“The number one priority would be raising capital,” Gill said in an interview in Mumbai on Monday, adding that the infusion would take place in two almost equal tranches with the first likely by the end of September. “Effectively, what we need is growth capital.”
India’s shadow banking woes that emerged last September have revealed cracks in YES Bank’s balance sheet. The country’s fourth-largest private-sector bank has $2.9 billion of exposure to junk-rated firms, including Dewan Housing Finance Corp, and parts of Anil Ambani’s conglomerate, companies at the heart of the unfolding crisis.
Gill said he has been “personally involved on a day-to-day basis,” in dealing with large companies facing repayment difficulties, including for loans extended to Ambani’s firms, Dewan and the Essel Group. The three account for about two-third of the Rs 10,000 crore of loans on the lender’s watchlist, he said.