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RBI Initiates 'Corrective Action' Against IDBI Bank Over Bad Loans

IDBI, which is almost 74% owned by the Indian government, had a net bad loans ratio of 9.61% as of December and will be the first lender to come under the RBI's central bank curbs.
Reuters
May 10 2017
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IDBI, which is almost 74% owned by the Indian government, had a net bad loans ratio of 9.61% as of December and will be the first lender to come under the RBI's central bank curbs.
A police officer stands guard in front of the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) head office in Mumbai, August 9, 2016. Credit: Reuters/Danish Siddiqui/Files
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A police officer stands guard in front of the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) head office in Mumbai, August 9, 2016. Credit: Reuters/Danish Siddiqui/Files

Mumbai: The RBI has initiated "prompt corrective action" for state-run IDBI Bank over its high bad loans and negative return on assets, the lender said on Tuesday, May 9.

IDBI, in a filing to the stock exchanges, said the action "will not have any material impact" on its performance and expected it to help improve its internal controls and performance.

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It did not give details of the corrective action.

IDBI is the first lender to come under the RBI's central bank curbs after the regulator revised the so-called prompt corrective action framework last month, tightening thresholds around bad loans.

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India's lenders have been saddled with a record $150 billion of sour loans, triggering a string of measures from the government and the regulator, RBI.

Just last week, the government tweaked rules giving the RBI greater powers to identify and enforce resolutions on specific soured loans.

IDBI, which is almost 74% owned by the Indian government, had a net bad loans ratio of 9.61% as of December. It has yet to report its results for last quarter.

Under RBI rules, prompt corrective action is triggered if a bank's net non-performing assets (NNPA) ratio crosses 6%. Lenders with an NNPA ratio of more than 9% fall in the "risk threshold 2" category, and can be asked by the regulator to restrict branch expansion and make higher provisions on sour loans among other curbs.

IDBI Bank said in February that it expected bad loans to rise in coming quarters and it may have to go slow on new lending to conserve capital, after a stretch of losses.

This article went live on May tenth, two thousand seventeen, at fifteen minutes past one in the afternoon.

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