PSB fund injection not enough for loan growth

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
MUMBAI: The Centre’s capital investments in banks controlled by it will be sufficient only to meet regulatory needs and, hence, restrict
their loan growth to about 4-5per cent
But the need for capital will not grow much after FY19 as profitability will rise in line with lower credit costs because of the ongoing
cleanup in balance sheets, Moody’s said. The analysis by the global credit rating agency shows that government’s capital injections will
only be enough to enable all public sector banks achieve the Common Equity Tier 1 (CET1) ratios of at least 8per cent by March 2019, giving
the lenders a capitalisation profile comparable to those of their similarly rated peers globally. North Block plans to provide Rupee 65,000
crore of new capital for public sector banks in FY19 after infusing Rupee90,000 crore in FY18
So far this year, the government has infused Rupee 11,300 crore into Punjab National Bank, Andhra Bank, Allahabad Bank, Corporation Bank and
Indian Overseas bank. The capital injections will enable the banks to strengthen their provision coverage, but may not be sufficient if they
take large writedowns on the non-performing loans (NPLs) they sell as part of new resolution proceedings
An increase in provisions could raise their capital needs significantly, Moody’s said. “The large-scale recapitalization plan, which was
meant to improve capital buffers and loan-loss reserves a n d support sufficiently strong loan growth, will now be just enough to shore up
capital ratios above regulatory requirements because the banks’ capital shortfalls have grown larger t h a n the government’s initial
projection,” says Alka Anbarasu, Moody’s vice president and senior credit officer.