resolution of the long tail, such as liquidation, fire sale or the current approach of hard work.

He, however, indicated that this would be decided in due course. Kotak also highlighted the high recovery from IL&FS, and noted that it is much higher than the average recovery observed under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, which is around 38 per cent to 39 per cent. “Group resolution is always a big challenge in terms of recovery in IBC cases. Many cases have had very low recovery numbers. This (IL&FS) reinforces the belief that fair amount of money can be recovered even from the most distressing and complex situations,” he said.

Further, of the 347 entities under IL&FS Group as of October 2018, a total of 235 entities stand resolved till date, including resolution applications filed with courts, and applications for additional 15 entities are expected to be filed with courts by March 2022.

“Since the last update in July 2021, the group has addressed additional debt of ₹8,500 crore from monetisation initiatives, including InvIT Phase 1; Terracis Technology (erstwhile IL&FS Technologies); ONGC Tripura Gas based power project; Warora Chandrapur Road project; and IL&FS Prime Terminals Fujai,” said an IL&FS statement.

Transfer of road projects

Additionally, the group has also submitted an application with the NCLT for approval of the transfer of five road projects, with approximate resolution value of ₹4,000 crore, under Phase 2 of the InvIT.

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Reserve Bank of India – Press Releases

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As announced in the Statement on Developmental and Regulatory Policies released along with the Monetary Policy Statement on April 07, 2021, Reserve Bank of India had, on April 19, 2021, announced the constitution of a Committee to undertake a comprehensive review of the legal and regulatory framework applicable to Asset Reconstruction Companies (ARCs) under the chairmanship of Shri Sudarshan Sen, former Executive Director, Reserve Bank of India. The terms of reference of the Committee were to examine the issues and recommend suitable measures for enabling the ARCs to meet the growing requirements of the financial sector.

The Committee has since submitted its report and the same is being placed on the RBI website today for comments of stakeholders and members of the public. Comments may be submitted by December 15, 2021 through email. RBI will examine them before taking a final view on the recommendations made by the Committee.

(Yogesh Dayal)     
Chief General Manager

Press Release: 2021-2022/1140

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