By Nupur Anand
MUMBAI (Reuters) - State Bank of India is considering offloading pools of non-performing retail loans worth less than 10 billion rupees ($132 million) to asset reconstruction companies, a strategy typically used for larger corporate loans.
SBI, which is India's largest lender by assets, had gross non-performing assets of 1,200 billion rupees at the end of December, representing 4.5% of its loan book, of which retail loans accounted for more than 619 billion rupees.
Selling a smaller portfolio of retail loans to asset reconstruction companies (ARCs) will help to test the market and also assess the depth of demand.
"We are going to evaluate selling pools of unsecured retail loans and also some retail small and medium enterprises portfolio which is seeing a little elevated stress at this point in time to ARCs or special situation funds," SBI Managing Director Swaminathan Janakiraman told Reuters on Wednesday.
"This will also essentially help to free our people engaged in chasing such small loans which can then be used for recovery of larger corporate loans where chances of getting a better recovery exist," Janakiraman added in an interview.
SBI also expects the country's bad bank, an ARC which is focused on resolving larger corporate soured loans, to start submitting binding offers for bad loans worth more than 500 billion rupees from Thursday.
Under guidelines by which the bad bank was granted its licence, it is expected to commence business by March 31.
"We expect that the binding offers for the stressed assets from the National ARC is likely to be between 10-40% of the total dues which is typically what we realise via ARC sale," Janakiraman said, adding he was not unduly concerned by delays.
($1 = 75.7568 Indian rupees)
(Reporting by Nupur Anand; Editing by Alexander Smith)
(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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