The domino effect of rising NPAs of banks
With public sector banks having accumulated Rs 4.5 lakh-crore worth of nonperforming assets or loans in which repayments are not happening in time, there has been a lot of talk going around on the performance of the banks and how it reflects on the broader performance of the Indian economy.With public sector banks having accumulated Rs 4.5 lakh-crore worth of nonperforming assets or loans in which repayments are not happening in time, there has been a lot of talk going around on the performance of the banks and how it reflects on the broader performance of the Indian economy.
While RBI has gone ahead with a 125 basis points rate cut, the 'aam aadmi' is yet to experience the full transmission. With banks further saddled with a huge NPA burden now, the customers are bound to feel the pinch
1. How do NPAs affect a bank's balance sheet?Accumulated bad loans severely dent a bank's interest income. As per regulatory norms, banks are expected to make provisions against bad loans. High provisioning figures further eat away from their profits. Banks such as Bank of Baroda, Bank of India and Punjab National Bank have all posted huge losses due to high provisioning this quarter.
2. Should investors be worried?With all public sector banks being listed entities, a bad quarterly result reflects strongly in the stock market. If a bank is suffering from mounting NPAs and does not give any positive forward looking statements then stock prices crash which in turn affects the bank's shareholders income. However, now with the RBI instructing banks to clean up their balance sheets over the last two quarters of FY16 it is left to be seen how the banks after recognising the bad accounts manage to recover them.
3. Does it impact your accounts with the bank?Yes. Banks already reeling under mounting losses will not offer any rate cut for the customers. Therefore, home loans and car loans will continue to pinch the pockets of the bank customers though the Reserve Bank of India has cut repo rates by 125 basis points.
4. What are the other constituents which are affected?The government which is the largest shareholder in public sector banks loses out on dividends from the banks. Moreover the government in its Economic Survey 2016 has mentioned that banks would require Rs 1.8 lakh crore which will be taxpayers' money at the end of the day. Another effect is that banks, being more worried about loan recovery fail to invest in latest technologies and digitization of banking. Thus, customer convenience is affected.
By Sun Capital
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