At a time when Indian banks are battling the bad loan
menace, global banking regulators’ body BIS has proposed a uniform
definition for non-performing assets and forbearance to ensure
consistency in disclosures.
The Bank for
International Settlements’ (BIS) proposal also assumes significance amid
efforts from
Indian banks and other authorities to recover loans from
wilful defaulters, including the beleaguered businessman Vijay Mallya.
The
Basel Committee on Banking Supervision’s guidelines for definition of
‘non-performing exposures’ and ‘forbearance’ seek to harmonise
quantitative and qualitative criteria used for credit categorisation.
Noting
that there are no “consistent international standards for categorising
problem loans”, BIS said banks categorise bad loans in a variety of
ways.
Reserve Bank of India Governor Raghuram Rajan is the Vice-Chairman of BIS, which has 60 central banks as members.
Rajan was elected to the post in 2015 for three years.
Set up way back in May 1930, BIS is the world’s oldest international financial organisation, as per its website.
Coming
out with the detailed consultative paper, BIS said the definitions are
aimed at promoting “harmonisation in the measurement and application of
two important measures of asset quality and thereby, foster consistency
in supervisory reporting and disclosures by banks“.
The document is titled ‘Prudential treatment of problem assets —— definitions of non—performing exposures and forbearance’
The
Switzerland—based BIS said definition of non—performing exposures
introduces criteria for categorising loans and debt securities that are
centred around delinquency status (90 days past due) or the unlikeliness
of repayment.
Besides, it seeks to clarify the
consideration of collateral in categorising assets as non—performing,
apart from mooting clear rules with respect to upgrading of an exposure
from ‘non—performing’ to ‘performing’ asset.
Meanwhile,
forbearance refers to concessions like modification or refinancing of
loans and debt securities that are granted as a result of a borrower’s
financial difficulty.
The proposed definition sets
out the criteria on when an exposure would cease to be identified as
forborne and also takes into account the soundness of the borrower
concerned.
In India, the bad loan woes have been
mounting in recent years. The country’s scheduled commercial banks,
including public sector ones, have stressed assets, a combination of
gross NPA and restructured loans, of about Rs. 8 lakh crore.
This is about 11 per cent of loan book size of around Rs. 69 lakh crore of the entire system.
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