Nationalised banks are hurting. And badly. Just when we thought we had
seen the worst in public sector banking (Punjab National Bank’s Rs 5,370 crore
loss), along comes Bank of India with a humongous Rs 6,089 crore minus sign before it. Barely half
the public sector banks have declared results and they have spilled oceans of
red ink in the last quarter (January-March 2016 losses so far: Rs 20,500
crore). By the time the rest of the results are out, losses will surely cross
Rs 25,000-30,000 crore, enough to soak up the entire Rs 25,000 crore of fresh
capital promised by the finance ministry this year.
This is the time for watchfulness, not excess despondency. For some of this is really
good news. If banks are finally letting it all hang out, it is a blow for
greater transparency. Their account books are now more believable. It also
means that going forward they will look at loan quality more than loan
quantity. And when the economy starts turning around, their profits will
rebound faster, especially if we continue to see interest rates weakening this
fiscal.
The other side of the coin, though, is grim. Since Finance Minister Arun
Jaitley is not promising more capital than what he has already promised (see
his interview to The Economic Times),
it means banks have to generate more resources internally or raise capital from
the market on lousy terms. This means lending will not rebound quickly, and
economic recovery will be slow. Banks may also be less keen to cut interest
rates on loans in order to protect existing margins.
While these consequences are obvious, less obvious is the possibility of
financial scams in such an environment.
Bank scams are more likely in three situations: when political meddling in bank
lending is high (which is most of the UPA period); when there is excess
optimism about growth and profitability (post-liberalisation, and post-2004);
or when banks are hurting badly - as is the case now.
While we can rule out the first two situations, unless the government is more
watchful, bankers may be tempted to show quick profits by resort to risky
manoeuvres. More so when capital is not easy to come by.
Remember the Harshad Mehta scam of 1992?
In the years following economic liberalisation in 1991, Manmohan Singh decided
to gradually end financial repression by allowing the markets to decide the
cost of money. The finance ministry, which earlier kept rates artificially low
and then forced banks to buy its paper at those low rates, started paying
market-based rates. In the era of regulated rates, the Reserve Bank also
allowed banks to hide their losses by giving them lots of leeway on prudential
norms and provisioning for losses. It was assumed that government-owned banks
were unsinkable, and so profits did not matter.
The immediate consequences of the beginning of the end of financial repression
were two-fold: the value of banks’ holdings of government paper crashed,
leading to losses. And banks had to start providing for bad loans
transparently.
In this situation, the late Harshad Mehta stepped in as saviour, and offered to
generate higher returns on banks’ holdings of treasuries. Some gullible banks
were lured, and soon Mehta was helping himself to their treasury stocks and
using that as collateral to raise money for investing in the stock markets. The
scam ended when his operations were outed by bears who wondered where he got so
much money to invest in stocks endlessly. It was a Ponzi scheme where Mehta
used stolen bonds to raise money, which then got invested in stocks, and the
returns from stocks were used to pay higher returns to banks, completing the
cycle. This scam could go on only as long as banks did not note the
(temporarily) missing bonds in their portfolio and as long as market returns
were high enough to grease the entire scam. Mehta crashlanded in jail soon
after.
Conditions today are not like 1992-93, when transparency was an unknown word in
the world of Indian banking. Today, most public sector banks are listed and
scrutinised by investors. Also, the high losses being reported today are driven
by the need for greater transparency and the political push under Narendra Modi
to end cronyism. And unlike 1992, when interest rates were rising and caused
banks portfolio losses, today the interest rate regime is trending down, and
this tends to enhance profits rather than reduce them.
But if any bank is hurting more than what is visible, managements may be
tempted to try short-cut methods of making money. Harshad Mehtas appear from
nowhere to promise banks easy money.
2016 is not 1992, but this is precisely the kind of financial crisis when bankers are sorely tempted to look beyond the rulebook. It would be foolish if the government assumes the opposite.