According to the report by French financial services major BNP Paribas, of the total bank credit of USD 1,109 billion in the country, corporate debt worth USD 178 billion, 16.1 per cent of the total bank credit, stands the risk of default.
India is followed by Indonesia and China with 7.2 per cent and 6.6 per cent of respective total bank credit at the risk of default.
The brokerage did not specify the time-frame of the report which is based on an analysis of 738 listed companies in Asia which have a combined gross debt of USD 1.7 trillion.
"Mounting corporate debt is one of the biggest problems for Asian economies," the report said.
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"Our country-wise analysis highlights the following percentages of bank loans at risk: 6.6 per cent in China, 16.1 per cent in India, 5.8 per cent in Korea, 2.4 per cent in Thailand and 7.2 per cent in Indonesia," it said.
"The present instance, however, could be different...The government may not assume a significant part of the debt, as it did in the last instance," it added.
Last December, RBI conducted an asset quality review under
which it identified 150 top corporate accounts which are stressed.
Following this, the regulator asked banks to make provisions for all these 150 accounts by December and March quarters and get the entire books cleaned up by March next.
Already, total NPAs and stressed assets have touched 13 per cent of the system and are set to rise again in the March quarter.