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India pushes state banks to find own funding sources after $32 billion bailout

Reuters  |  NEW DELHI 

By Neha and Miglani

(Reuters) - A massive $32 billion bailout package for India's dominant will not happen again and lenders will have to find their own funding by selling non-core assets and merging with each other, a senior government said on Monday.

Twenty-one banks, majority owned by New Delhi, account for more than two-thirds of the assets in Asia's third-biggest economy. These lenders also account for close to 90 percent of soured loans in the sector.

Last October, the announced a worth 2.11 trillion rupees ($32.41 billion) - $14 billion of which it is in the process of injecting as a first tranche - to help banks set aside enough for their bad loans and boost credit growth in an economy where banks are the main source of funding.

"My message is no more recapitalisation. Whatever has happened, has happened. Clean up on your own," the who oversees the state sector told

"We brought you out of the intensive care unit (ICU). Now, if you again go back to the ICU, and we keep bringing you out, that's not how it's done," said the official, declining to be named.

The would like to get the total number of to down to 12-13 from 21 now through mergers, the said. He did not give a time-frame for such deals, but expected some to happen during the current financial year that began on Sunday.

"You either shrink or find some synergy," the said.

Recent rule changes by the that did away with existing loan-restructuring schemes and aims to steer more defaulting companies into the bankruptcy courts could mean non-performing loans in could rise from nearly 8 trillion rupees now, the said, although he added 10 trillion rupees would be the upper limit for any such increase.

Including restructured or rolled over loans, all banks in had a total 9.5 trillion rupees of soured loans as of end-December, central State-run banks' stressed loan pile was 8.26 trillion rupees, or 15.8 percent of their total loans.

To avert situations like the massive $2 billion fraud in state-run that stunned the financial sector, the government is asking banks to constantly monitor loans above 2.5 billion rupees and report at their board meetings every quarter, the said.

The government is also working to ease the country's fledgling bankruptcy laws to help speed up the resolution process, the said.

One of the proposals is to allow a resolution process to go ahead if 66 percent of the creditors vote for it, compared with the current requirement of a minimum of 75 percent.

"We are facing some resistance here from the promoters," the said, referring to the main backers of companies.

"But we are planning to ease the process with more changes."

($1 = 65.1100 Indian rupees)

(Reporting by Neha and Miglani, editing by David Evans)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Mon, April 02 2018. 21:26 IST
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