Bandhan Bank plunges to all-time low as RBI tightens scrutiny

Reuters 

By Krishna V Kurup

The Reserve of (RBI) clamped down on the lender, majority owned by Financial Holdings Ltd, a financial company (NBFC), for failing to bring down its main shareholder's stake to below 40 percent.

India's financial sector is under scrutiny after a series of defaults by one of the biggest financial firms in the sector raised fears of a credit crunch that roiled financial markets in the past week.

The RBI is becoming stricter which is good for the banking system, else later it may become a bigger scam, said AK Prabhakar, at in

"Initially, things may go haywire as people cannot digest too much of regulation," he said.

Late last month, the RBI curtailed Rana Kapoor's term, without giving a reason. The move, according to market insiders, exemplifies the central bank's increasingly assertive approach in tackling the bad debt problem plaguing India's banking sector.

Indian banks have seen a surge in soured loans that hit a record $150 billion at the end of March and stricter rules enforced by the RBI are expected to have pushed the industry's non-performing loans even higher.

"Wherever RBI has seen divergence, they demanded management to change, for example, Axis Bank," said.

In April, Axis Bank, riddled with bad loans, said its long-time would step down, days after the central bank was reported to have expressed concerns about the lender giving her a three-year extension.

"I believe the RBI is doing the right thing. If they would have done this long back, we could have had a better banking regulation and system," said.

Bank shares closed down 20 percent at 452.20 rupees.

(Reporting by Sharnya G and Krishna V in Bengaluru; Editing by Gopakumar Warrier)

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

First Published: Mon, October 01 2018. 15:53 IST