Only Standard Loan Accounts As Of March 1 Can Be Recast Under Moratorium: RBI

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has clarified that loans which have remained standard without any defaults as of March 1, 2020, will be
eligible for restructuring under the pandemic-related resolution framework issued in August.In clarifications issued late last night to
borrowers as well as lenders about the August 6 circular, RBI said a loan account that was due for more than 30 days as on March 1, 2020,
but subsequently got regularised, will not be ineligible for resolution under the COVID-19 resolution framework.This is because the
restructuring framework is applicable only for eligible borrowers who were classified as standard as of March 1, 2020.However, such accounts
may still be resolved under the prudential framework dated June 7, 2019, the central bank said.Similarly, the regulator said restructuring
of under-implementation project loans involving deferment of date of commencement of operations (DCCO) are excluded from the scope of
resolution framework and that such accounts will continue to be governed by the February 7, 2020, and the other relevant instructions as
applicable to specific category of lending institutions.Also, in case of multiple lenders to a single borrower whose resolution is
undertaken, all lending institutions will have to enter into an inter-creditor agreement.On whether loans of Rs 100 crore and above will
require an independent credit evaluation by any one credit rating agency, the apex bank said, in case credit opinion is obtained from more
than one rating agency, all such credit opinions must be RP4 rating or above.The clarification also said the new definition of micro, small
and medium enterprises (MSMEs) effective June 26, will not impact their eligibility for resolution but will be based on the definition that
existed as of March 1, 2020.It also clarified that any company from any sector is eligible for resolution subject, except those exclusions
prescribed in paragraph 2 of the annex to the August 6 circular and also those sector-specific thresholds not specified in the circular
dated September 7
But lenders shall make their own internal assessments regarding eligibility.Loans against property will also be eligible for recast if they
don't fall under the personal loan category.The quantum of the loan eligible for recast depends on the outstanding as on the date of
invocation, which is March 1, 2020, provided it was a standard account then.It has also been clarified that all farm credit exposures,
including non-banking financial institution (NBFCs), can be recast under this scheme, but loans to allied activities such as dairy,
fisheries, animal husbandry, poultry, bee-keeping and sericulture are excluded from the scope of the resolution framework.But loans given to
farmer households are eligible for resolution if they are not under other exclusion conditions listed in the framework.On the loans to the
realty sector, RBI said the requirement of inter-creditor agreement is a basic feature of the prudential framework for resolution issued on
June 7, 2019, and consequently that of the pandemic resolution framework as well.However, RBI said there is sufficient flexibility to the
lenders to formulate such pacts in respect of a legal entity to which they have exposure that address the specific requirements of each
borrowers on a case-to-case basis, including designing different resolution approaches for different projects under the same borrower within
an pact.For borrowers not eligible for resolution under the circular dated August 6, 2020, all the extant instructions shall still be in
force
However, if any entity is otherwise eligible to be resolved under the new resolution framework, only this framework can be used for
resolving the stress arising out of the pandemic.All microfinance institution/self-help group loans meeting the basic eligibility criteria,
unless covered by the specific exclusions, are eligible resolution but personal loans from these categories will not be recast.Similarly
investment exposures that are credit substitutes like corporate bonds and commercial papers are also eligible for resolution, the RBI
said.On whether the list of financial parameters prescribed by the expert committee and notified by RBI on September 7, 2020, are applicable
only to borrowers having exposure of over Rs 1,500 crore, it said the September 7 instructions are applicable to all borrowers whose
resolution is being undertaken as per the August 6, 2020, on resolution framework, the RBI said.