Reserve Bank deputy governor N S Vishwanathan today said the deadline for banks to clean up their balance sheet 'stands' at March 2017, even as its governor Urjit Patel hinting at pragmatic approach in dealing with NPAs.
"It ( March 2017 deadline to clean up of balance sheet) stands," Vishwanathan told reporters when asked if the clean up deadline remains unchanged.
He was at Infrastructure Finance summit organised by Assocham.
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When asked about the stress asset trends in September quarter, Vishwanathan said incremental stress is coming down.
"The basic way we are looking at is that the increment (in stress) is coming down. We are seeing the trend across the sectors ," Vishwanathan said.
In August this year, RBI deputy governor S S Mundra had said level of stressed advances in banking sector has risen to 12 per cent as gross non-performing assets nearly doubled to 8.7 per cent in June quarter.
System-level stressed advances, which includes GNPAs and restructured standard advances during March 2016, were 11.4 per cent, while they were at 10.9 per cent as of March 2015.
Mundra had said stressed assets of public sector banks have jumped to 15.4 per cent in the June quarter as against 14.4 per cent in March 2016 and 13.2 per cent in March 2015.
Earlier speaking at the event, Vishwanathan said bad loans in the infrastructure sector is close to 16-17 per cent of the total advances.
"It is an important issue and we need to have various ways to deal with it," he said.
He said the structuring of infrastructure financing has to be very correct as their projects have long gestation.
"These are long gestation project that need to have a proper mix of equity and loan funding," he said.
The timeline for completion of project need to assessed realistically upfront so that the date of commencement of commercial operations (DCCO) is not artificially fixed without taking into consideration the normal time taken for executing such projects.
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