Global Economy

Finance Minister calls state-owned lenders' meet amid global banking crisis


Finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman has called a special meeting of state-run lenders later this week to seek their views on heightened global concerns over the banking system’s vulnerability due to monetary tightening.

The finance minister will also assess the performance of public sector banks (PSBs) as FY23 draws to a close, besides their capital requirements, if any, said a person with knowledge of the matter.

Though experts have ruled out any possible spillover impact on domestic banks given their strong balance sheets, the government wants to know from the lenders whether any policy intervention is required. “A review will be undertaken likely on Saturday,” said the person cited above. The government has already been in touch with financial sector regulators. Any local impact has been ruled out with banks’ key parameters remaining robust, the person said. The government wants to make a deep-dive assessment to take pre-emptive steps if needed, the person said.

The finance ministry has already asked all state-run banks to draw up a strategic roadmap for three years starting FY24. The government is also likely to approve the next generation of reforms in public sector banks under the Ease 6.0 programme in the first week of April.

The collapse of two regional banks in the US – Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank – and the forced merger of Credit Suisse Group AG with rival UBS Group AG have fanned panic over a domino effect on the global banking sector.

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Cautious approach taken
The rapid rise in interest rates in the US and Europe has imposed large mark-to-market losses on banks holding long-maturity debt. Worried depositors pulling out funds, as happened in the case of Silicon Valley Bank, could lead to more failures.The US administration is pushing to save First Republic Bank, which has lost almost 40% of its deposits.

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Reserve Bank of India governor Shaktikanta Das has said that the Indian banking system continues to be stable and resilient but cautioned banks against any excessive asset-liability mismatch.

“We’ve strengthened our engagement with the senior management and boards of banks. The focus is more on identifying the root cause of vulnerabilities, rather than dealing with the symptoms alone,” he said in a speech last week.

The offsite supervision of banks has also become more intense and frequent, he said.

The gross non-performing assets (NPAs) of all scheduled commercial banks dropped to 5.8% of gross advances at the end of March 2022 from 11.2% at the end of March 2018.

In a reply to a question in Parliament on Monday, the government pointed out that all public sector banks were profitable. Aggregate profit was Rs 66,543 crore in FY22 and has risen to Rs 70,167 crore in the first nine months of the current financial year.

The capital adequacy ratio of public sector banks improved significantly to 14.5% in December 2022 from 11.5% in March 2015. Also, Indian lenders have passed the central bank‘s stress tests.



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