Lenders to Vijay Mallya-promoted Kingfisher Airlines may have no option other than restructuring the carrier's loans again.
Bankers are working on a formula that would aim to keep the re-payment period and the net present value of the asset specified during the first restructuring intact, by increasing the interest rate.
In this case, there would be no increase in the provisioning requirement. However, such an exercise can only be carried out if the asset is standard, and not slipped into the sub-standard category.
Banks' loan to Kingfisher is still in the standard category, since the company is servicing the loan by paying interest.
"Even if we keep the net present value intact, while carrying out the second restructuring, we would need the regulator's permission to classify the loan as standard," said a banker.
Bankers said a second round of restructuring was the only way out, even if this meant classifying the loan as non-performing asset.
"If we do not restructure, it would be difficult to recover the loan. In case we want to sell the assets, it can only happen at a discount," said an official of a bank with exposure to the airline.
Banks have total exposure of close to Rs 7,000 crore (Rs 70 billion) in the airline, and Rs 4,000 crore (Rs 40 billion)
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