Policy on Sale of stressed assets 
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 In terms of extant instructions of the Reserve Bank, the board of banks  shall lay down detailed policies and guidelines on sale of their  stressed assets to Securitisation Companies (#ASC)/ Reconstruction Companies (#ARC). The policy, inter alia, shall cover the following aspects:
 1. Financial assets to be sold;
 Norms and procedure for sale of such financial assets;
 Valuation procedure to be followed to ensure that the realisable value of financial assets is reasonably estimated;
 Delegation of powers of various functionaries for taking decision on the sale of the financial assets; etc.
 2. In order to enhance transparency in the entire process of sale of stressed assets, it is decided as under:
 Identification of stressed assets beyond a specified value, as may be  determined by bank’s policy, for sale shall be top-down i.e., the head  office/corporate office of the bank shall be actively involved in  identification of stressed assets, including assets which are classified  as Special Mention Account, to be put on sale. Early identification  will help in low vintage and better price realisation for banks;
  At least once in a year, preferably at the beginning of the year, banks  shall, with the approval of their Board, identify and list internally  the specific financial assets identified for sale to other institutions,  including #ASCs /#ARCs;
 At a minimum, all assets classified as ‘#doubtfulasset’  above a threshold amount should be reviewed by the board/board  committee on periodic basis and a view, with documented rationale, is to  be taken on exit or otherwise. The assets identified for exit shall be  listed for the purpose of sale as indicated above;
 Prospective buyers need not be restricted to ASCs/ARCs. Banks may also offer the assets to other banks/#NBFCs/FIs,  etc. who have the necessary capital and expertise in resolving stressed  assets. Participation of more buyers will result in better price  discovery;
 In order to attract a wide variety of buyers, the  invitation for bids should preferably be publicly solicited so as to  enable participation of as many prospective buyers as possible. In such  cases, it would be desirable to use e-auction platforms. An open auction  process, apart from attracting a larger set of borrowers, is expected  to result in better price discovery. Banks should lay down a Board  approved policy in this regard;
 Banks must provide adequate time  for due diligence by prospective buyers which may vary as per the size  of the assets, with a floor of two weeks;
 Banks should have clear  policies with regard to valuation of assets proposed to be sold. In  particular it must be clearly specified as to in which cases internal  valuation would be accepted and where #externalvaluation would be needed. However, in case of exposures beyond Rs.50 crore, banks shall obtain two external valuation reports;
 The cost of valuation exercise shall be borne by the bank, to ensure that the bank's interests are protected;
 The discount rate used by banks in the valuation exercise shall be  spelt out in the policy. This may be either cost of equity or average  cost of funds or opportunity cost or some other relevant rate, subject  to a floor of the contracted interest rate and penalty, if any.
3. Banks shall review the efficacy of their extant policies on sale of #NPAs, with focus on valuation of stressed assets, and rework their policies by appropriately adopting the above principles.
 Investment by banks in security receipts backed by assets sold by them
 4. In order to make sure that sale of stressed assets by banks actually  result in ‘true sale’ of assets and to create a vibrant stressed assets  market, it has been decided to progressively restrict banks’ investment  in SRs backed by their own stressed assets.
 i) With effect from  April 1, 2017, where the investment by a bank in SRs backed by stressed  assets sold by it, under an asset securitisation, is more than 50  percent of SRs backed by its sold assets and issued under that  securitisation, the provisions held in respect of these SRs will be  subject to a floor; this floor shall be progressive provisioning as per  extant asset classification and provisioning norms, notionally treating  book value of these SRs as the corresponding #stressedloans,  assuming these had remained, without recovery of principal, on the  bank's books. In effect, provisioning requirement on SRs will be higher  of the:
 provisioning rate required in terms of net asset value declared by the ASCs/ARCs; and
 provisioning rate as applicable to the underlying loans, assuming that the loans notionally continued in the books of the bank;
 ii) With effect from April 1, 2018, the above threshold of 50 percent will stand reduced to 10 percent.
 Disclosure of Investment in SRs
5. In addition to the existing disclosure requirements, banks shall  make following disclosures pertaining to their investments in #securityreceipts:
 ParticularsSRs issued within past 5 yearsSRs issued more than 5 years  ago but within past 8 yearsSRs issued more than 8 years ago(i) Book  value of SRs backed by NPAs sold by the bank as underlying    Provision  held against (i)   (ii)Book value of SRs backed by NPAs sold by other  banks / #financialinstitutions / non-banking financial companies as underlying    Provision held against (ii)   Total (i) + (ii) 
 Debt Aggregation – First right of refusal
 6. To enhance ASC/ARCs ability to aggregate debt faster, a bank  offering stressed assets for sale shall offer the first right of refusal  to a ASC/ARC which has already acquired the highest and at the same  time a significant share (~25-30%) of the asset, for acquiring the asset  by matching the highest bid. This requires the process of price  discovery via auction, as described elsewhere, to be done first.
 Swiss Challenge Method – Enabling Low Vintage and #DebtAggregation
 7. In order to bring down the vintage of NPAs sold by banks as well as  to enable faster debt aggregation by ASC/ARCs, banks shall put in place  board approved policy on adoption of Swiss Challenge Method for sale of  their stressed assets to ASCs/ARCs/other banks/NBFCs/FIs, etc. For this  purpose, as indicated in paragraph 2 of this circular, the  board/committee of the board shall conduct periodic review (at least  once in a year) of their stressed - asset portfolio, with a view to  decide on the proposed course of action to resolve the portfolio in  terms of their loan recovery policy. During such review, the bank should  identify the assets which will be offered for sale among prospective  buyers and an authenticated list of such assets shall be maintained by  the bank. The list may, at the discretion of the bank, be disclosed to  prospective bidder on entering into confidentiality agreement. The broad  contours of the #SwissChallengeMethod are as under:
 I. A prospective buyer interested in buying a specific stressed asset may offer a bid to the bank;
 II. If the asset features in the list of assets for sale maintained by  the bank, and if the aforesaid bidder offers more than the minimum  percentage specified in the bank’s policy (say, 30 percent of #outstandingloan)  in the form of cash, the bank shall be required to publicly call for  counter bids from other prospective buyers, on comparable terms;
  III. Once bids are received, the bank shall first invite the ASC/ARC, if  any, which has already acquired highest significant stake (as indicated  at paragraph 6 above) to match the highest bid. Ceteris paribus, the  order of preference to sell the asset shall be as follows: i) The  ASC/ARC which has already acquired highest significant stake; ii) The  original bidder and iii) The highest bidder during the counter bidding  process.
 IV. Bank will have the following two options:
 i. Sell the asset to winning bidder, as determined above;
 ii. If the bank decides not to sell the asset to winning bidder, bank  will be required to make immediate provision on the account to the  extent of the higher of:
 The discount on the book value quoted by the highest bidder; and
 The provisioning required as per extant asset classification and provisioning norms.
 Buy-Back of Financial Assets
 8. The extant guidelines of Reserve Bank do not prohibit banks from  taking over standard accounts from ASCs/ARCs. Accordingly, in cases  where ASCs/ARCs have successfully implemented a restructuring plan for  the stressed assets acquired by them, banks may, at their discretion,  with appropriate due diligence, take over such assets after the  ‘specified period’ (as defined in terms of extant guidelines on  restructuring) provided that the account performed satisfactorily during  the ‘specified period’. Banks may frame a board approved policy  containing various aspects governing such take over viz., type of assets  that may be taken over, due diligence requirements, viability criteria,  performance requirement of asset, etc. However, a bank cannot at any  point of time take over from ASCs/ARCs the assets they have themselves  earlier sold.
 ✩ www.financecentre.in
» email: ask@regulatory.in
» email: ask@regulatory.in
 

