Saturday, March 1, 2014

A tale of two banks: United Bank far better off than Indian Bank

A tale of two banks: United Bank far better off than Indian Bank
All United Bank of India needs is capital from the government and the right kind of leadership to get out of the mess. Photo: Indranil Bhoumik/Mint
Live Mint : Tamal Bandyopadhyay:26 Feb 14
Many in the banking industry feel the Kolkata-based United Bank of India
cannot survive on its own and must be merged with another bank. Some
 are even reliving the Indian Bank experience in United Bank’s current 
state of affairs. But barring the fact that both were part of the first set of 
14 banks that were nationalized on 19 July, 1969, they are as different 
as chalk and cheese.
Indeed, United Bank is not in good health. It made a Rs.1,238.08 crore
 net loss in the December quarter, after a Rs.489.47 crore net loss in
 the previous quarter. Its net worth has eroded substantially and its
 capital adequacy ratio has dropped to around 9%, the floor level.
In the December quarter, United Bank’s operating profit was
 Rs.545,08 crore, up from Rs.373.39 crore in the previous
 quarter. Despite that, it ended up making net losses in both 
the quarters as it had to set aside hefty amounts to take care of its bad loans.
In the September quarter, it made a provision for 
Rs.987.35 crore; in the December quarter, the provision
 rose to Rs.1,857.83 crore. The bank’s gross non-performing
 assets (NPAs) rose from 5.39% in the September quarter to
 10.82% in the December quarter. After setting aside money,
 net NPA increased from 5.39% of its total loans in the September 
quarter to 7.44% in the three months ended December.
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) ordered a forensic audit of United
 Bank’s books late last year and restrained its management from
 giving loans beyondRs.10 crore. Till the bank gets fresh capital, 
it will not be able to expand its loan book.
If these facts encourage one to think that United Bank is in a dire 
state of affairs and it must either be merged or its board superseded 
and RBI must appoint an administrator to run the bank and nurse it
 back to health, let’s take a look at what happened to the Chennai-
based Indian Bank. It had gone through worse times and ye
t managed to walk on its own.
For a long time since the late-1980s, the Chennai-based bank
 faced huge asset-liability mismatches and had to depend on the
 overnight call money market to meet regulatory requirements 
such as cash reserve ratio and compulsory buying of government 
bonds. RBI restrained the bank from credit expansion in 1992 but it 
did not care to listen to the regulator. In 1996, it posted a net loss of 
Rs.1,336.40 crore, the highest by any bank in India till that time, and
 its net worth was wiped out by Rs.650.86 crore.
In fact, Indian Bank posted net losses for eight years at a stretch—
between 1994 and 2001—and the government kept pumping in money
 to keep it afloat. By 2001, its capital adequacy ratio was 13.6%. At one 
point of time, its gross NPAs were around 43% and net NPAs 21.6% 
of total loans.
Between 1998 and 2003—a year after Indian Bank made a net profit—
the government pumped in at least Rs.4,500 crore into it. The money 
was big considering the fact that Indian Bank at that time was roughly 
one-fifth of the size of United Bank now.
Rating agency Icra Ltd had chalked out a revival plan for Indian Bank in 
1997 and later, in 1999, an advisory group was formed under the
 chairmanship ofDeepak Parekh to improve the bank’s performance
Ranjana Kumar, its former chairperson, executed the restructuring
 plans deftly and turned around the bank.
United Bank is far better placed than Indian Bank. All it needs is
 capital from the government and the right kind of leadership to get 
out of the mess.
Banker’s Trust Realtime is a frequent blog by Tamal Bandyopadhyay, 
who writes a popular weekly column Banker’s Trust.​

No comments:

Post a Comment