FinMin officials say an announcement could be made in the Budget.
As such, the setting up of an asset reconstruction company backed by the sovereign is a long-drawn process and these are still early days.
Even then, senior government sources say Finance Minister Arun Jaitley might make an announcement in the upcoming Union Budget as part of his medium-term plans for the financial sector.
There have been inter-ministerial discussions on the matter.
Earlier in February, Reserve Bank of India (RBI) Governor Rajan had said there was “no need” to set up a separate “bad bank” to deal with stressed assets of public sector (PSU) banks. “PSU banks themselves have the backing of the government, so there is no need to create a new entity that has the backing of the government. The issue is now to clean it up,” he had said at an event in New Delhi.
Rajan had also said the pricing of assets of a government-owned bad bank could get entangled with the Comptroller and Auditor General or the Central Vigilance Commissioner.
“The government is examining the proposal of setting up a ‘bad bank’, which will take over NPAs of public sector lenders and help them clean up their books. Deliberations with stakeholders are in the initial stages,” said an official.
The third quarter of financial year 2016 saw a sharp rise in banks’ NPAs because of stress in sectors like steel, power and infrastructure.
“The (RBI) governor has made valid points, which will be taken on board. However, there is no rule that says if the regulator is opposed to something it should not or cannot be done. A decision will be taken considering all views,” the official added.
The asset reconstruction company would not be RBI's problem as it would just take over toxic assets of banks, said another official.
However, experts say a bad bank alone will not be a solution, it will have to be ensured that banks do not fall back and come up with more toxic assets.
Sources said the idea was being drawn from various countries that had set up such banks, the latest being the Troubled Assets Relief Program (TARP) by the US Treasury after the collapse of Lehman Brothers in 2008.
However, the aim will be to ensure that the exchequer does not take the entire financial hit and that banks themselves be asked to pick up the burden once they have cleaned up their books.
Under the Indradhanush scheme, while the government's promise of recapitalising PSU banks over a three-year period seems to be on track, it seems inadequate considering the scale of stress.
Of the Rs 25,000 crore meant for 2015-16, the government has pumped in about Rs 20,000 crore in 13 PSU banks so far.
The government will infuse another Rs 5,000 crore in the current financial year to strengthen bank balance sheets.
PSU banks will get Rs 25,000 crore in the next financial year, followed by Rs 10,000 crore each in 2017-18 and 2018-19.
For the December quarter, almost all state-owned lenders reported lower profits or slumped to losses on the back of higher provisioning for NPAs.
State Bank of India Chairman Arundhati Bhattacharya has warned that the level of NPAs might rise in the March quarter, even as Jaitley promised further steps to deal with the situation.
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