Why in news?
More than a dozen of lenders led by State Bank of India recently signed the inter-creditor agreement (ICA).
What is the agreement on?
- The agreement is part of the proposed Project Sashakt.
- “Sashakt” plan is approved by the government to address the problem of resolving bad loans.
- The objective is to use this ICA for faster facilitation of resolution of stressed assets.
- It is aimed at the resolution of loan accounts with a size of Rs. 50 crore and above that are under the control of a group of lenders.
How did it evolve?
- Over the last few years, stressed assets resolution has been a challenge, despite RBI's consistent direction to banks.
- A panel led by banker Sunil Mehta identified the disagreement among joint lenders as the biggest problem in resolution.
- It recommended the bank-led resolution approach in the form of inter-creditor agreement.
- This is an improvement on the earlier model of solely relying on the joint lenders’ forum to arrive at a consensus.
What are the provisions?
- If 66% of the lenders agree to a resolution plan it would be binding on all lenders.
- A ‘dissenting creditor’ is that which votes against or abstains from voting for the resolution plan approved by the committee.
- A dissenting creditor could sell its loan at a discount of 15% of the liquidation value to other lenders.
- Liquidation value is the amount at which a company could sell its assets and settle liabilities.
- Another option is to sell their loans to any person at a price mutually arrived between dissenting lender and the buyer.
- However, it cannot sell it to an asset reconstruction company.
- The agreement has a standstill clause wherein all lenders are barred from enforcing any legal action against the borrower.
- During standstill period, lenders are also barred from transferring or assigning their loan to any other person except a bank or finance company.
What are the concerns?
- The obligation on the lead lender to come up with a time-bound resolution plan can have unintended consequences.
- Banks may be compelled to engage in a rush sale of stressed assets due to arbitrary deadlines.
- This will work against the interests of lenders looking to get the best price for their stressed assets.
- Besides, the biggest challenge to bad loan resolution is the absence of buyers to purchase stressed assets.
- There is also the unwillingness of banks to sell their loans at a deep discount to their face value.
Source: Economic Times, The Hindu