Lenders plan to go slow on referring stressed small and medium enterprises to the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) for resolution under the
Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC), with the chances of recovery of their dues through this process being “slim”.
According to a banker, the process of sending
SMEs to the
NCLT is delaying their revival, apart from
banks losing a significant portion of the
loans. There are several cases where the units awaiting debt resolution laid off workers.
The banker said that in the case of Vizag-based Synergies-Dooray Automotive, the first case to get a resolution plan under the IBC,
banks had to take a haircut of 94 per cent on the debt, and it was the promoter who took control of the company again.
Besides, according to the
Reserve Bank of India (RBI) rule, lenders have to make provision for 50 per cent of the loan in the same quarter when a company is sent to the
NCLT.
“
Banks would prefer to restructure the debt in small accounts, as their resolution would be faster. The borrowers are also willing to negotiate,” said a banking analyst.
There are 500 NPA (non-performing asset) accounts, most of them SMEs, that are awaiting resolution with the banks. Banks are currently busy with the resolution of 12 large accounts that were recommended by the RBI for resolution under the IBC.
According to the RBI’s criteria, all accounts that were an NPA as of March 2016 and owed more than Rs 5,000 crore to
banks were to be sent to the
NCLT. The first set of 12 companies has been sent to the NCLT, and bidders are doing their due diligence on these companies. The
RBI is also preparing a list of another 29 companies, which are likely to be sent to the tribunal by this month-end.
Bankers said the one-size-fits-all strategy of sending all companies to the
NCLT was not working and was increasing the write-offs. “A lot of resolution mechanisms are already there. The
banks have to use what is the best mechanism in each case. The
NCLT cannot be the solution for all cases,” State Bank of India’s Managing Director, P K Gupta, had said in New Delhi in October.
The Indian banking system is plagued with bad
debts worth Rs 8 lakh crore. According to rating firm CRISIL, the
banks will have to set aside Rs 3.3 lakh crore for provisioning for the bad
loans in the current fiscal year, compared to Rs 2.2 lakh crore last year. The government plans to infuse Rs 2.11 lakh crore in state-owned
banks so that they can maintain their capital adequacy norms.