Opinion: Bad Bank Politically Expedient Before 2019 Polls, But A Bad Idea

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Bad ideas keep returning to the corridors of power in New Delhi with the unfailing regularity of migratory
birds
This year is no exception
According to media reports, some kind of a state-blessed asset manager to take over the distressed assets of Indian lenders is being
considered again.The proposal to set up a bad bank looked senseless even when it was first mooted in early 2016
It looked downright silly when the finance ministry floated the idea of raiding the central bank's reserves to run the rehab clinic for
toxic debt.As much as 90 percent of nonperforming assets are with state-run banks
Suppose they're asked to unload the mess into something like Sareb, the Spanish bad bank whose shareholders include Banco Santander SA and
CaixaBank SA, among others
Sareb investors are set to lose 73 percent of their original investment
If the same happens to Indian lenders' equity, taxpayers might end up paying over and above the $32 billion recapitalization for which
they're already on the hook.The whole point of having a bad bank is to discover and recover the steady-state economic value of assets that
may be currently depressed
In Sareb's case, the task was relatively easy because boom-bust cycles in real estate - the recipient of Spain's lending binge - are
fairly predictable, certainly more so than the economics of Indian power plants
(About 12 percent of the country's total power generation capacity is in financial distress.)Besides, Sareb assumed the loans of savings
banks after a 45.6 percent reduction in their carrying value
To compensate the proposed Indian bad bank for under-recovery risk, exposing lenders to a haircut of even 50 percent may not be adequate,
according to Jefferies analysts Nilanjan Karfa and Harshit Toshniwal
Given just how capital-starved some of the 21 state-run banks are, having them book steep upfront losses on sales would necessitate
immediate consolidation or, in some cases, closure
That would mean taking on powerful unions.The maneuver makes sense only if unclogging balance sheets restores lenders' profitability to a
point where they can absorb future losses on their bad-bank investment
With a respected former central bank governor saying that confidence in state-controlled lenders is at a historic low, miracles can't be the
base-case scenario.Besides, for a decisive turnaround, there must be parallel efforts to improve governance, risk management and
underwriting standards
The urgency with which politicians and bureaucrats are looking for a solution is directly proportional to the existential threat to India's
government-dominated banking sector
Take away the hanging sword, and the pressure to reform may also ebb.So why then a bad bank A year has elapsed, and bankruptcy resolution,
which was supposed to take no more than 270 days, has so far been successful with only two large debtors out of an original list of a dozen
Meanwhile, the central bank - the regulator - has taken away lenders' leeway to extend and pretend
They're now being forced to make aggressive loan-loss provisions
But where's the money Hardening yields are inflicting mark-to-market losses on state-run banks' outsize holdings of government debt,
crimping their ability to climb out of the hole.A bad bank will buy some time, and give the impression something is being done
With general elections due next year, this looks like a politically expedient proposal of dubious economic merit.(Andy Mukherjee is a
Bloomberg Gadfly columnist covering industrial companies and financial services
He previously was a columnist for Reuters Breakingviews
He has also worked for the Straits Times, ET NOW and Bloomberg News.)Disclaimer: The opinions expressed within this article are the personal
opinions of the author
The facts and opinions appearing in the article do not reflect the views of TheIndianSubcontinent and TheIndianSubcontinent does not assume
any responsibility or liability for the same.(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by TheIndianSubcontinent staff and is
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