Don’t miss the latest developments in business and finance.

Fund requirement assessment for banks ongoing process: Finmin

Image
Press Trust of India New Delhi
Last Updated : Jan 28 2016 | 4:13 PM IST
Amidst reports that additional fund infusion may be needed for state-owned banks, the Finance Ministry today said assessment of their capital needs is an ongoing process that is reviewed periodically.
"Capital assessment is an ongoing process. We continue to review as situation doesn't remain the same as it was one year ago," Financial Services Secretary Anjuly Chib Duggal said.
The Indradhanush plan envisages Rs 70,000 crore of capital infusion over the next four years. Of this Rs 25,000 crore each will be infused in 2015-16 and 2016-17 and Rs 10,000 crore each in 2017-18 and 2018-19.
The government estimates that state-run lenders would require Rs 1.8 trillion (Rs 1.8 lakh crore) over the next four years. Banks will have to raise the balance Rs 1.10 trillion from the market.
But the calculation has changed after RBI identified top 150 defaulters and asked banks to make provisions for those accounts and clean their books by March, 2017.
Following this, the banks are demanding higher capital infusion from the government as they are unable to raise funds from the market in prevailing conditions. Their stocks are trading on an average almost 60 per cent below their March, 2015 high, and also as higher provisioning norms have left them cash starved.

Also Read

Under Indradhanush, the government had already infused Rs 20,088 crore into 13 public sector banks last September and the remaining Rs 5,000 crore would be given in the March quarter looking at the performance in the first nine months.
Many banks, who were looking to raise funds through qualified institutional placement, are planning to defer them as market conditions are not very conducive.
Recently, the country's largest lender State Bank of India chairperson Arundhati Bhattacharya had expressed skepticism about launching the proposed Rs 15,000-crore follow-on public offer of the bank this year citing poor market conditions.
(Reopens DEL17)
According to ministry sources, the resolution followed a case pertaining to an assessment order passed by tax official on March 30 in which a demand of Rs 10,000 crore was raised against State Bank of India and it was asked to pay the dues on the same day.
The bank paid the tax and requested for rectification on the same day because the actual amount paid in advance tax was Rs 4,900 crore, while assessing officer had taken only Rs 1,200 crore. The assessing officer had therefore slapped an interest of Rs 5,800 crore on short payment of advance tax, sources said.
The assessing officer passed rectification order on March 31, 2016, sources said, adding that this was a clear case of how the officers of the Income Tax Department jacked up their achievement of revenue collection for the year.
The Revenue Department took a serious view of this and asked CBDT to initiate action against responsible officers for this, mainly because this time the government had made it very clear to all field functionaries that no such unfair means will be used for jacking up the revenue collection achievement, sources said.

More From This Section

First Published: Jan 28 2016 | 4:13 PM IST

Next Story