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RBI warns of rising tide of NPAs

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RBI warns of rising tide of NPAs
RBI warns of rising tide of NPAs

The Reserve Bank on Monday ruled out any major impact on domestic markets by the US Fed’s tapering its monthly bond buying programme from later this week, saying that India’s external sector has improved with reduction in CAD and a pick up in exports.

RBI Governor Raghuram Rajan however warned against the rising tide of bad loans saying risks to the banking system have increased over the past six months. But, he added that there are no systemic risks at the moment.

The economy is taper-ready, he said in the half-yearly financial stability report released on Monday. “The effect of the tapering on the economy is expected to be limited and short-lived,” as the external sector risks to the economy have considerably come down over the past few months,” he added.

3 per cent CAD

Pegging the Current Account Deficit at below 3 per cent of GDP, the report said “the country’s external position appears to be manageable and reserves seem adequate,” which stood at over USD 295 billion in the third week of December.

However, it added: “The banking stability indicator shows that risks to the banking sector have increased since June 2013.”

The tapering, from January, of the USD 85-billion monthly bond buying programme by US Fed to prop the American economy, has given India time to replenish forex reserves and rein in high CAD, which was at 3.05 per cent in first half of this fiscal (2013-14) as against 4.8 per cent last fiscal.

The US Fed announced this month that it would cut back on bond buying by USD 10 billion to USD 75 billion a month following improvement in the world’s biggest economy.

Warning on the high inflation as a hurdle for easy money policy, Dr. Rajan in his foreword said: “The outlook for the economy has improved, with export growth regaining momentum, but growth is still weak. The challenges of containing inflationary pressures limit what the monetary policy can do.”

Inflation based on wholesale price index, hit 14-month high of 7.52 per cent in November. Retail inflation, based on consumer price index, rose to 9-month high of 11.24 per cent.

“Some moderation is expected in food inflation going forward, (but) persistence of retail inflation remains a concern,” the report said, adding that “persistently high inflation” and the consequent pressure on interest rates poses a downside risk to growth.

Bad loans

On the rising NPAs, the report warned that “strain on asset quality continues to be a major concern”. In a base case scenario, with present conditions continuing, gross NPAs will rise to 4.6 per cent by September 2014 from 4.2 per cent in September 2013. As of Q2 this fiscal, GNPAs stood at Rs 2.29 trillion (Rs 2.29 lakh crore) from Rs 1.67 trillion a year earlier, it added.

The amount of recast loans also touched all-time high of Rs 4 trillion or 10.2 per cent of overall advances as of Q2, or July-September quarter of 2013-14 fiscal.

However, RBI expects some positives in the next fiscal and has estimated that gross NPAs would improve to 4.4 per cent by March 2015. In case the economic condition deteriorates, it could be 7 per cent by March 2015, the RBI warned.

State-owned banks will be the worst-affected, the report said, pegging GNPAs for PSBs at 4.9 per cent by March 2015, while for new private sector banks it will be 2.7 per cent.

The report reiterates that RBI will discontinue the system of relaxed restructuring of advances from 2015 onwards and warned that state-run banks will be affected the most as the provisions will shoot up.

“The regulatory concerns regarding restructuring arises from the possibility of the relaxations not being used judiciously by banks commensurate with the viability of projects. These relaxations for asset classification/ provisioning will be phased out by April 2015,” it said.

Rupee downfall

High CAD, along with tapering fears, was one of the reasons for the rupee touching a lifetime low of 68.85 against the dollar on August 28 and forcing RBI to unleash a slew of unconventional measures to prop the battered currency. The rupee has improved since then, but is still 14 per cent lower year-to-date.

Authorities acted on multiple fronts, curbing gold imports, opening currency swap windows to get fresh dollars, and increasing money market rates to reduce speculation. All these resulted in CAD improving and thus bringing investors back to the market.

The biggest leveller had been a drastic fall in gold imports and USD 34 billion that RBI grossed up by way of the two swap windows.

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