"The details are being worked out," he said, when asked if SBI will lead the proposed bad bank or the national ARC to tackle mounting bad loans, which has crossed Rs 8 trillion.
"We are working towards stressed assets funds. As I have said multiple times in the past, we need an efficient resolution and then recovery processes for our banks," the Union Minister of State for Finance told reporters on the sidelines of a Crisil seminar on corporate bond markets here.
According to a report, an arm of SBI may team up with global private equity major Warburg Pincus and two sovereign wealth funds from West Asia to launch a USD 3-billion distressed assets fund.
The maiden sovereign investment fund, National Investment and Infrastructure Fund, with a corpus of Rs 40,000 crore, may also invest in the proposed national bad bank.
The government had first floated the idea of a 'bad bank' last year, but Reserve Bank Governor Raghuram Rajan had questioned its efficacy in a system where public-sector lenders held the bulk of bad loans.
Rajan had added that such a body with state-run characteristics can face trouble if it pays too high for an asset, while if it pays too low, the state-run banks will face flak for selling cheap.
"It is not clear to me that a quasi-public entity will solve that problem effectively," he had said.
Given the huge quantum of stressed assets (gross NPAs of
45 listed banks touched 13 per cent in March 2016 at Rs 5.81 trillion), a significant number of players have evinced interest in forming a distressed assets funds.
"There are many other players that are looking to invest in the stressed assets. So we expect there will be a vibrant market to be able to take these assets that are in need of equity capital right now to bring them back to high quality operating performance," Sinha said.
On the progress on the Rs 40,000-crore NIIF, the minister said "we are close to getting the funds".
Stating the proposed sovereign fund will play a very "pragmatic" role, Sinha said, "We are very close to getting the funds. The legal structure is already in place. We have gone for a very extensive global search for the CEO."
The biggest challenge is not in the fixed income side but the equity side as "we don't have sufficient long-term equity risk capital available which would absorb some of the stress that comes when equity investing is there with long gestation period and very risky projects," Sinha said.
Asked about the risks from China flagged by Rajan earlier, Sinha said there are a variety of factors, including the slowdown in the world's second largest economy, turmoil in West Asia and its effect on oil prices which the government is vigilant about.
On economic growth, Sinha said it is important for GDP to grow at 8-9 per cent for a long time.
"We need to focus on the supply side and be investment
-driven," Sinha said, adding "if we do not do so, we will end up with a number of bottlenecks in the economy, as has happened historically."
Passage of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code has changed the operation of fixed income market, he added.
On rising food inflation, Sinha said it is largely due to the demand and supply mismatch in pulses and added the government is mitigating the stress through imports and building a buffer stock.
Sinha said inflation is a challenge everywhere. "As we are targeting CPI and 46 per cent of CPI is constituted by food, its prices are going to be the area we are going to focus on.
"Obviously we're looking to imports to build buffer stock, to ensure the markets work well but it is a challenging situation because global supply of pulses is limited as well. We are keeping a very close watch on 22 commodities across 54 retail markets on a weekly basis," he said.
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