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RBI asks banks to disclose IL&FS provisions in Q4 accounts

"No financial institution will declare the accounts of IL&FS or its entities as non-performing assets without its prior permission," NCLAT had said.

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Published : Apr 25, 2019, 5:35 PM IST

IL&FS

Mumbai: Even as its petition is pending at the NCLAT seeking a review of the ban on banks classifying the IL&Fs accounts as NPAs, the Reserve Bank on Wednesday directed lenders to disclose their exposure to the bankrupt infra lender in their forthcoming earnings announcements.

The city-headquartered infra lender and its 348 group companies owe over Rs 94,000 crore, of which over Rs 54,000 crore is owed to banks. It began defaulting on repayment commitments from last August, and in October the government superseded its board and appointed a new board under banker Uday Kotak.

In a notification, the central bank said the new directions are as per a February 25 order of the National Company Law Appellate Tribunal (NCLAT), which asked banks not to declare their loans to the company and group as NPAs.

"No financial institution will declare the accounts of IL&FS or its entities as non-performing assets without its prior permission," NCLAT had said.

The RBI moved the review petition on March 19 and a decision is pending now as the tribunal had sought corporate affairs ministry's views to the RBI demand.

Earlier this month, reacting to the NCLAT order, governor Shaktikanta Das had said apex bank had filed a review petition seeking a modification of the previous NCLAT order.

In the notification, RBI has asked banks to disclose the IL&FS and group entities exposure in the notes to accounts in a standard proforma.

Read more:Wireless broadband subscriber base touches 532 million in February: ICRA

The lenders will have to mention the outstanding position on a particular date and give details including overall outstanding and amount which is NPA as per the income recognition and asset classification norms but not classified as NPAs, it said.

They will also have to specify the total provisions which are required to be made as per these norms for the assets and the provisions actually held.

A majority of lenders are yet to report their quarterly and full-year accounts for FY19. A slew of banks has hinted that exposures to IL&FS have impacted their profits in the past quarter as they made provisions towards this account.

Group entity IL&FS Financial Services had reported last month that its NPAs touched 90 per cent. Media reports on RBI's decision to challenge the NCLAT order had said the insolvency court's decision was "tantamount to judicial overreach".

"The bankruptcy tribunal's order encroaches into RBI's regulatory domain and this could set a precedent if left unchallenged. These issues fall under the ambit of RBI as the regulator of the banking sector," a senior RBI official had said.

Mumbai: Even as its petition is pending at the NCLAT seeking a review of the ban on banks classifying the IL&Fs accounts as NPAs, the Reserve Bank on Wednesday directed lenders to disclose their exposure to the bankrupt infra lender in their forthcoming earnings announcements.

The city-headquartered infra lender and its 348 group companies owe over Rs 94,000 crore, of which over Rs 54,000 crore is owed to banks. It began defaulting on repayment commitments from last August, and in October the government superseded its board and appointed a new board under banker Uday Kotak.

In a notification, the central bank said the new directions are as per a February 25 order of the National Company Law Appellate Tribunal (NCLAT), which asked banks not to declare their loans to the company and group as NPAs.

"No financial institution will declare the accounts of IL&FS or its entities as non-performing assets without its prior permission," NCLAT had said.

The RBI moved the review petition on March 19 and a decision is pending now as the tribunal had sought corporate affairs ministry's views to the RBI demand.

Earlier this month, reacting to the NCLAT order, governor Shaktikanta Das had said apex bank had filed a review petition seeking a modification of the previous NCLAT order.

In the notification, RBI has asked banks to disclose the IL&FS and group entities exposure in the notes to accounts in a standard proforma.

Read more:Wireless broadband subscriber base touches 532 million in February: ICRA

The lenders will have to mention the outstanding position on a particular date and give details including overall outstanding and amount which is NPA as per the income recognition and asset classification norms but not classified as NPAs, it said.

They will also have to specify the total provisions which are required to be made as per these norms for the assets and the provisions actually held.

A majority of lenders are yet to report their quarterly and full-year accounts for FY19. A slew of banks has hinted that exposures to IL&FS have impacted their profits in the past quarter as they made provisions towards this account.

Group entity IL&FS Financial Services had reported last month that its NPAs touched 90 per cent. Media reports on RBI's decision to challenge the NCLAT order had said the insolvency court's decision was "tantamount to judicial overreach".

"The bankruptcy tribunal's order encroaches into RBI's regulatory domain and this could set a precedent if left unchallenged. These issues fall under the ambit of RBI as the regulator of the banking sector," a senior RBI official had said.

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URG COM ECO ESPL
.MUMBAI BCM5
BIZ-TELECOM-REPORT
Voda-Idea to lose mkt share, needs more funds in FY21: Report
         Mumbai, Apr 25 (PTI) Vodafone Idea, which is in the
process of raising Rs 25,000 crore through a rights issue,
will again require a funding next fiscal as it loses market
share, a foreign brokerage said Thursday.
         Market repair in the battered telecom sector is at
least a year away as the disruptor Reliance Jio continues to
focus on subscriber additions, Jefferies said.
         Operators will raise at least Rs 1 lakh crore in core
equity in the first half of the ongoing fiscal, it said,
stressing that the largest telco Vodafone Idea will require
funding again next fiscal to fund capex and spectrum
repayments.
         Vodafone Idea will lose market share to come down to
25 percent over the next 18 months and hence will require
funding again, it said, adding that second biggest telco
Bharti Airtel's market share will remain stable at 30 percent.
         It can be noted that it had a market share of over 35
percent as of December 2018, according to reports.
         Price hikes necessary for improvements in financial
conditions of telcos are unlikely in FY20 and will happen only
after Jio becomes the dominant player with 40 percent market
share in FY21, it said.
         On the fund raising plans, the brokerage said apart
from Vodafone Idea's Rs 25,000 crore rights issue, there is
Bharti's fund raising for a similar amount through the same
route.
         It also hinted that the remaining Rs 50,000 crore will
be done by Jio's fiber and tower infrastructure investment
trusts (InVITs) will need equity funding for the majority of
the Rs 1.1 trillion in liability.
         The report explained that Jio has de-merged its fiber
and tower assets into a separate company which is majority
owned by an InvIT. It has transferred Rs 1,073 billion of
liabilities, the majority of which will need to be refinanced
by an equity raising, in InvIT, it said.
         It can be noted that domestic rating agency Crisil had
recently hinted of a revival in the industry's fortunes from
FY20, with estimating revenues to increase 7 percent on
better pricing power.
         The turnaround will ride on an increase in average
revenue per user (ARPU) by 11 percent, it had said.
         The brokerage said it expects the revenues to be
"stable to slightly down" for Vodafone Idea and Bharti in the
results for the fourth quarter of last fiscal to be announced
soon.
         "Further competitive intensity in the near term will
remain high especially in the postpaid segment," it said.
         It can be noted that Jio's September 2016 entry has
wrecked the telecom industry, as the new entrant made calling
which delivered 70 percent of revenues, free.
         All the companies have been showing financial troubles
including profit erosion or losses, which has led to
consolidations, asset sell-offs, exits and even bankruptcies.
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