PNB scam just tip of iceberg

PNB scam just tip of iceberg
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Highlights

Investors may have been shocked when one of India\'s biggest banks disclosed a $1.77 billion (Rs 7,400 crore) fraud by a billionaire jeweller, but the Reserve Bank of India has recorded data that shows the problem runs far deeper and wider.

New Delhi: Investors may have been shocked when one of India's biggest banks disclosed a $1.77 billion (Rs 7,400 crore) fraud by a billionaire jeweller, but the Reserve Bank of India has recorded data that shows the problem runs far deeper and wider.

RBI data, which a Reuters reporter obtained through a right-to-information request, shows state-run banks have reported 8,670 ‘loan fraud’ cases totalling Rs 61,260 crore over the last five financial years up to March 31, 2017. Loan frauds typically refer to cases where the borrower intentionally tries to deceive the lending bank and does not repay the loan. The figures expose the magnitude of the problem in a banking sector already under pressure after years of poor lending practices. Bad loans surged to a record peak of nearly $149 billion last year.

Bank loan frauds have steadily increased as well, reaching Rs 17,634 crore in the latest financial year from Rs 6,357 crore in 2012-13, according to the data, which doesn't include the PNB case. Punjab National Bank, the country’s second-largest state lender, said on Wednesday two officers at a single branch had illegally steered $1.77 billion in fraudulent loans to companies, most of them controlled by billionaire jeweller Nirav Modi. It was India's biggest fraud ever.

"This might be the tip of the iceberg or the middle, and that is the worry," said Pratibha Jain, partner at law firm Nishith Desai Associates, who advises on bankruptcy cases. "The fact is we don't know what else is out there."

The RBI did not immediately respond to a request for comment. But in June 2017 the central bank, in its Financial Stability Report, called frauds in banks and financial institutions "one of the emerging risks to the financial sector". "In a number of large value frauds, serious gaps in credit underwriting standards were evident," the RBI said, adding that some of the gaps include lack of continuous monitoring of cash flows and cash profits, diversion of funds, double financing and general credit governance issues in banks.

The RBI has been commended for forcing Indian banks to fully disclose its bad loans, speed up their recovery, and stop hiding fraud cases as non-performing assets. Yet to some critics, the RBI has, at the same time, been too guarded about publicly sharing data on loan defaults or fraudulent loans. This is partly due to legal constraints on disclosing individual cases and worries investors would pummel the affected banks, making loan recovery even harder.

In fact, the numbers of loan fraud cases across India could be even higher since they only include cases reported to the RBI, which involve only loans of Rs 1 lakh or more. In its right-to-information request, Reuters sought data from 20 of India's 21 state-run lenders and obtained 15 replies. PNB topped the list with 389 cases totalling Rs 6,562 crore over the last five financial years, in terms of the total amounts involved.

Reuters was unable to obtain a detailed breakdown on the exact nature and method of the loan frauds the banks reported to RBI over the last five financial years.After PNB, Bank of Baroda had the highest amount of loan fraud reported, with Rs 4,473 crore from 389 cases and Bank of India ranked third, with loan frauds totalling Rs 4,050 from 231 cases over the same period, the data shows.

PNB plans to pay off 500 cr by March
Scam-hit PNB is considering to expedite sale of some of its fixed assets, including few office buildings not in use presently, for about Rs500 crore by March-end, sources said. The bank is planning to monetise some of its fixed assets, sources said it has large number of properties which are lying vacant.

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