The government is considering floating a special purpose vehicle (SPV) that 
would buy non-performing assets, or NPAs, of domestic banks. Bank NPAs are 
expected to enlarge over time. 

The proposal for creating an SPV is being debated by the finance ministry and 
the regulators as a pre-emptive step to protect the financial sector from 
widespread defaults; it is learnt from government sources. 

The subject is likely to figure in finance minister P Chidambaram's meeting 
with heads of the public sector banks on Tuesday. The global financial crisis 
has choked liquidity around the world and raised across-the-board defaults and 
delinquencies. As a result, banks in India have become risk-averse in lending. 
The government thinking is that an SPV will help banks get rid of their bad 
assets and free up the capital for lending. This would improve liquidity 
conditions in the market and bank balance sheets. 

Officials recognise that as the crisis lingers on the proportion of bad assets 
are bound to increase. Indeed, during the July-September 2008 quarter, net 
non-performing advances of ICICI Bank grew 42.47% to Rs 4,232.93 crore against 
Rs 2,970.94 crore for the same period last year. Net NPAs as a percentage of 
net advances rose to 1.91% compared with 1.43% in the same quarter last year. 
The consolidated net NPA ratio of the bank and its subsidiaries was at 1.60%. 
In contrast, the net NPA ratio of SBI improved to 1.34% as of September 2008 
(1.42% in June 2008). Gross non-performing assets of HDFC Bank stood at 1.57% 
of gross advances for the quarter ended September 2008 while its net NPA is at 
0.57% of net advances. 

"Over the coming six months, NPAs might go up, and in addition to questions 
about liquidity, questions about insolvency will also become important," 
according to a latest NIPFP-DEA research paper. The net NPA ratio, which is 
used to measure the overall quality of banks' loan book, stood at 1% in 2007-08 
for all banks operating in India, according to RBI data. 

The structure on the SPV is expected to be on the lines of the Asset 
Reconstruction Company (India) Ltd, or Arcil, with government being a dominant 
stakeholder in it, it is understood. Arcil is promoted by State Bank of India, 
IDBI Bank, ICICI Bank and Punjab National Bank, who collectively own over 
66.02%. The government of India does not have any direct stake in Arcil. The 
finance ministry had announced a plan to recapitalisebanks to ensure that their 
capital adequacy is at 12%

http://www.financialexpress.com/news/govt-considering-spv-to-buy-bad-loans-of-banks/380660/0
"All you need is ignorance and confidence; then success is sure."









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