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Basel III deadline extension a big relief for banks: India Ratings

Says govt's commitment to maintain its majority shareholding in public sector banks assures them of steady equity injections

Press Trust of India Kolkata
Last Updated : Mar 28 2014 | 4:08 PM IST
The Reserve Bank decision to defer the implementation of Basel III capital regulations by a year to March 2019 will give relief to banks, especially the state-run ones, from issuing hybrid tier I capital next fiscal, India Ratings said today.

The apex bank yesterday said, "the transitional period for full implementation of Basel III capital norms is extended up to March 31, 2019, instead of March 31, 2018," due to the industry's concerns on potential stress to asset quality.

"The RBI's deferral of the Basel III implementation deadline by a year has eased the pressure on banks to issue hybrid tier I capital in FY15," the rating said in a report.

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"This is a practical outcome of the current limited investor appetite for such instruments and we believe the new deadlines do not dilute the spirit of Basel III," it said.

According to an earlier estimate by RBI, banks, led by state-run lenders, as a whole need close to Rs 5 trillion on fresh capital, of which Rs 1.75 trillion will be in core capital, to meet the stringent norms under Basel III.

The regulator said there were industry-wide concerns about the potential stress on asset quality and consequential impact on performance and profitability of banks.

"This may necessitate some lead time for banks to raise capital within the internationally agreed timeline for full implementation of the Basel III capital regulations," the RBI said.

However, India Rating believes capital injection would remain a priority for banks through the rest of this decade, as the total capital required during the migration to Basel III has only gone up due to addition of an extra year.

The report said as the Government is committed towards maintaining its majority shareholding in public banks, they will keep steady equity infusion in them. The rating agency has a long-term issuer rating for the PSU banks.

The earlier guideline required banks to issue as much as Rs 26,000 crore of hybrid tier 1 in FY15, significantly higher than Rs 11,200 crore of common equity tier I that the Government has budgeted to inject during the year.

"While the capital requirement in FY15 has diminished significantly, the Government is likely to maintain its schedule of injecting capital," the report noted.

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First Published: Mar 28 2014 | 4:00 PM IST

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