RBI puts Bank of India under prompt corrective action

in worldnews •  7 years ago 

Bank of India says high net NPAs, insufficient common equity tier 1 capital and negative return on assets for two consecutive years has prompted the RBI action

Bank of India (BoI) on Wednesday became the eighth lender to come under the Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI) prompt corrective action (PCA), as bad loans soared and return on assets turned negative at the state-owned lender. The regulator also placed additional restrictions on United Bank of India, which was the first to go under PCA three years ago.

“This is to inform that the Reserve Bank of India vide their letter dated 19 December, has placed the Bank under Prompt Corrective Action Framework, consequent to the onsite inspection under the risk based supervision model carried out for year ended March 2017,” said the bank in its notification to the stock exchanges on Wednesday. “This is in view of high net NPA, insufficient CET1 capital (common equity tier 1) and negative RoA (Return on Assets) for two consecutive years,” it said.

Gross non-performing assets at Bank of India more than doubled in the past two years, touching Rs52,045 crore on March. As a percentage of total bad loans, gross NPA stood at 12.62% and return on assets at -0.24% at the end of March. The bank had reported a net loss of Rs1,558 crore for the year ended March against a loss of Rs6,089 crore a year ago.

“After the inspection for the fiscal year 2016-17, RBI asked the bank to reclassify some of the accounts as NPA. These are loans which were part of a consortium. In BoI’s case, majority of the accounts are backed by stand by letter of credit (SBLC) and will be recovered in the fourth quarter,” said Dinabandhu Mohapatra, managing director and chief executive of Bank of India.

The RBI action comes at a time when the bank was looking to raise Rs3,000 crore through a qualified institutional placement (QIP). The bank is also expecting capital from the government through recapitalization bonds. Under RBI’s new PCA framework, breaching a net NPA ratio of 6% invites action. Under the old rules, net NPA ratio had to breach 10% for taking action. BoI’s net NPA ratio breached 6% in the March 2016 quarter and stood at 6.90% at the end of March 2017.

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