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A RESEARCH PROJECT REPORT ON “A STUDY OF NON PERFORMING ASSETS WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO ICICI BANK” A report submitted to Mahamaya Technical University for the partial Fulfillment of MBA Degree 2010-12 Submitted to: - Submitted by:- Dr.H.P.Maheshwari ASHISH KUMAR Director- MBA MBA – 2 nd year Greater Noida Institute of Technology Roll.No.-1027270021 Greater Noida Institute of Technology(Management Institute) Code: 272 7, Knowledge Park-II, Greater Noida (U.P)

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Page 1: A study of non performing assets with special reference to icici bank

A RESEARCH PROJECT REPORT

ON

“A STUDY OF NON PERFORMING ASSETS WITH

SPECIAL REFERENCE TO ICICI BANK”

A report submitted to Mahamaya Technical University for the partial

Fulfillment of MBA

Degree 2010-12

Submitted to: - Submitted by:- Dr.H.P.Maheshwari ASHISH KUMAR Director- MBA MBA – 2nd year Greater Noida Institute of Technology Roll.No.-1027270021

Greater Noida Institute of Technology(Management Institute) Code: 272 7, Knowledge Park-II, Greater Noida (U.P)

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CERTIFICATE

This is to certify that the Research Project Report entitled “A STUDY OF NON

PERFORMING ASSETS WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO ICICI BANK ”, Being

submitted by ASHISH KUMAR fulfillment of the requirement of Mahamaya Technical

University is a record of an independent work done by his under my guidance and

supervision.

Dr. H.P.Maheshwari Mr.Ashish Kumar Dixit

Director-MBA Assistant Professor

Greater Noida Institute of Technology GNIT, Greater Noida

(Management Institute)-Code: 272

GREATER NOIDA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY (MBA INSTITUTE) Pg.2

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DECLARATION

I ASHISH KUMAR to declare that the Research project report entitled “A

STUDY OF NON PERFORMING ASSETS WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE

TO ICICI BANK”Being submitted to the MAHAMAYA TECHNICAL

UNIVERSITY for the partial fulfillment of the requirement for the degree of

Master of Business Administration is my own endeavors and it has not been

submitted earlier to any institution/university for any degree.

Place: Greater Noida

Date: (ASHISH KUMAR)

GREATER NOIDA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY (MBA INSTITUTE) Pg.3

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ACKNOWLEDGEMENT

With profound veneration, first of all we recline ourselves before ALMIGHTY without

whose blessings ourselves is cipher.

It is my pleasure to be indebted to various people, who directly or indirectly contributed in

the development of this work and who influenced my thinking, behavior, and acts during the

course of study.

As a student specializing in finance, I came to know about the ground realities in topics like

Non Performing Assets with special reference to ICICI BANK. For this I am indebted to

Mr.Ashish Kumar Dixit my research project guidance & my faculty members who took

personal interest in my project and bore the associated headaches.

It would be unfair if I do not mention the name of Dr.H.P Maheshwari, Director, GNIT

(MBA INSTITUTE) who gave me valuable tips to complete this project.

Lastly, I would like to thank the almighty and my parents for their moral support and my

colleagues with whom I shared my day-to-day experience and received lots off suggestions

that improved my work quality.

ASHISH KUMAR

GNIT (MBA INSTITUTE)

ROLL. NO.1027270021

GREATER NOIDA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY (MBA INSTITUTE) Pg.4

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ABSTRACT

A strong banking sector is important for flourishing economy. The failure of the banking

sector may have an adverse impact on other sectors. Non-performing assets are one of the

major concerns for banks in India.

NPAs reflect the performance of banks. A high level of NPAs suggests high probability of a

large number of credit defaults that affect the profitability and net-worth of banks and also

erodes the value of the asset. The NPA growth involves the necessity of provisions, which

reduces the over all profits and shareholders value.

The issue of Non Performing Assets has been discussed at length for financial system all over

the world. The problem of NPAs is not only affecting the banks but also the whole economy.

In fact high level of NPAs in Indian banks is nothing but a reflection of the state of health of

the industry and trade.

This report deals with understanding the concept of NPAs, its magnitude and major causes

for an account becoming non-performing, projection with special reference to ICICI bank.

GREATER NOIDA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY (MBA INSTITUTE) Pg.5

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CONTENTS

CHAPTER

NO.TOPICS PAGE NO.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENT 4

ABSTRACT 5

TABLE OF CONTENT 6

1. INTRODUCTION 7

2. OBJECTIVES 9

3. NEEDS OF THE STUDY 10

5. BACKGROUND 11

6. LITERATURE REVIEW 12

7. INDUSTRY PROFILE 36

HISTORY OF BANKING 37

TRANSFORMATION IN

BANKING42

CHALLENGES IN BANKING 44

8. COMPANY PROFILE 46

INTRODUCTION 49

HISTORY 51

IMPACT OF FINANCIAL

CRISIS56

9. RESEARCH METHODOLOGY 58

10.DATA ANALYSIS AND

INTERPRETATION63

11. SUGGESTIONS AND CONCLUSION 81

12. LIMITATIONS 91

13. REFERENCES 92

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INTRODUCTION

The crucial role of bank economists in transforming the banking system in India. Economists

have to be more ‘mainstreamed’ within the operational structure of commercial banks. Apart

from the traditional functioning of macro-scanning, the inter linkages between treasuries,

dealing rooms and trading rooms of banks need to be viewed not only with the day-to-day

needs of operational necessity, but also with analytical content and policy foresight.

Banking sector reforms in India has progressed promptly on aspects like interest rate

deregulation, reduction in statutory reserve requirements, prudential norms for interest rates,

asset classification, income recognition and provisioning. But it could not match the pace

with which it was expected to do. The accomplishment of these norms at the execution stages

without restructuring the banking sector as such is creating havoc.

During pre-nationalization period and after independence, the banking sector remained in

private hands Large industries who had their control in the management of the banks were

utilizing major portion of financial resources of the banking system and as a result low

priority was accorded to priority sectors. Government of India nationalized the banks to make

them as an instrument of economic and social change and the mandate given to the banks was

to expand their networks in rural areas and to give loans to priority sectors such as small scale

industries, self-employed groups, agriculture and schemes involving women.

To a certain extent the banking sector has achieved this mandate. Lead Bank Scheme enabled

the banking system to expand its network in a planned way and make available banking

series to the large number of population and touch every strata of society by extending credit

to their productive endeavours. This is evident from the fact that population per office of

commercial bank has come down from 66,000 in the year 1969 to 11,000 in 2004. Similarly,

share of advances of public sector banks to priority sector increased form 14.6% in 1969 to

44% of the net bank credit. The number of deposit accounts of the banking system increased

from over 3 crores in 1969 to over 30 crores. Borrowed accounts increased from 2.50 lakhs to

over 2.68 crores.

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Without a sound and effective banking system in India it cannot have a healthy economy. The

banking system of India should not only be hassle free but it should be able to meet new

challenges posed by the technology and any other external and internal factors.

For the past three decades India's banking system has several outstanding achievements to its

credit. The most striking is its extensive reach. It is no longer confined to only metropolitans

or cosmopolitans in India. In fact, Indian banking system has reached even to the remote

corners of the country. This is one of the main reasons of India's growth process.

Financial sector reform in India has progressed rapidly on aspects like interest rate

deregulation, reduction in reserve requirements, barriers to entry, prudential norms and risk-

based supervision. But progress on the structural-institutional aspects has been much slower

and is a cause for concern. The sheltering of weak institutions while liberalizing operational

rules of the game is making implementation of operational changes difficult and ineffective.

Changes required to tackle the NPA problem would have to span the entire gamut of

judiciary, polity and the bureaucracy to be truly effective.

In liberalizing economy banking and financial sector get high priority. Indian banking sector

of having a serious problem due non performing. The financial reforms have helped largely

to clean NPA was around Rs. 52,000 crores in the year 2004. The earning capacity and

profitability of the bank are highly affected due to this

Non Performing Asset means an asset or account of borrower, which has been classified by a

bank or financial institution as sub-standard, doubtful or loss asset, in accordance with the

directions or guidelines relating to asset classification issued by The Reserve Bank of India.

The level of NPA act as an indicator showing the bankers credit risks and efficiency of

allocation of resource.

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OBJECTIVE OF THE STUDY

Following are the objectives of the study:

What types of challenges banking industry is facing with special reference to NPA.

How ICICI bank cope with NPA and its impact in recent economic crisis.

To find the factors that would effect level of NPAs.

To analyze the significance of each variable that might effect the NPA level.

To understand what is Non Performing Assets and what are the underlying reasons for

the emergence of the NPAs.

To understand the impacts of NPAs on the operations of the banks.

To know what steps are being taken by the Indian banking sector to reduce the NPAs?

To evaluate the comparative ratio of the banks with concerned to the NPAs.

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NEEDS OF THE STUDY

The banks not only accept the deposits of the people but also provide them credit

facilities for their development. Indian banking sector has the nation in developing the

business and service sectors. But recently the banks are facing the problem of credit risk. It is

found that many general people and business people borrow from the banks but due to some

genuine or other reasons are not able to repay back the amount drawn to the banks. The

amount which is not given back to the banks is known as the non performing assets. Many

banks are facing the problem of NPAs which hampers the business of the banks. Due to

NPAs the income of the banks is reduced and the banks have to make the large number of

the provisions that would curtail the profit of the banks and due to that the financial

performance of the banks would not show good results.

The main aim behind making this report is to know how public sector banks are

operating their business and how NPAs play its role to the operations of the public sector

banks. The report NPAs are classified according to the sector, industry, and state wise. The

present study also focuses on the existing system in India to solve the problem of NPAs and

comparative analysis to understand which bank is playing what role with concerned to NPAs.

Thus, the study would help the decision makers to understand the financial performance and

growth of public sector banks as compared to the NPAs.

This report explores an empirical approach to the analysis of Non-Performing Assets

(NPAs) with special reference of ICICI bank in India. The level of NPAs is one of the drivers

of financial stability and growth of the banking sector. This report aims to find the

fundamental factors which impact NPAs of banks. A model consisting of two types of

factors, viz., macroeconomic factors and bank-specific parameters, is developed and the

behavior of NPAs of the three categories of banks is observed. The empirical analysis

assesses how macroeconomic factors and bank-specific parameters affect NPAs of a

particular category of banks. The macroeconomic factors of the model included are GDP

growth rate and excise duty, and the bank-specific parameters are Credit Deposit Ratio

(CDR), loan exposure to priority sector, Capital Adequacy Ratio (CAR), and liquidity risk.

The results show that movement in NPAs over the years can be explained well by the factors

considered in the model for the public and private sector banks. The other important results

derived from the analysis include the finding that banks' exposure to priority sector lending

reduces NPAs.

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BACKGROUND

Granting of credit for economic activities is the prime duty of banking. Apart from

raising resources through fresh deposits, borrowings and recycling of funds received back

from borrowers constitute a major part of funding credit dispensation activity. Lending is

generally encouraged because it has the effect of funds being transferred from the system to

productive purposes, which results into economic growth. However lending also carries a risk

called credit risk, which arises from the failure of borrower. Non-recovery of loans along

with interest forms a major hurdle in the process of credit cycle. Thus, these loan losses affect

the banks profitability on a large scale. Though complete elimination of such losses is not

possible, but banks can always aim to keep the losses at .

at a low level. Non-performing Asset (NPA) has emerged since over a decade as an alarming

threat to the banking industry in our country sending distressing signals on the sustainability

and endurability of the affected banks. The positive results of the chain of measures affected

under banking reforms by the Government of India and RBI in terms of the two Narasimhan

Committee Reports in this contemporary period have been neutralized by the ill effects of this

surging threat. Despite various correctional steps administered to solve and end this problem,

concrete results are eluding. It is a sweeping and all pervasive virus confronted universally on

banking and financial institutions.

main aim of any person is the utilization of money in the best manner since the India

is country where more than half of the population has problem of running the family in the

most efficient manner. However Indian people faced large number of problem till the

development of the full fledged banking sector. The Indian banking sector came into the

developing nature mostly after the 1991 government policy. The banking sector has really

helped the Indian people to utilize the single money in the best manner as they want. People

now have started investing their money in the banks and banks also provide goods returns on

the deposited amount. The people now have at the most understood that banks provide them

good security to their deposits and so excess amounts are invested in the banks. Thus, banks

have helped the people to achieve their socio economic objectives.

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LITERATURE REVIEW

NON PERFORMING ASSETS (NPA)

Action for enforcement of security interest can be initiated only if the secured asset is

classified as Nonperforming asset. Non performing asset means an asset or account of

borrower, which has been classified by bank or financial institution as sub –standard ,

doubtful or loss asset, in accordance with the direction or guidelines relating to assets

classification issued by RBI . An amount due under any credit facility is treated as “past due

“when it is not been paid within 30 days from the due date. Due to the improvement in the

payment and settlement system, recovery climate, up gradation of technology in the banking

system etc, it was decided to dispense with “past due “concept, with effect from March 31,

2001. Accordingly as from that date, a Non performing asset shell be an advance where

i. Interest and/or instalment of principal remain overdue for a period of more than 180 days in

respect of a term loan,

ii. The account remains ‘out of order ‘for a period of more than 180 days, in respect of an

overdraft/cash credit (OD/CC)

iii. The bill remains overdue for a period of more than 180 days in case of bill purchased or

discounted.

iv. Interest and/or principal remains overdue for two harvest season but for a period not

exceeding two half years in case of an advance granted for agricultural purpose, and

v. Any amount to be received remains overdue for a period of more than 180 days in respect

of other accounts

With a view to moving towards international best practices and to ensure greater

transparency, it has been decided to adopt ’90 days overdue ‘norms for identification of NPA

s, from the year ending March 31, 2004, a non performing asset shell be a loan or an advance

where;

i. Interest and/or instalment of principal remain overdue for a period of more than 90 days in

respect of a term loan,

ii. The account remains ‘out of order ‘for a period of more than 90 days ,in respect of an

overdraft/cash credit (OD/CC)

iii. The bill remains overdue for a period of more than 90 days in case of bill purchased or

discounted.

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iv. Interest and/or principal remains overdue for two harvest season but for a period not

exceeding two half years in case of an advance granted for agricultural purpose, and

v. Any amount to be received remains overdue for a period of more than 90 days in respect of

other accounts

Out of order

An account should be treated as out of order if the outstanding balance remains continuously

in excess of sanctioned limit /drawing power. in case where the out standing balance in the

principal operating account is less than the sanctioned amount /drawing power, but there are

no credits continuously for six months as on the date of balance sheet or credit are not enough

to cover the interest debited during the same period ,these account should be treated as ‘out of

order’.

Overdue

Any amount due to the bank under any credit facility is ‘overdue’ if it is not paid on due date

fixed by the bank.

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FACTORS FOR RISE IN NPAs

The banking sector has been facing the serious problems of the rising NPAs. But the problem

of NPAs is more in public sector banks when compared to private sector banks and foreign

banks. A strong banking sector is important for a flourishing economy. The failure of the

banking sector may have an adverse impact on other sectors. The Indian banking system,

which was operating in a closed economy, now faces the challenges of an open economy. On

one hand a protected environment ensured that banks never needed to develop sophisticated

treasury operations and Asset Liability Management skills. On the other hand a combination

of directed lending and social banking relegated profitability and competitiveness to the

background. The net result was unsustainable NPAs and consequently a higher effective cost

of banking services.

The problem India Faces is not lack of strict prudential norms but

i. The legal impediments and time consuming nature of asset disposal proposal.

ii. Postponement of problem in order to show higher earnings.

iii. Manipulation of debtors using political influence.

Macro Perspective Behind NPAs

A lot of practical problems have been found in Indian banks, especially in public sector

banks. For Example, the government of India had given a massive wavier of Rs. 15,000 Crs.

under the Prime Minister ship of Mr. V.P. Singh, for rural debt during 1989-90. This was not

a unique incident in India and left a negative impression on the payer of the loan.

Poverty elevation programs like IRDP, RREP, SUME, SEPUP, JRY, PMRY etc., failed on

various grounds in meeting their objectives. The huge amounts of loan granted under these

schemes were totally unrecoverable by banks due to political manipulation, misuse of funds

and non-reliability of target audience of these sections. Loans given by banks are their assets

and as the repayments of several of the loans were poor, the qualities of these assets were

steadily deteriorating. Credit allocation became 'Lon Melas', loan proposal evaluations were

slack and as a result repayments were very poor. There are several

reasons for an account becoming NPA.

* Internal factors

* External factors

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EXTERNAL FACTORS

Ineffective recovery tribunal

The Govt. has set of numbers of recovery tribunals, which works for recovery of loans and

advances. Due to their negligence and ineffectiveness in their work the bank suffers the

consequence of non-recover, their by reducing their profitability and liquidity.

Willful Defaults

There are borrowers who are able to payback loans but are intentionally withdrawing it.

These groups of people should be identified and proper measures should be taken in order to

get back the money extended to them as advances and loans.

Natural calamities

This is the measure factor, which is creating alarming rise in NPAs of the PSBs. every now

and then India is hit by major natural calamities thus making the borrowers unable to pay

back there loans. Thus the bank has to make large amount of provisions in order to

compensate those loans, hence end up the fiscal with a reduced profit.

Mainly ours framers depends on rain fall for cropping. Due to irregularities of rain fall the

framers are not to achieve the production level thus they are not repaying the loans.

Industrial sickness

Improper project handling , ineffective management , lack of adequate resources , lack of

advance technology , day to day changing govt. Policies give birth to industrial sickness.

Hence the banks that finance those industries ultimately end up with a low recovery of their

loans reducing their profit and liquidity.

Lack of demand

Entrepreneurs in India could not foresee their product demand and starts production which

ultimately piles up their product thus making them unable to pay back the money they borrow

to operate these activities. The banks recover the amount by selling of their assets, which

covers a minimum label. Thus the banks record the non recovered part as NPAs and has to

make provision for it.

Change on Govt. policies

With every new govt. banking sector gets new policies for its operation. Thus it has to cope

with the changing principles and policies for the regulation of the rising of NPAs.

The fallout of handloom sector is continuing as most of the weavers Co-operative societies

have become defunct largely due to withdrawal of state patronage. The rehabilitation plan

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worked out by the Central govt to revive the handloom sector has not yet been implemented.

So the over dues due to the handloom sectors are becoming NPAs.

Apart from these factors there may be others external factors which can cause of NPA’s,

these factors are:

1. Sluggish legal system - Long legal tangles Changes that had taken place in labour laws

Lack of sincere effort.

2. Scarcity of raw material, power and other resources.

3. Industrial recession.

4. Shortage of raw material, raw material\input price escalation, power shortage, industrial

recession, excess capacity, natural calamities like floods, accidents.

5. Failures, non payment\ over dues in other countries, recession in other countries,

externalization problems, adverse exchange rates etc.

6. Government policies like excise duty changes, Import duty changes etc.,

INTERNAL FACTORS

Defective Lending process

There are three cardinal principles of bank lending that have been followed by the

commercial banks since long.

i. Principles of safety

ii. Principle of liquidity

iii. Principles of profitability

i. Principles of safety

By safety it means that the borrower is in a position to repay the loan both principal and

interest. The repayment of loan depends upon the borrowers:

a. Capacity to pay

b. Willingness to pay

Capacity to pay depends upon: 1. Tangible assets 2. Success in business

Willingness to pay depends on: 1. Character 2. Honest 3. Reputation of borrower

The banker should, there fore take utmost care in ensuring that the enterprise or business for

which a loan is sought is a sound one and the borrower is capable of carrying it out

successfully .he should be a person of integrity and good character.

Inappropriate technology

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Due to inappropriate technology and management information system, market driven

decisions on real time basis can not be taken. Proper MIS and financial accounting system is

not implemented in the banks, which leads to poor credit collection, thus NPA. All the

branches of the bank should be computerized.

Improper swot analysis

The improper strength, weakness, opportunity and threat analysis is another reason for rise in

NPAs. While providing unsecured advances the banks depend more on the honesty, integrity,

and financial soundness and credit worthiness of the borrower.

1. Banks should consider the borrowers own capital investment.

2. It should collect credit information of the borrowers from

a. From bankers

b. Enquiry from market/segment of trade, industry, business.

c. From external credit rating agencies. · Analyse the balance sheet

True picture of business will be revealed on analysis of profit/loss a/c and balance sheet.

3. Purpose of the loan

When bankers give loan, he should analyse the purpose of the loan. To ensure safety and

liquidity, banks should grant loan for productive purpose only. Bank should analyse the

profitability, viability, long term acceptability of the project while financing.

Poor credit appraisal system

Poor credit appraisal is another factor for the rise in NPAs. Due to poor credit appraisal the

bank gives advances to those who are not able to repay it back. They should use good credit

appraisal to decrease the NPAs.

Managerial deficiencies

The banker should always select the borrower very carefully and should take tangible assets

as security to safe guard its interests. When accepting securities banks should consider the

1. Marketability

2. Acceptability

3. Safety

4. Transferability.

The banker should follow the principle of diversification of risk based on the famous maxim

“do not keep all the eggs in one basket”; it means that the banker should not grant advances

to a few big farms only or to concentrate them in few industries or in a few cities. If a new

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big customer meets misfortune or certain traders or industries affected adversely, the overall

position of the bank will not be affected.

Like OSCB suffered loss due to the OTM Cuttack, and Orissa hand loom industries. The

biggest defaulters of OSCB are the OTM (117.77lakhs), and the handloom sector Orissa

hand loom WCS ltd (2439.60lakhs).

Absence of regular industrial visit

The irregularities in spot visit also increases the NPAs. Absence of regularly visit of bank

officials to the customer point decreases the collection of interest and principals on the loan.

The NPAs due to wilful defaulters can be collected by regular visits.

Re loaning process

Non remittance of recoveries to higher financing agencies and re loaning of the same have

already affected the smooth operation of the credit cycle. Due to re loaning to the defaulters

and CCBs and PACs, the NPAs of OSCB is increasing day by day.

Apart from these the other internal factors are:

1. Funds borrowed for a particular purpose but not use for the said purpose.

2. Project not completed in time.

3. Poor recovery of receivables.

4. Excess capacities created on non-economic costs.

5. In-ability of the corporate to raise capital through the issue of equity or other debt

instrument from capital markets.

6. Business failures.

7. Diversion of funds for expansion\modernization\setting up new projects\ helping or

promoting sister concerns.

8. Willful defaults, siphoning of funds, fraud, disputes, management disputes, mis-

appropriation etc.,

9. Deficiencies on the part of the banks viz. in credit appraisal, monitoring and follow-ups,

delay in settlement of payments\ subsidiaries by government bodies etc.,

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PROBLEMS DUE TO NPA

1. Owners do not receive a market return on there capital .in the worst case, if the banks fails,

owners loose their assets. In modern times this may affect a broad pool of shareholders.

2. Depositors do not receive a market return on saving. In the worst case if the bank fails,

depositors loose their assets or uninsured balance.

3. Banks redistribute losses to other borrowers by charging higher interest rates, lower

deposit rates and higher lending rates repress saving and financial market, which hamper

economic growth.

4. Non performing loans epitomise bad investment. They misallocate credit from good

projects, which do not receive funding, to failed projects. Bad investment ends up in

misallocation of capital, and by extension, labour and natural resources.

5. Non performing asset may spill over the banking system and contract the money stock,

which may lead to economic contraction. This spill over effect can channelize through

liquidity or bank insolvency: a) when many borrowers fail to pay interest, banks may

experience liquidity shortage. This can jam payment across the country, b) illiquidity

constraints bank in paying depositors .c) undercapitalised banks exceeds the banks capital

base.

What caused such high NPAs in the system until 1995?

Some key reasons for huge NPAs until mid-1990s are as follows:

� Absence of competition: The entire banking sector was state-owned; there was complete

absence of any kind of competition from the private sector.

� Lack of focus and control: The government-controlled operations of banks resulted in

favoritisms in terms of lending, besides lack of focus on quality of lending. Managements of

banks lacked any control on operations of their banks, while directors largely were influenced

by the will of power-circles.

� Collateral-based lending and a dormant legal recourse system: Collateral was

considered king. Under the name of collateral, large sums of loans were disbursed, and in the

absence of an active legal recovery system, loan repayment and quality considerations took a

back seat.

� Corruption and bureaucracy: Political interference and lack of supervision increased

corruption and redtapism in the banking system. This resulted in complete dilution of credit

quality and control procedures.

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� Inadequacy of capital and tools relating to asset quality monitoring: Banks suffered

from shortage of capital funds to pursue any meaningful investments in quality control, loan

monitoring, etc. This inadequacy of funds, together with the absence of independent

management, led to low focus on asset quality tracking and taking corrective actions.

The situation changed after 1993, when the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) with the

government's support, came up with several decisions on managing Indian banks that had a

salutary impact, and the future never looked so much in control henceforth.

There was a significant decline in the non-performing assets (NPAs) of SCBs in 2003-04,

despite adoption of 90 day delinquency norm from March 31, 2004. The gross NPAs of SCBs

declined from 4.0 per cent of total assets in 2002-03 to 3.3 per cent in 2003-04. The

corresponding decline in net NPAs was from 1.9 per cent to 1.2 per cent. Both gross NPAs

and net NPAs declined in absolute terms. While the gross NPAs declined from Rs. 68,717

crore in 2002-03 to Rs. 64,787 crore in 2003-04, net NPAs declined from Rs. 32,670 crore to

Rs. 24,617 crore in the same period. There was also a significant decline in the proportion of

net NPAs to net advances from 4.4 per cent in 2002-03 to 2.9 per cent in 2003-04. The

significant decline in the net NPAs by 24.7 per cent in 2003-04 as compared to 8.1 per cent in

2002- 03 was mainly on account of higher provisions (up to 40.0 per cent) for NPAs made by

SCBs.

The decline in NPAs in 2003-04 was witnessed across all bank groups. The decline in net

NPAs as a proportion of total assets was quite significant in the case of new private sector

banks, followed by PSBs. The ratio of net NPAs to net advances of SCBs declined from 4.4

per cent in 2002-03 to 2.9 per cent in 2003-04. Among the bank groups, old private sector

banks had the highest ratio of net NPAs to net advances at 3.8 per cent followed by PSBs (3.0

per cent) new private sector banks (2.4 per cent) and foreign banks (1.5 per cent)

An analysis of NPAs by sectors reveals that in 2003-04, advances to non-priority sectors

accounted for bulk of the outstanding NPAs in the case of PSBs (51.24 per cent of total) and

for private sector banks (75.30 per cent of total). While the share of NPAs in agriculture

sector and SSIs of PSBs declined in 2003-04, the share of other priority sectors increased.

The share of loans to other priority sectors in priority sector lending also increased. Measures

taken to reduce NPAs include reschedulement, restructuring at the bank level, corporate debt

restructuring, and recovery through Lok Adalats, Civil Courts, and debt recovery tribunals

and compromise settlements. The recovery management received a major fillip with the

enactment of the Securitisation and Reconstruction of Financial Assets and Enforcement of

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Security Interest (SARFAESI) Act, 2002 enabling banks to realise their dues without

intervention of courts and tribunals. The Supreme Court in its judgment dated April 8, 2004,

while upholding the constitutional validity of the Act, struck down section 17 (2) of the Act

as unconstitutional and contrary to Article 14 of the Constitution of India. The Government

amended the relevant provisions of the Act to address the concerns expressed by the Supreme

Court regarding a fair deal to borrowers through an ordinance dated November 11, 2004. It is

expected that the momentum in the recovery of NPAs will be resumed with the amendments

to the Act.

The revised guidelines for compromise settlement of chronic NPAs of PSBs were issued in

January 2003 and were extended from time to time till July 31, 2004. The cases filed by

SCBs in Lok Adalats for recovery of NPAs stood at 5.20 lakh involving an amount of Rs.

2,674 crore (prov.). The recoveries effected in 1.69 lakh cases amounted to Rs. 352 crore

(prov.) as on September 30, 2004. The number of cases filed in debt recovery tribunals stood

at 64, 941 as on June 30, 2004, involving an amount of Rs. 91,901 crore. Out of these, 29,

525 cases involving an amount of Rs. 27,869 crore have been adjudicated. The amount

recovered was to Rs. 8,593 crore. Under the scheme of corporate debt restructuring

introduced in 2001, the number of cases and value of assets restructured stood at 121 and Rs.

69,575 crore, respectively, as on December 31, 2004. Iron and steel, refinery, fertilisers and

telecommunication sectors were the major beneficiaries of the scheme. These sectors

accounted for more than two-third of the values of assets restructured.

Capital adequacy ratio

The concept of minimum capital to risk weighted assets ratio (CRAR) has been developed to

ensure that banks can absorb a reasonable level of losses. Application of minimum CRAR

protects the interest of depositors and promotes stability and efficiency of the financial

system. At the end of March 31, 2004, CRAR of PSBs stood at

13.2 per cent, an improvement of 0.6 percentage point from the previous year. There was also

an improvement in the CRAR of old private sector banks from 12.8 per cent in 2002-03 to

13.7 per cent in 2003-04. The CRAR of new private sector banks and foreign banks

registered a decline in 2003-04. For the SCBs as a whole the CRAR improved from 12.7 per

cent in 2002-03 to 12.9 per cent in 2003-04. All the bank groups had CRAR above the

minimum 9 per cent stipulated by the RBI. During the current year, there was further

improvement in the CRAR of SCBs. The ratio in the first half of 2004-05 improved to 13.4

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per cent as compared to 12.9 per cent at the end of 2003-04. Among the bank groups, a

substantial improvement was witnessed in the case of new private sector banks from 10.2 per

cent as at the end of 2003-04 to 13.5 percent in the first half of 2004-05. While PSBs and old

private banks maintained the CRAR at almost the same level as in the previous year, the

CRAR of foreign banks declined to

14.0 per cent in the first half of 2004-05 as compared to 15.0 per cent as at the end of 2003-

04.

The above picture is self-explanatory. Over the period of time, Indian commercial banks have

shown tremendous improvement in terms of quality of credit. NPAs, both at gross and net

levels, as a percentage of advances, have fallen consistently. The gross NPA/Advances ratio

has fallen from 16% in FY97 to less than 2.5% in FY08. Banks displayed great control over

credit quality, as even in times of falling IIP and GDP growth, they continued to show fewer

NPAs. This is a very impressive indicator that highlights the fact that Indian banking has

shown substantial improvement in terms of asset quality management even in adverse macro-

economic conditions. FY99, FY01 and FY02 saw considerable fall in industrial production

from the then existing levels. However, this did not lead to any increase in bank NPAs. On

the contrary, banks improved NPA ratios considerably through the exercise of strong asset

quality monitoring programmes. The current environment is again indicating a decline in

GDP, and IIP growth rates as slowdown hits demand and consumption across all major

sectors. However, we strongly believe that managements of top Indian banks have put 'NPA

Management and Control' as one of their top priorities, and that even though there would be a

jump in NPAs as a proportion of total assets, the banking sector has the ability to withstand

this jump and still emerge as a strong performer in these extremely difficult times.

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What changed the scenario of NPAs after 1995?

Some of the key factors that contributed to the fall in NPAs in the Indian banking

• Introduction of competition: The RBI opened up gates for the private sector

participation in the Indian banking industry. HDFC, the principal mortgage lender, got the

first approval to start a private bank in the reform-driven era. HDFC Bank was given

permission to carry on commercial banking operations. Many new private banks and

foreign banks were allowed later, which brought in the much-required competition in the

Indian banking industry.

• Guidelines on NPAs, income recognition, capital adequacy: One of the key reasons

for such a drastic fall in system NPAs was the introduction of asset and capital quality

guidelines. These norms, introduced on the basis of the Narasimhan Committee report in

1993, had a revolutionary impact on the way banks managed and controlled their asset

book.

• Separation of control: Bank managements were given a free hand to run their

businesses as the Ministry of Finance and the RBI moved away from controlling positions

to supervising and regulating positions. This enabled boards of Indian banks to take

uninfluenced calls as to lending and asset control.

• Improvement of the legal recourse mechanism: This is another significant step.

Through Debt Recovery Tribunal (DRT), Lok Adalat mechanism for small loans, and

One-Time Settlement (OTS) mechanism for stressed loans in 1999, the central bank

ensured that there is a quick clean-up of sticky assets, so as to enable banks to start

functioning with a clean slate. The legal recourse for amounts lent has been an important

contributor to asset quality improvement.

• Capital infusion: Public banks were allowed to bring down the government holding to

51%, thereby enabling flow of fresh money for much-needed banks and also roping in

investment interest from market participants. Board of directors now became more

independent, and a mixed lot of individuals brought in experience from various segments

of the financial world.

• Establishment of CIBIL: Credit Information Bureau of India Ltd was established in

2000. This institution started to maintain a database of borrowers and their credit history.

This served as a very effective tool for loan sanctioning and asset quality maintenance.

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Banks use the database to ensure credit does not fall in the hands of a borrower, with a

bad credit record.

• Asset Reconstruction Company: ARCs were permitted to operate from 2002; these

institutions helped the removal of bank's focus on bad assets by acquiring their bad loans,

thereby strengthening their balance sheets.

• Corporate Debt Restructuring, SICA: The CDR mechanism, sick industries revival

enactments enabled addressing issues of troubled borrowers through effective hand-

holding and bank support. This prevented further slippage of asset quality.

• Exposure limits (sector-wise and borrower-wise): The RBI put in place strict exposure

limits for banks with respect to sensitive sectors like real estate and capital markets. In

addition, limits on amounts a bank can lend to a specific borrower, or a borrower group

helped in non-concentration of funds as loans in a few hands, thereby diversifying the risk

of default.

• Risk management tools: The RBI ensured that banks have effective risk measurement,

management and control systems in place, so as to avoid credit shocks. Asset liability

management (ALM), value at risk (VAR), control on off-balance sheet exposures, credit

risk weightages, etc. are few concepts that enabled banks to effectively control NPAs.

• In this context of a highly improved, dynamic and competitive domestic banking

environment, we expect that Indian banks will exercise adequate caution in terms of the

quality of their loan-books. In addition, some of the steps (underlined) can be effectively

used again by RBI and the government, if the condition of NPAs worsens.

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Basel Report Framework and India

Various risks in bank

Liquidity Risk

Market Liquidity Risk arises when a bank is unable to conclude a large transaction in a

particular instrument near the current market price. Funding Liquidity Risk is defined as the

inability to obtain funds to meet cash flow obligations. For banks, funding liquidity risk is

more crucial.

Interest Rate Risk

Interest Rate Risk (IRR) is the exposure of a Bank’s financial condition to adverse

movements in interest rates. Banks have an appetite for this risk and use it to earn returns.

IRR manifests itself in four different ways: re-pricing, yield curve, basis and embedded

options.

Pricing Risk

Pricing Risk is the risk to the bank’s financial condition resulting from adverse movements in

the level or volatility of the market prices of interest rate instruments, equities, commodities

and currencies. Pricing Risk is usually measured as the potential gain/loss in a

position/portfolio that is associated with a price movement of a given probability over a

specified time horizon. This measure is typically known as value-at-risk (VAR).

Foreign Currency Risk

Foreign Currency Risk is pricing risk associated with foreign currency.

Market Risk

The term Market Risk applies to (i) that part of IRR which affects the price of interest rate

instruments, (ii) Pricing Risk for all other assets/portfolio that are held in the trading book of

the bank and (iii) Foreign Currency Risk.

Strategic Risk

Strategic Risk is the risk arising from adverse business decisions, improper implementation

of decisions, or lack of responsiveness to industry changes. This risk is a function of the

compatibility of an organization’s strategic goals, the business strategies developed to

achieve those goals, the resources deployed against these goals, and the quality of

implementation.

Reputation Risk

Reputation risk is the risk arising from negative public opinion. This risk may expose the

institution to litigation, financial loss, or a decline in customer base.

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Transaction Risk

Transaction risk is the risk arising from fraud, both internal & external, failed business

processes and the inability to maintain business continuity and manage information.

Compliance Risk

Compliance risk is the risk of legal or regulatory sanctions, financial loss or reputation loss

that a bank may suffer as a result of its failure to comply with any or all of the applicable

laws, regulations, codes of conduct and standards of good practice. It is also called integrity

risk since a bank’s reputation is closely linked to its adherence to principles of integrity and

fair dealing.

Operational Risk

The term Operational Risk includes both compliance risk and transaction risk but excludes

strategic risk and reputation risk.

Credit Risk

Credit Risk is most simply defined as the potential of a bank borrower or counter-party to fail

to meet its obligations in accordance with agreed terms. For most banks, loans are the largest

and most obvious source of credit risk.

Banking Regulation and Supervision

The Need for Regulation

Banking is one of the most heavily regulated businesses since it is a very highly leveraged

(high debt-equity ratio or low capital-assets ratio) industry. In fact, it is an irony that banks,

which constantly judge their borrowers on debt-equity ratio, have themselves a debt-equity

ratio far too adverse than their borrowers! In simple words, they earn by taking risk on their

creditors’ money rather than shareholders’ money. And since it is not their money

(shareholders’ stake) on the block, their appetite for risk needs to be controlled.

Goals and Tools for Bank Regulation and Supervision

The main goal of all regulators is the stability of the banking system. However, regulators

cannot be concerned solely with the safety of the banking system, for if that was the only

purpose, it would impose a narrow banking system, in which checkable deposits are fully

backed by absolutely safe assets – in the extreme, currency. Coexistent with this primary

concern is the need to ensure that the financial system operates efficiently. As we have seen,

banks need to take risks to be in business despite a probability of failure. In fact, Alan

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Greenspan puts it very succinctly, `providing institutions with the flexibility that may lead to

failure is as important as permitting them the opportunity to succeed’.

The twin supervisory or regulatory goals of stability and efficiency of the financial system

often seem to pull in opposite directions and there is much debate raging on the nature and

extent of the trade-off between the two. Though very interesting, it is outside the scope of this

report to elaborate upon. Instead, let us take a look at the list of some tools that regulators

employ:

• Restrictions on bank activities and banking-commerce links: To avoid conflicts of interest

that may arise when banks engage in diverse activities such as securities underwriting,

insurance underwriting, and real estate investment.

• Restrictions on domestic and foreign bank entry: The assumption here is that effective

screening of bank entry can promote stability.

• Capital Adequacy: Capital serves as a buffer against losses and hence also against failure.

Capital adequacy is deemed to control risk appetite of the bank by aligning the incentives of

bank owners with depositors and other creditors.

• Deposit Insurance: Deposit insurance schemes are to prevent widespread bank runs and to

protect small depositors but can create moral hazard (which means in simple terms the

propensity of both firms and individuals to take more risks when insured).

• Information disclosure & private sector monitoring: Includes certified audits and/or ratings

from international rating agencies. Involves directing banks to produce accurate,

comprehensive and consolidated information on the full range of their activities and risk

management procedures.

• Government Ownership: The assumption here is that governments have adequate

information and incentives to promote socially desirable investments and in extreme cases

can transfer the depositors’ loss to tax payers! Government ownership can, at times, promote

financing of politically attractive projects and not the economically efficient ones.

• Mandated liquidity reserves: To control credit expansion and to ensure that banks have a

reasonable amount of liquid assets to meet their liabilities.

• Loan classification, provisioning standards & diversification guidelines: These are controls

to manage credit risk.

`Unfortunately, however, there is no evidence that any universal set of best practices is

appropriate for promoting well-functioning banks; that successful practices in the United

States, for example, will succeed in countries with different institutional settings; or that

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detailed regulations and supervisory practices should be combined to produce an extensive

checklist of best practices in which more checks are better than fewer. There is no broad

cross-country evidence on which of the many different regulations and supervisory practices

employed around the world work best, if at all, to promote bank development and stability.’

The Basel I Accord

Basel Committee on Banking Supervision (BCBS)

On 26th June 1974, a number of banks had released Deutschmarks to Bank Herstatt in

Frankfurt in exchange for dollar payments that were to be delivered in New York. Due to

differences in time zones, there was a lag in dollar payments to counter-party banks during

which Bank Herstatt was liquidated by German regulators, i.e. before the dollar payments

could be affected.

The Herstatt accident prompted the G-10 countries (the G-10 is today 13 countries: Belgium,

Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Spain, Sweden,

Switzerland, United Kingdom and United States) to form, towards the end of 1974, the Basel

Committee on Banking Supervision (BCBS), under the auspices of the Bank for International

Settlements (BIS), comprising of Central Bank Governors from the participating countries.

BCBS has been instrumental in standardizing bank regulations across jurisdictions with

special emphasis on defining the roles of regulators in cross-jurisdictional situations. The

committee meets four times a year. It has around 30 technical working groups and task forces

that meet regularly.

1988 Basel Accord

In 1988, the Basel Committee published a set of minimal capital requirements for banks,

known as the 1988 Basel Accord. These were enforced by law in the G-10 countries in 1992,

with Japanese banks permitted an extended transition period.

The 1988 Basel Accord focused primarily on credit risk. Bank assets were classified into five

risk buckets i.e. grouped under five categories according to credit risk carrying risk weights

of zero, ten, twenty, fifty and one hundred per cent. Assets were to be classified into one of

these risk buckets based on the parameters of counter-party (sovereign, banks, public sector

enterprises or others), collateral (e.g. mortgages of residential property) and maturity.

Generally, government debt was categorised at zero per cent, bank debt at twenty per cent,

and other debt at one hundred per cent. 100%. OBS exposures such as performance

guarantees and letters of credit were brought into the calculation of risk weighted assets using

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the mechanism of variable credit conversion factor. Banks were required to hold capital equal

to 8% of the risk weighted value of assets. Since 1988, this framework has been progressively

introduced not only in member countries but also in almost all other countries having active

international banks. The 1988 accord can be summarized in the following equation:

Total Capital = 0.08 x Risk Weighted Assets (RWA)

The accord provided a detailed definition of capital. Tier 1 or core capital, which includes

equity and disclosed reserves, and Tier 2 or supplementary capital, which could include

undisclosed reserves, asset revaluation reserves, general provisions & loan–loss reserves,

hybrid (debt/equity) capital instruments and subordinated debt.

Value at Risk (VAR)

VAR is a method of assessing risk that uses standard statistical techniques and provides users

with a summary measure of market risk. For instance, a bank might say that the daily VAR of

its trading portfolio is rupees 20 million at the 99 per cent confidence level. In simple words,

there is only one chance in 100, under normal market conditions, for a loss greater than

rupees 20 million to occur. This single number summarizes the bank's exposure to market

risk as well as the probability (one per cent, in this case) of it being exceeded. Shareholders

and managers can then decide whether they feel comfortable at this level of risk. If not, the

process that led to the computation of VAR can be used to decide where to trim risk.

Now the definition; `VAR summarizes the predicted maximum loss (or worst loss) over a

target horizon within a given confidence interval’. Target horizon means the period till which

the portfolio is held. Ideally, the holding period should correspond to the longest period

needed for an orderly (as opposed to a `fire sale’) portfolio liquidation.

Without going into the related math, it should be mentioned here that there exist three

methods of computing VAR, viz. Delta-Normal, Historical Simulation and Monte Carlo

Simulation, the last one being the most computation intensive and predictably the most

sophisticated one.

In a lighter vein, a definition of VAR that was found at the gloriamundi.org web site said, `A

number invented by purveyors of panaceas for pecuniary peril intended to mislead senior

management and regulators into false confidence that market risk is adequately understood

and controlled.’

1996 Amendment to include Market Risk

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In 1996, BCBS published an amendment to the 1988 Basel Accord to provide an explicit

capital cushion for the price risks to which banks are exposed, particularly those arising from

their trading activities. This amendment was brought into effect in 1998.

Salient Features

• Allows banks to use proprietary in-house models for measuring market risks.

• Banks using proprietary models must compute VAR daily, using a 99th percentile, one-

tailed confidence interval with a time horizon of ten trading days using a historical

observation period of at least one year.

• The capital charge for a bank that uses a proprietary model will be the higher of the

previous day's VAR and three times the average of the daily VAR of the preceding sixty

business days.

• Use of `back-testing’ (ex-post comparisons between model results and actual performance)

to arrive at the `plus factor’ that is added to the multiplication factor of three.

• Allows banks to issue short-term subordinated debt subject to a lock-in clause (Tier 3

capital) to meet a part of their market risks.

• Alternate standardized approach using the `building block’ approach where general market

risk and specific security risk are calculated separately and added up.

• Banks to segregate trading book and mark to market all portfolio/position in the trading

book.

• Applicable to both trading activities of banks and non-banking securities firms.

Evolution of Basel Committee Initiatives

The Basel I Accord and the 1996 Amendment thereto have evolved into Basel II, as depicted

in the figure above.

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The New Accord (Basel II)

Close on the heels of the 1996 amendment to the Basel I accord, in June 1999 BCBS issued a

proposal for a New Capital Adequacy Framework to replace the 1988 Accord.

The proposed capital framework consists of three pillars: minimum capital requirements,

which seek to refine the standardised rules set forth in the 1988 Accord; supervisory review

of an institution's internal assessment process and capital adequacy; and effective use of

disclosure to strengthen market discipline as a complement to supervisory efforts. The accord

has been finalized recently on 11th May 2004 and the final draft is expected by the end of June

2004. For banks adopting advanced approaches for measuring credit and operational risk the

deadline has been shifted to 2008, whereas for those opting for basic approaches it is retained

at 2006.

The Need for Basel II

The 1988 Basel I Accord has very limited risk sensitivity and lacks risk differentiation

(broad brush structure) for measuring credit risk. For example, all corporations carry the

same risk weight of 100 per cent. It also gave rise to a significant gap between the regulatory

measurement of the risk of a given transaction and its actual economic risk. The most

troubling side effect of the gap between regulatory and actual economic risk has been the

distortion of financial decision-making, including large amounts of regulatory arbitrage, or

investments made on the basis of regulatory constraints rather than genuine economic

opportunities. The strict rule based approach of the 1988 accord has also been criticised for

its `one size fits all’ prescription. In addition, it lacked proper recognition of credit risk

mitigants such as credit derivatives, securitisation, and collaterals.

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The recent cases of frauds, acts of terrorism, hacking, have brought into focus the operational

risk that the banks and financial institutions are exposed to.

The proposed new accord (Basel II) is claimed by BCBS to be `an improved capital adequacy

framework intended to foster a strong emphasis on risk management and to encourage

ongoing improvements in banks’ risk assessment capabilities’. It also seeks to provide a

`level playing field’ for international competition and attempts to ensure that its

implementation maintains the aggregate regulatory capital requirements as obtaining under

the current accord. The new framework deliberately includes incentives for using more

advanced and sophisticated approaches for risk measurement and attempts to align the

regulatory capital with internal risk measurements of banks subject to supervisory review and

market disclosure.

PILLAR I:

Minimum Capital Requirements

There is a need to look at proposed changes in the measurement of credit risk and operational

risk.

Credit Risk

Three alternate approaches for measurement of credit risk have been proposed. These are:

• Standardised

• Internal Ratings Based (IRB) Foundation

• Internal Ratings Based (IRB) Advanced

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The standardised approach is similar to the current accord in that banks are required to slot

their credit exposures into supervisory categories based on observable characteristics of the

exposures (e.g. whether the exposure is a corporate loan or a residential mortgage loan). The

standardised approach establishes fixed risk weights corresponding to each supervisory

category and makes use of external credit assessments to enhance risk sensitivity compared

to the current accord. The risk weights for sovereign, inter-bank, and corporate exposures are

differentiated based on external credit assessments. An important innovation of the

standardised approach is the requirement that loans considered `past due’ be risk weighted at

150 per cent unless, a threshold amount of specific provisions has already been set aside by

the bank against that loan.

Credit risk mitigants (collaterals, guarantees, and credit derivatives) can be used by banks

under this approach for capital reduction based on the market risk of the collateral instrument

or the threshold external credit rating of recognised guarantors.

Reduced risk weights for retail exposures, small and medium size enterprises (SME) category

and residential mortgages have been proposed. The approach draws a number of distinctions

between exposures and transactions in an effort to improve the risk sensitivity of the resulting

capital ratios.

The IRB approach uses banks’ internal assessments of key risk drivers as primary inputs to

the capital calculation. The risk weights and resultant capital charges are determined through

the combination of quantitative inputs provided by banks and formulae specified by the

Committee. The IRB calculation of risk weighted assets for exposures to sovereigns, banks,

or corporate entities relies on the following four parameters:

Probability of default (PD), which measures the likelihood that the borrower will

default over a given time horizon.

Loss given default (LGD), which measures the proportion of the exposure that will

be lost if a default occurs.

Exposure at default (EAD), which for loan commitment measures the amount of the

facility that is likely to be drawn in the event of a default.

Maturity (M), which measures the remaining economic maturity of the exposure.

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Operational Risk

Within the Basel II framework, operational risk is defined as the risk of losses resulting from

inadequate or failed internal processes, people and systems, or external events.

Operational risk identification and measurement is still in an evolutionary stage as

compared to the maturity that market and credit risk measurements have achieved.

As in credit risk, three alternate approaches are prescribed:

• Basic Indicator

• Standardised

• Advanced Measurement (AMA)

PILLAR 2:

Supervisory Review Process

Pillar 2 introduces two critical risk management concepts: the use of economic capital, and

the enhancement of corporate governance, encapsulated in the following four principles:

• Principle 1: Banks should have a process for assessing their overall capital adequacy in

relation to their risk profile and a strategy for maintaining their capital levels.

The key elements of this rigorous process are:

• Board and senior management attention;

• Sound capital assessment;

• Comprehensive assessment of risks;

• Monitoring and reporting; and

• Internal control review.

• Principle 2: Supervisors should review and evaluate banks’ internal capital adequacy

assessments and strategies, as well as their ability to monitor and ensure their compliance

with regulatory capital ratios. Supervisors should take appropriate supervisory action if

they are not satisfied with the result of this process.

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This could be achieved through:

• On-site examinations or inspections;

• Off-site review;

• Discussions with bank management;

• Review of work done by external auditors; and

• Periodic reporting.

• Principle 3: Supervisors should expect banks to operate above the minimum regulatory

capital ratios and should have the ability to require banks to hold capital in excess of the

minimum.

• Principle 4: Supervisors should seek to intervene at an early stage to prevent capital from

falling below the minimum levels required to support the risk characteristics of a

particular bank and should require rapid remedial action if capital is not maintained or

restored.

Prescriptions under Pillar 2 seek to address the residual risks not adequately covered under

Pillar 1, such as concentration risk, interest rate risk in banking book, business risk and

strategic risk. `Stress testing’ is recommended to capture event risk. Pillar 2 also seeks to

ensure that internal risk management process in the banks is robust enough. The combination

of Pillar 1 and Pillar 2 attempt to align regulatory capital with economic capital.

PILLAR 3:

Market Discipline

The focus of Pillar 3 on market discipline is designed to complement the minimum capital

requirements (Pillar 1) and the supervisory review process (Pillar 2). With this, the Basel

Committee seeks to enable market participants to assess key information about a bank’s risk

profile and level of capitalization—thereby encouraging market discipline through increased

disclosure. Public disclosure assumes greater importance in helping banks and supervisors to

manage risk and improve stability under the new provisions which place reliance on internal

methodologies providing banks with greater discretion in determining their capital needs.

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BANKING INDUSTRY

Banking in India

Banking in India originated in the last decades of the 18th century. The oldest bank in

existence in India is the State Bank of India, a government-owned bank that traces its origins

back to June 1806 and that is the largest commercial bank in the country. Central banking is

the responsibility of the Reserve Bank of India, which in 1935 formally took over these

responsibilities from the then Imperial Bank of India, relegating it to commercial banking

functions. After India's independence in 1947, the Reserve Bank was nationalized and given

broader powers. In 1969 the government nationalized the 14 largest commercial banks; the

government nationalized the six next largest in 1980.

Currently, India has 88 scheduled commercial banks (SCBs) - 27 public sector banks (that is

with the Government of India holding a stake), 29 private banks (these do not have

government stake; they may be publicly listed and traded on stock exchanges) and 31 foreign

banks. They have a combined network of over 53,000 branches and 17,000 ATMs.

According to a report by ICRA Limited, a rating agency, the public sector banks hold over 75

percent of total assets of the banking industry, with the private and foreign banks holding

18.2% and 6.5% respectively.

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HISTORY

Early history

Banking in India originated in the last decades of the 18th century. The first banks were The

General Bank of India, which started in 1786, and the Bank of Hindustan, both of which are

now defunct. The oldest bank in existence in India is the State Bank of India, which

originated in the Bank of Calcutta in June 1806, which almost immediately became the Bank

of Bengal. This was one of the three presidency banks, the other two being the Bank of

Bombay and the Bank of Madras, all three of which were established under charters from the

British East India Company. For many years the Presidency banks acted as quasi-central

banks, as did their successors. The three banks merged in 1925 to form the Imperial Bank of

India, which, upon India's independence, became the State Bank of India.

Indian merchants in Calcutta established the Union Bank in 1839, but it failed in 1848 as a

consequence of the economic crisis of 1848-49. The Allahabad Bank, established in 1865 and

still functioning today, is the oldest Joint Stock bank in India. It was not the first though. That

honor belongs to the Bank of Upper India, which was established in 1863, and which

survived until 1913, when it failed, with some of its assets and liabilities being transferred to

the Alliance Bank of Simla.

When the American Civil War stopped the supply of cotton to Lancashire from the

Confederate States, promoters opened banks to finance trading in Indian cotton. With large

exposure to speculative ventures, most of the banks opened in India during that period failed.

The depositors lost money and lost interest in keeping deposits with banks. Subsequently,

banking in India remained the exclusive domain of Europeans for next several decades until

the beginning of the 20th century.

Foreign banks too started to arrive, particularly in Calcutta, in the 1860s. The Comptoire

d'Escompte de Paris opened a branch in Calcutta in 1860, and another in Bombay in 1862;

branches in Madras and Pondichery, then a French colony, followed. HSBC established itself

in Bengal in 1869. Calcutta was the most active trading port in India, mainly due to the trade

of the British Empire, and so became a banking center.

The first entirely Indian joint stock bank was the Oudh Commercial Bank, established in

1881 in Faizabad. It failed in 1958. The next was the Punjab National Bank, established in

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Lahore in 1895, which has survived to the present and is now one of the largest banks in

India.

Around the turn of the 20th Century, the Indian economy was passing through a relative

period of stability. Around five decades had elapsed since the Indian Mutiny, and the social,

industrial and other infrastructure had improved. Indians had established small banks, most of

which served particular ethnic and religious communities.

The presidency banks dominated banking in India but there were also some exchange banks

and a number of Indian joint stock banks. All these banks operated in different segments of

the economy. The exchange banks, mostly owned by Europeans, concentrated on financing

foreign trade. Indian joint stock banks were generally under capitalized and lacked the

experience and maturity to compete with the presidency and exchange banks. This

segmentation let Lord Curzon to observe, "In respect of banking it seems we are behind the

times. We are like some old fashioned sailing ship, divided by solid wooden bulkheads into

separate and cumbersome compartments."

The period between 1906 and 1911, saw the establishment of banks inspired by the Swadeshi

movement. The Swadeshi movement inspired local businessmen and political figures to

found banks of and for the Indian community. A number of banks established then have

survived to the present such as Bank of India, Corporation Bank, Indian Bank, Bank of

Baroda, Canara Bank and Central Bank of India.

The fervour of Swadeshi movement lead to establishing of many private banks in Dakshina

Kannada and Udupi district which were unified earlier and known by the name South

Canara ( South Kanara ) district. Four nationalised banks started in this district and also a

leading private sector bank. Hence undivided Dakshina Kannada district is known as "Cradle

of Indian Banking".

From World War I to Independence

The period during the First World War (1914-1918) through the end of the Second World

War (1939-1945), and two years thereafter until the independence of India were challenging

for Indian banking. The years of the First World War were turbulent, and it took its toll with

banks simply collapsing despite the Indian economy gaining indirect boost due to war-related

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economic activities. At least 94 banks in India failed between 1913 and 1918 as indicated in

the following table:

Years Number of banks

that failed

Authorised capital

(Rs. Lakhs)

Paid-up Capital

(Rs. Lakhs)

1913 12 274 35

1914 42 710 109

1915 11 56 5

1916 13 231 4

1917 9 76 25

1918 7 209 1

Post-independence

The partition of India in 1947 adversely impacted the economies of Punjab and West Bengal,

paralyzing banking activities for months. India's independence marked the end of a regime of

the Laissez-faire for the Indian banking. The Government of India initiated measures to play

an active role in the economic life of the nation, and the Industrial Policy Resolution adopted

by the government in 1948 envisaged a mixed economy. This resulted into greater

involvement of the state in different segments of the economy including banking and finance.

The major steps to regulate banking included:

• In 1948, the Reserve Bank of India, India's central banking authority, was

nationalized, and it became an institution owned by the Government of India.

• In 1949, the Banking Regulation Act was enacted which empowered the Reserve

Bank of India (RBI) "to regulate, control, and inspect the banks in India."

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• The Banking Regulation Act also provided that no new bank or branch of an existing

bank could be opened without a license from the RBI, and no two banks could have

common directors.

However, despite these provisions, control and regulations, banks in India except the State

Bank of India, continued to be owned and operated by private persons. This changed with the

nationalisation of major banks in India on 19 July, 1969.

Nationalisation

By the 1960s, the Indian banking industry has become an important tool to facilitate the

development of the Indian economy. At the same time, it has emerged as a large employer,

and a debate has ensued about the possibility to nationalise the banking industry. Indira

Gandhi, the-then Prime Minister of India expressed the intention of the GOI in the annual

conference of the All India Congress Meeting in a paper entitled "Stray thoughts on Bank

Nationalisation." The paper was received with positive enthusiasm. Thereafter, her move was

swift and sudden, and the GOI issued an ordinance and nationalised the 14 largest

commercial banks with effect from the midnight of July 19, 1969. Jayaprakash Narayan, a

national leader of India, described the step as a "masterstroke of political sagacity." Within

two weeks of the issue of the ordinance, the Parliament passed the Banking Companies

(Acquisition and Transfer of Undertaking) Bill, and it received the presidential approval on 9

August, 1969.

A second dose of nationalization of 6 more commercial banks followed in 1980. The stated

reason for the nationalization was to give the government more control of credit delivery.

With the second dose of nationalization, the GOI controlled around 91% of the banking

business of India. Later on, in the year 1993, the government merged New Bank of India with

Punjab National Bank. It was the only merger between nationalized banks and resulted in the

reduction of the number of nationalised banks from 20 to 19. After this, until the 1990s, the

nationalised banks grew at a pace of around 4%, closer to the average growth rate of the

Indian economy.

The nationalised banks were credited by some, including Home minister P. Chidambaram, to

have helped the Indian economy withstand the global financial crisis of 2007-2009.[1][2]

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Liberalisation

In the early 1990s, the then Narsimha Rao government embarked on a policy of

liberalization, licensing a small number of private banks. These came to be known as New

Generation tech-savvy banks, and included Global Trust Bank (the first of such new

generation banks to be set up), which later amalgamated with Oriental Bank of Commerce,

UTI Bank(now re-named as Axis Bank), ICICI Bank and HDFC Bank. This move, along

with the rapid growth in the economy of India, revitalized the banking sector in India, which

has seen rapid growth with strong contribution from all the three sectors of banks, namely,

government banks, private banks and foreign banks.

The next stage for the Indian banking has been setup with the proposed relaxation in the

norms for Foreign Direct Investment, where all Foreign Investors in banks may be given

voting rights which could exceed the present cap of 10%,at present it has gone up to 49%

with some restrictions.

The new policy shook the Banking sector in India completely. Bankers, till this time, were

used to the 4-6-4 method (Borrow at 4%;Lend at 6%;Go home at 4) of functioning. The new

wave ushered in a modern outlook and tech-savvy methods of working for traditional

banks.All this led to the retail boom in India. People not just demanded more from their

banks but also received more.

Currently (2007), banking in India is generally fairly mature in terms of supply, product

range and reach-even though reach in rural India still remains a challenge for the private

sector and foreign banks. In terms of quality of assets and capital adequacy, Indian banks are

considered to have clean, strong and transparent balance sheets relative to other banks in

comparable economies in its region. The Reserve Bank of India is an autonomous body, with

minimal pressure from the government. The stated policy of the Bank on the Indian Rupee is

to manage volatility but without any fixed exchange rate-and this has mostly been true.

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THE TRANSFORMATION OF THE INDIAN BANKING

SECTOR

The financial sector reforms in the country were initiated in the beginning of the 1990s.The

reforms have brought about a sea change in the profile of the banking sector. Our

implementation of the reforms process has had several unique features. Our financial sector

reforms were undertaken early in the reform cycle. Notably, the reforms process was not

driven by any banking crisis, nor was it the outcome of any external support package.

Besides, the design of the reforms was crafted through domestic expertise, taking on board

the international experiences in this respect. The reforms were carefully sequenced with

respect to the instruments to be used and the objectives to be achieved. Thus, prudential

norms and supervisory strengthening were introduced early in the reform cycle, followed by

interest-rate deregulation and a gradual lowering of statutory preemptions. The more complex

aspects of legal and accounting measures were ushered in subsequently when the basic tenets

of the reforms were already in place.

The public sector banks continue to be a dominant part of the banking system. As on March

31, 2008, the PSBs accounted for 69.9 per cent of the aggregate assets and 72.7 per cent of

the aggregate advances of the Scheduled commercial banking system. A unique feature of the

reform of the public sector banks was the process of their financial restructuring. The banks

were recapitalised by the government to meet prudential norms through recapitalisation

bonds. The mechanism of hiving off bad loans to a separate government asset management

company was not considered appropriate in view of the moral hazard. The subsequent

divestment of equity and offer to private shareholders was undertaken through a public offer

and not by sale to strategic investors. Consequently, all the public sector banks, which issued

shares to private shareholders, have been listed on the exchanges and are subject to the same

disclosure and market discipline standards as other listed entities. To address the problem of

distressed assets, a mechanism has been developed to allow sale of these assets to Asset

Reconstruction Companies which operate as independent commercial entities.

As regard the prudential regulatory framework for the banking system, we have come a long

way from the administered interest rate regime to deregulated interest rates, from the system

of Health Codes for an eight-fold, judgmental loan classification to the prudential asset

classification based on objective criteria, from the concept of simple statutory minimum

capital and capital-deposit ratio to the risk-sensitive capital adequacy norms – initially under

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Basel I framework and now under the Basel II regime. There is much greater focus now on

improving the corporate governance set up through “fit and proper” criteria, on encouraging

integrated risk management systems in the banks and on promoting market discipline through

more transparent disclosure standards. The policy endeavor has all along been to benchmark

our regulatory norms with the international best practices, of course, keeping in view the

domestic imperatives and the country context. The consultative approach of the RBI in

formulating the prudential regulations has been the hallmark of the current regulatory regime

which enables taking account of a wide diversity of views on the issues at hand.

The implementation of reforms has had an all round salutary impact on the financial health

of the banking system, as evidenced by the significant improvements in a number of

prudential parameters. Let me briefly highlight the improvements in a few salient financial

indicators of the banking system.

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CHALLENGES FACING BANKING INDUSTRY IN INDIA

The banking industry in India is undergoing a major transformation due to changes in

economic conditions and continuous deregulation. These multiple changes happening one

after other has a ripple effect on a bank (Refer fig. 2.1) trying to graduate from completely

regulated sellers market to completed deregulated customers market.

· Deregulation: This continuous deregulation has made the Banking market extremely

competitive with greater autonomy, operational flexibility, and decontrolled interest rate and

liberalized norms for foreign exchange. The deregulation of the industry coupled with

decontrol in interest rates has led to entry of a number of players in the banking industry. At

the same time reduced corporate credit off take thanks to sluggish economy has resulted in

large number of competitors battling for the same pie.

· New rules: As a result, the market place has been redefined with new rules of the game.

Banks are transforming to universal banking, adding new channels with lucrative pricing and

freebees to offer. Natural fall out of this has led to a series of innovative product offerings

catering to various customer segments, specifically retail credit.

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· Efficiency: This in turn has made it necessary to look for efficiencies in the business. Banks

need to access low cost funds and simultaneously improve the efficiency. The banks are

facing pricing pressure, squeeze on spread and have to give thrust on retail assets

· Diffused Customer loyalty: This will definitely impact Customer preferences, as they are

bound to react to the value added offerings. Customers have become demanding and the

loyalties are diffused. There are multiple choices, the wallet share is reduced per bank with

demand on flexibility and customization. Given the relatively low switching costs; customer

retention calls for customized service and hassle free, flawless service delivery.

· Misaligned mindset: These changes are creating challenges, as employees are made to

adapt to changing conditions. There is resistance to change from employees and the Seller

market mindset is yet to be changed coupled with Fear of uncertainty and Control orientation.

Acceptance of technology is slowly creeping in but the utilization is not maximised.

· Competency Gap: Placing the right skill at the right place will determine success. The

competency gap needs to be addressed simultaneously otherwise there will be missed

opportunities. The focus of people will be on doing work but not providing solutions, on

escalating problems rather than solving them and on disposing customers instead of using the

opportunity to cross sell.

Strategic options with banks to cope with the challenges

Leading players in the industry have embarked on a series of strategic and tactical initiatives

to sustain leadership. The major initiatives include:

· Investing in state of the art technology as the back bone of to ensure reliable service delivery

· Leveraging the branch network and sales structure to mobilize low cost current and savings

deposits

· Making aggressive forays in the retail advances segment of home and personal loans

· Implementing organization wide initiatives involving people, process and technology to

reduce the fixed costs and the cost per transaction

· Focusing on fee based income to compensate for squeezed spread, (e.g. CMS, trade

services)

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COMPANY PROFILE

ICICI GROUP

In 1955, The Industrial Credit and Investment Corporation of India Limited (ICICI)

incorporated at the initiative of the World Bank, the Government of India and representatives

of Indian industry, with the objective of creating a development financial institution for

providing medium-term and long-term project financing to Indian businesses.

Mr.A.Ramaswami Mudaliar elected as the first Chairman of ICICI Limited.

ICICI emerges as the major source of foreign currency loans to Indian industry. Besides

funding from the World Bank and other multi-lateral agencies, ICICI was also among the

first Indian companies to raise funds from international markets

OVERVIEW

ICICI Group offers a wide range of banking products and financial services to corporate and

retail customers through a variety of delivery channels and through its specialised group

companies, subsidiaries and affiliates in the areas of personal banking, investment banking,

life and general insurance, venture capital and asset management. With a strong customer

focus, the ICICI Group Companies have maintained and enhanced their leadership position in

their respective sectors.

ICICI Bank is India's second-largest bank with total assets of Rs. 3,997.95 billion (US$ 100

billion) at March 31, 2008 and profit after tax of Rs. 41.58 billion for the year ended March

31, 2008. ICICI Bank is second amongst all the companies listed on the Indian stock

exchanges in terms of free float market capitalisation. The Bank has a network of about 1,308

branches and 3,950 ATMs in India and presence in 18 countries.

ICICI Prudential Life Insurance Company is a 74:26 joint venture with Prudential plc

(UK). It is the largest private sector life insurance company offering a comprehensive suite of

life, health and pensions products. It is also the pioneer in launching innovative health care

products like Diabetes Care and Cancer Care. The company operates on a multi-channel

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platform and has distribution strength of over 2, 90,000 financial advisors operating from

1956 branches spread across 1669 locations across the country. In addition to the agency

force, it also has tie-ups with various banks, corporate agents and brokers. In fiscal 2008,

ICICI Prudential attained a market share of 12.7% with new business weighted premium

growth of 68.3% to Rs. 66.84 billion and held assets of Rs. 285.78 billion at March 31, 2008.

ICICI Lombard General Insurance Company, a joint venture with the Canada based

Fairfax Financial Holdings, is the largest private sector general insurance company. It has a

comprehensive product portfolio catering to all corporate and retail insurance needs and is

present in over 200 locations across the country. ICICI Lombard General Insurance has

achieved a market share of 29.8% among private sector general insurance companies and an

overall market share of 11.9% during fiscal 2008. The gross return premium grew by 11.4%

from Rs. 30.3 billion in fiscal 2007 to Rs. 33.45 billion in fiscal 2008.

ICICI Securities Ltd is the largest equity house in the country providing end-to-end

solutions (including web-based services) through the largest non-banking distribution channel

so as to fulfill all the diverse needs of retail and corporate customers. ICICI Securities (I-Sec)

has a dominant position in its core segments of its operations - Corporate Finance including

Equity Capital Markets Advisory Services, Institutional Equities, Retail and Financial

Product Distribution.

ICICI Securities Primary Dealership is the largest primary dealer in Government

securities. In fiscal 2008, it achieved a profit after tax of Rs.1.40 billion.

ICICI Prudential Asset Management is the second largest mutual fund with asset under

management of Rs. 547.74 billion and a market share of 10.2% as on March 31, 2008. The

Company manages a comprehensive range of mutual fund schemes and portfolio

management services to meet the varying investment needs of its investors through 235

branches spread across the country. Incorporated in 1987, ICICI Venture is the oldest and the

largest private equity firm in India. The funds under management of ICICI Venture have

increased at a 5 year CAGR of 49% to Rs.95.50 billion as on March 31, 2008.

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PRODUCTS

ICICI Group has always been at the forefront of developing innovative financial products,

which caters to various needs of people from all walks of life. Over the years, it has launched

several financial products that offer financial support, security and more to not just

individuals, but to big and small organisations too.

Banking

• Personal Banking

• Global Private Clients

• Corporate Banking

• Business Banking

• NRI Banking

Insurance & Investment

• Life Insurance

• General Insurance

• Securities

• Mutual Fund

• Private Equity Practice

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ICICI BANK:

ICICI Bank (formerly Industrial Credit and Investment Corporation of India) is India's

largest private bank and also the largest bank in the country. ICICI Bank has total assets of

about Rs.20.05bn (end-Mar 2005), a network of over 550 branches and offices, and about

1900 ATMs. ICICI Bank offers a wide range of banking products and financial services to

corporate and retail customers through a variety of delivery channels and through its

specialized subsidiaries and affiliates in the areas of investment banking, life and non-life

insurance, venture capital and asset management.

ICICI Bank's equity shares are listed in India on stock exchanges at Kolkata and

Vadodara, the Stock Exchange, Mumbai and the National Stock Exchange of India Limited

and its ADRs are listed on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE).

Formation:

• The World Bank, the Government of India and representatives of Indian industry

form ICICI Limited as a development finance institution to provide medium-term and

long-term project financing to Indian businesses in 1955.

• 1994 ICICI establishes ICICI Bank as a subsidiary.

• 1999 ICICI becomes the first Indian company and the first bank or financial

institution from non-Japan Asia to list on the NYSE.

• 2001 ICICI acquired Bank of Madurai (est. 1943). Bank of Madurai was a Chettiar

bank, and had acquired Chettinad Mercantile Bank (est. 1933) and Illanji Bank

(established 1904) in the 1960s.

• 2002 The Boards of Directors of ICICI and ICICI Bank approve the merger of ICICI, ICICI

Personal Financial Services Limited and ICICI Capital Services Limited, with ICICI Bank.

After receiving all necessary regulatory approvals, ICICI integrates the group's financing and

banking operations, both wholesale and retail, into a single entity.

International Expansion

• 2002 ICICI establishes representative offices in NY and London.

• 2003 ICICI opens subsidiaries in Canada and the United Kingdom (UK), and in the

UK it establishes alliance with Lloyds TSB. It also opens an Offshore Banking Unit

(OBU) in Singapore and representative offices in Dubai and Shanghai.

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• 2004 ICICI opens a rep office in Bangladesh to tap the extensive trade between that

country, India and South Africa.

• 2005 ICICI acquires Investitsionno-Kreditny Bank (IKB), a Russia bank with about

US$4mn in assets, head office in Balabanovo in the Kaluga region, and with a branch

in Moscow. ICICI Bank offers a high-interest (5.4% gross) internet savings account to

UK customers

Overview of ICICI BANK

ICICI Bank is India's second-largest bank with total assets of Rs. 3,849.70 billion (US$ 82

billion) at September 30, 2008 and profit after tax Rs. 17.42 billion for the half year ended

September 30, 2008. The Bank has a network of about 1,400 branches and 4,530 ATMs in

India and presence in 18 countries. ICICI Bank offers a wide range of banking products and

financial services to corporate and retail customers through a variety of delivery channels and

through its specialised subsidiaries and affiliates in the areas of investment banking, life and

non-life insurance, venture capital and asset management. The Bank currently has

subsidiaries in the United Kingdom, Russia and Canada, branches in United States,

Singapore, Bahrain, Hong Kong, Sri Lanka, Qatar and Dubai International Finance Centre

and representative offices in United Arab Emirates, China, South Africa, Bangladesh,

Thailand, Malaysia and Indonesia. Our UK subsidiary has established branches in Belgium

and Germany.

ICICI Bank's equity shares are listed in India on Bombay Stock Exchange and the National

Stock Exchange of India Limited and its American Depositary Receipts (ADRs) are listed on

the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE).

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HISTORY OF ICICI

• 1955 The Industrial Credit and Investment Corporation of India Limited (ICICI) was

incorporated at the initiative of World Bank, the Government of India and

representatives of Indian industry, with the objective of creating a development

financial institution for providing medium-term and long-term project financing to

Indian businesses.

• 1994 ICICI established Banking Corporation as a banking subsidiary.formerly

Industrial Credit and Investment Corporation of India. Later, ICICI Banking

Corporation was renamed as 'ICICI Bank Limited'. ICICI founded a separate legal

entity, ICICI Bank, to undertake normal banking operations - taking deposits, credit

cards, car loans etc.

• 2001 ICICI acquired Bank of Madura (est. 1943). Bank of Madura was a Chettiar

bank, and had acquired Chettinad Mercantile Bank (est. 1933) and Illanji Bank

(established 1904) in the 1960s.

• 2002 The Boards of Directors of ICICI and ICICI Bank approved the reverse merger

of ICICI, ICICI Personal Financial Services Limited and ICICI Capital Services

Limited, into ICICI Bank. After receiving all necessary regulatory approvals, ICICI

integrated the group's financing and banking operations, both wholesale and retail,

into a single entity.

Also in 2002, ICICI Bank bought the Shimla and Darjeeling branches that Standard

Chartered Bank had inherited when it acquired Grindlays Bank.

ICICI started its international expansion by opening representative offices in New

York and London.

• 2003 ICICI opened subsidiaries in Canada and the United Kingdom (UK), and in the

UK it established an alliance with Lloyds TSB.

It also opened an Offshore Banking Unit (OBU) in Singapore and representative

offices in Dubai and Shanghai.

• 2004 ICICI opens a rep office in Bangladesh to tap the extensive trade between that

country, India and South Africa.

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• 2005 ICICI acquired Investitsionno-Kreditny Bank (IKB), a Russia bank with about

US$4mn in assets, head office in Balabanovo in the Kaluga region, and with a branch

in Moscow. ICICI renamed the bank ICICI Bank Eurasia.

Also, ICICI established a branch in Dubai International Financial Centre and in Hong

Kong.

• 2006 ICICI Bank UK opened a branch in Antwerp, in Belgium. ICICI opened

representative offices in Bangkok, Jakarta, and Kuala Lumpur.

• 2007 ICICI amalgamated Sangli Bank, which was headquartered in Sangli, in

Maharashtra State, and which had 158 branches in Maharashtra and another 31 in

Karnataka State. Sangli Bank had been founded in 1916 and was particularly strong in

rural areas.

ICICI also received permission from the government of Qatar to open a branch in

Doha.

ICICI Bank Eurasia opened a second branch, this time in St. Petersburg.

• 2008 The US Federal Reserve permitted ICICI to convert its representative office in

New York into a branch.

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Effect of Financial Crisis

The major financial crisis of the 21st century involves esoteric instruments, unaware

regulators, and nervous investors.

Starting in the summer of 2007, the United States experienced a startling contraction in

wealth, triggered by the sub prime crisis, thereby leading to increase in risk spreads, and

decrease in credit market functioning. During boom years, mortgage brokers enticed by the

lure of big commissions, talked buyers with poor credit into accepting housing mortgages

with little or no down payment and without credit checks. Higher default levels, particularly

among less credit-worthy borrowers, magnified the impact of the crisis on the financial

sector.

The same financial crisis, which started last summer, is back with a vengeance. Paul

Krugman describes the analogy between credit – lending between market players and the

financial markets, and motor oil to car engines. The ability to raise cash on short notice, i.e.

liquidity, is an essential lubricant for the markets and for the economy as a whole.

The drying liquidity has closed shops of a large number of credit markets. Interest rates have

been rising across the world, even rates at which banks lend to each other. The freezing up of

the financial markets will ultimately lead to a severe reduction in the rate of lending, followed

by slowed and drastically reduced business investments, leading to a recession, possibly a

nasty one.

A collapse of trust between market players has decreased the willingness of lending

institutions to risk money. The major reason behind this lack of trust being the bursting of the

housing bubble, which caused a lot of AAA labeled investments to turn out to be junk.

The IMF has warned the global economy of a spiraled mortgage crisis, starting in the United

States, ultimately leading to the largest financial shock since the Great Depression.

Since 1864, American Banking has been split into commercial banks and investment banks.

But now that’s changing. Some of the biggest names on Wall Street, Bear Stearns, Lehman

Brothers, and Merrill Lynch, have disappeared into thin air overnight. Goldman Sachs and

Morgan Stanley are the only two giants left. Nervous investors have been sending markets

plunging down. Even Morgan Stanley, one of the last two big independent investment banks

on Wall Street, is struggling to survive at the exchange, though it insists that the company is

still in solid shape. Markets all over the world are confronted by all-time low figures in the

past couple of years or more, including those of Britain, Germany, and Asia.

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In India, IT companies, with nearly half of their revenues coming from banking and financial

service segments, are close monitors of the financial crisis across the world. The IT giants

which had Lehman Brothers and Merrill Lynch as their clients are TCS, Wipro, Satyam, and

Infosys Technologies. HCL escaped the loss to a great extent because neither Lehman

Brothers nor ML was its client.

The government has a reason to worry because the ongoing financial crisis may have an

adverse impact on the banks. Lehman Brothers and Merrill Lynch had invested a substantial

amount in the stocks of Indian Banks, which in turn had invested the money in derivatives,

leading to the exposure of even the derivates market to these investment bankers.

The real estate sector is also affected due to the same factor. Lehman Brothers’ real estate

partner had given Rs. 7.40 crores to Unitech Ltd., for its mixed use development project in

Santa Cruz. Lehman had also signed a MoU with Peninsula Land Ltd, an Ashok Piramal real

estate company, to fund the latter’s project amounting to Rs. 576 crores. DLF Assets, which

holds an investment worth $200 million, is another major real estate organization whose

valuations are affected by the Lehman Brothers dissolution.

Britain has also witnessed the so called “bursting of the Brown bubble”, in the form of the

highest personal debt per capita in the G7 combined with an unsustainable rise in housing

prices. The longest period of expansion in the 21st century, which Britain claimed to be

undergoing, eventually revealed itself of being an illusion. The illusion of rising to prosperity

has been maintained by borrowing to spend, often in the form of equity withdrawal from

increasing expensive houses. The bubble ultimately burst, exposing Britain to the most

serious financial crisis since the 1920s. This brings a lot of misery for home owners who are

set to see the cost of mortgages soar following the deepening of the banking crisis and the

Libor – the rate at which banks lend to each other.

The impact of the crisis is more vividly observable in the emerging markets which are

suffering from one of their biggest sell-offs.

“Everyone has exposure to everything…either directly or indirectly”, JP Morgan analyst,

Brian Johnson Economies with disproportionate offshore borrowings (like that of Australia)

are adversely affected by the western financial crunch. Globalization has ensured that none of

the economies of the world stay insulated from the present financial crisis in the developed

economies.

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Analysis of the impact of the crisis on India can be on the basis of the following 3 criteria:

1. Availability of global liquidity

2. Demand for India investment and cost thereof

3. Decreased consumer demand affecting Indian exports

The main source of Indian prosperity was Foreign Direct Investment (FDI). American and

European companies were bringing in truck-loads of dollars and Euros to get a piece of the

pie of Indian prosperity. Less inflow of foreign investment will result in the dilution of the

element of GDP driven growth.

Liquidity is a major driving force of the strong market performances we have seen in

emerging markets. Markets such as those of India are especially dependent on global liquidity

and international risk appetite. While interest rates in some countries are increasing, countries

such as Brazil are decreasing interest rates. In general, rising interest rates tend to have a

negative impact on global liquidity and subsequently equity prices as fund may move into

bonds and other money markets.

Indian companies which had access to foreign funds for financing their import and export

will be worst hit Foreign funds will be available at huge premiums and will be limited only to

the blue-chip companies, thus leading to:

o Reduced capacity of expansion leading to supply – side pressure

o Increased interest rates to affect corporate profitability

o Increased demand for domestic liquidity will put interest rates under pressure

Consumer demand will face a slow-down in developed economies leading to a reduced

demand for Indian goods and services, thus affecting Indian exports

o Export oriented units will be worst hit, thus impacting employment

o Widening of the trade gap due to reduced exports, leading to pressure on the rupee

exchange rate

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Impact on ICICI bank

The move by Lehman Brothers Holdings, the fourth-largest investment bank to file for

bankruptcy in the US, will impact the country’s largest private bank ICICI Bank partly. The

bank will have to take a hit of $28 million on account of the additional provisioning that

ICICI Bank’s UK subsidiary will have to make. During this quarter, ICICI Bank pared its

credit default swap (CDS) exposures to overseas corporate from $650 million to $80 million.

Some of the larger state-owned banks are also likely to take small hits because of mark-to-

market provisioning on their overseas investments. ICICI Bank will also have to make

additional provisioning on its investments in corporate bonds and on CDS exposures of

Indian corporates. However, officials in the Mumbai-based bank said that the provisioning

requirement for these investments is not substantial.

For the first quarter of FY09, ICICI Bank had reported a net profit of Rs 728 crore. ICICI

Bank’s UK subsidiary had investments of euro 57 million (around $80 million) in senior

bonds of Lehman Brothers. It has already made a provision of close to $12 million against

investment in these bonds. Assuming a recovery of 50% of these investments, the additional

provision required would be about $28 million. The bank has already made a provision of

$188 million in its international books at the end of March 2007-08. According to a research

report by broking house Edelweiss, the UK subsidiary would have to book mark-to-market

losses of $200 million. The report said that the subsidiary had $600 million investments in

mortgage-backed securities and another $500 million investment in corporate bonds.

However, bank officials said that it was too early to comment on the mark-to-market on

corporate bonds as things could change if the Fed cuts rates. ICICI Bank and its subsidiaries

had consolidated total assets of Rs 484,643 crore as on June 30, while ICICI Bank UK had

total assets of around $8.7 billion. At the end of the last quarter, the bank had on its books

CDS papers of overseas clients in the range of close to $650 million. Subsequently, the bank

was able to pare this to $80 million. The bank also has close to $1.5 billion of CDS of Indian

papers. It is likely to take a small hit on these investments. Some of the other Indian banks

such as State Bank of India would also have to take a mark-to-market hit on its investments.

SBI officials said that it was too early to quantify the amount.

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ICICI Bank Ltd., India's second- largest bank, reported $264 million of costs to write down

the value of overseas investments, the biggest loss disclosed by an Indian bank since the

collapse of the U.S. subprime-loan market.

The bank set aside $90 million through December and $70 million will be earmarked in

fourth-quarter earnings. The rest will be set off against the bank's net worth.

So far, 45 of the world's biggest banks and securities firms have written down or lost $181

billion related to investments tied to rising defaults on U.S. home loans or to people with poor

credit histories.

The company has the largest holdings of overseas investments among the nation's major

banks and has been expanding internationally to counter slowing demand for credit in India.

The value of the subprime-related investments in its $2 billion of overseas assets dropped

because investors are shunning all except the safest securities

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RESEARCH METHODOLOGY

The purpose of research is to discover answers to the questions through the application of

scientific procedures. The main aim of research is to find out the truth which is hidden and

which has not been discovered as yet. Though each research study has its own specific

purpose, we may think of research objectives as falling into a number of following broad

categories:

To gain familiarity with a phenomenon or to achieve new insights into it.

To portray accurately the characteristics of a particular individual, situation or a

group.

To determine the frequency with which something occurs or with which it is

associated with something else.

To test a hypothesis of a casual relationship between variables.

Research methodology is a way to systematically solve the research problem . it may be

understood as a science of studying how research is done scientifically. In it we study the

various steps that are generally adopted by a researcher in studying his research problem

along with the logic behind them.

Research methodology has many dimensions and research methods do constitute a part of the

research methodology. The scope of research methodology is wider than that of research

methods. Thus, when we talk of research methodology we not only talk of the research

methods but also consider the logic behind the methods we use in the context of our research

study and explain why we are using a particular method or technique and why we are not

using others so that research results are capable of being evaluated either by the researcher

himself or by others. Why a research study has been undertaken, what data have been

collected and what particular method has been adopted, why particular technique of

analyzing data has been used and a host of similar other question are usually answered when

we talk of research methodology concerning a research problem or study.

Research is often described as active; diligent and systematic process of inquiry aimed at

discovering, interpreting and revising facts. This intellectual investigation produces a greater

understanding of events, behaviors or theories and makes practical application through laws

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and theories. In other words we can say, the purpose of research is to discover answers to the

questions through the application of scientific procedures. The main aim of research is to find

out the truth which is hidden and which has not been discovered as yet.

Research methodology is a way to systematically solve the research problem. It may be

understood as a science of studying how research is done scientifically. In it we study the

various steps that are generally adopted by a researcher in studying his research problem

along with the logic behind them.

RESEARCH METHODOLOGY

The research methodology means the way in which we would complete our

prospected task. Before undertaking any task it becomes very essential for any one to

determine the problem of study. I have adopted the following procedure in completing my

study report.

1. Formulating the problem

2. Research design

3. Determining the data sources

4. Analysing the data

5. Interpretation

6. Preparing research report

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(1) Formulating The Problem

I am interested in the banking sector and I want to make my future in the banking

sector so decided to make my research study on the banking sector. I analysed first the

factors that are important for the banking sector and I came to know that providing credit

facility to the borrower is one of the important factors as far as the banking sector is

concerned. On the basis of the analysed factor, I felt that the important issue right now as far

as the credit facilities are provided by bank is non performing assets. I started knowing about

the basics of the NPAs and decided to do study on the NPAs. So, I choose the topic “A

STUDY OF NON PERFORMING ASSETS” with special reference to ICICI BANK LTD.

(2) Research Design

The research design tells about the mode with which the entire project is prepared.

My research design for this study is basically descriptive . Because I have utilized the large

number of data of the banks.

Descriptive research includes surveys and fact-finding enquiries of different kinds. The major

purpose of descriptive research is description of the state of affairs, as it exists at present. The

main characteristic of this method is that the researcher has no control over the variables; he

can only report what has happened or what is happening. It is also called as ex post facto

research. Most ex post facto research projects are used for descriptive studies in which

researcher seeks to measure such items as, for example, frequency of shopping, preferences

of people, or similar data. Descriptive research also includes attempts by the researcher to

discover causes even when they cannot control the variables. The methods of research

utilized in descriptive research are survey methods of all kinds.

Why descriptive research?

In this case descriptive study was most suitable because it helped in giving focus to the

preferences, knowledge, beliefs & satisfaction of a group of people in a given population and

characteristics of the successful and unsuccessful companies. Moreover it helped in

determining the relationships between two or more variables.

(3) Determining The Data Source

The data source can be primary or secondary. The primary data are those for data

which are used for the first time in the study. However such data take place much time and

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are also expensive. Whereas the secondary data are those data which are already available in

the market. These data are easy to search and are not expensive too. For my study I have

utilized totally the secondary data. Which is raw in state I analysed this data for my research

purpose .

Source Of Secondary Data

• Annual reports of banks

• Reports of RBI

• Internet

• Books etc.

Data generated by the comparison of banks:

For this purpose I compare following facts or data of banks

• Comparison of credit growth with GNPA and NNPA

• Between credit growth and repo rate

• Comparison of unsecured loans

• Comparison of deposit growth

• Comparison of provision coverage

(4) Analysing The Data

The primary data would not be useful until and unless they are well edited, tabulated

and analysed. When the person receives the primary data many unuseful data would also be

there. So, I analysed the data and edited them and turned them in the useful tabulations. So,

that it can become useful in my report.

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As no study could be successfully completed without proper tools and techniques, same with

my project. For the better presentation and right explanation I used tools of statistics and

computer very frequently. And I am very thankful to all those tools for helping me a lot.

Basic tools which I used for project from statistics are-

- Bar Charts

- Pie charts

- Tables

bar charts and pie charts are really useful tools for every research to show the result in a well

clear, ease and simple way. Because I used bar charts and pie cahrts in project for showing

data in a systematic way, so it need not necessary for any observer to read all the theoretical

detail, simple on seeing the charts any body could know that what is being said.

Technological Tools

Ms- Excel

Ms-Word

Above application software of Microsoft helped me a lot in making project more interactive

and productive.

Microsoft-Excel had a great role in my project, it created for me a situation of “you sit and

get”. I provided it simply all the detail of data and in return it given me all the relevant

information..

And in last Microsoft-Word did help me for the documentation of the project in a presentable

form.

(5) Interpretation Of The Data

With use of analysed data I managed to prepare my project report. But the analysing

of data would not help the study to reach towards its objectives. The interpretation of the data

is required so that the others can understand the crux of the study in more simple way without

any problem so I have added the chapter of analysis that would explain others to understand

my study in simpler way. In this segment I interpret my findings in the form of graphs and

charts. All the data which I got form the market will not be disclosed over here but extract of

that in the form of information will definitely be here.

(6) Project Writing

This is the last step in preparing the project report. The objective of the report writing was to

report the finding of the study to the concerned authorities.

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DATA ANALYSIS AND INTERPRETATION

Financial of ICICI bank

Performance Review – Quarter ended December 31, 2008

• Profit after tax of Rs. 1,272 crore; 25% increase over second quarter

• 23% year-on-year increase in operating profit for the quarter ended December 31, 20010

• Strong capital adequacy ratio of 15.6%; highest among large Indian banks

• 19% year-on-year reduction in costs due to cost rationalization measures

• Branch network increased to 1,416 branches The Board of Directors of ICICI Bank Limited

(NYSE: IBN) at its meeting held at Mumbai today, approved the audited accounts of the

Bank for the quarter ended December 31, 2008 (Q3-2010).

Highlights

• The profit after tax for Q3-20010 was Rs. 1,272 crore (US$ 261 million) which represents

an increase of 25% over the profit after tax of Rs. 1,014 crore (US$ 208 million) in the

quarter ended September 30, 2009 (Q2-2010). Profit after tax for the quarter ended December

31,2008 (Q3-2009) was Rs. 1,230 crore (US$ 253 million).

• Operating profit for Q3-2010 was Rs. 2,771 crore (US$ 569 million) which represents an

increase of 23% over operating profit of Rs.2,259 crore (US$ 464 million) for Q3-2010.

• Net interest income for Q3-2009 was Rs. 1,990 crore (US$ 409 million) compared to the net

interest income of Rs. 1,960 crore (US$ 402 million) for Q3-2009.

• The Bank earned treasury income of Rs. 976 crore (US$ 200 million) in Q3-2010, primarily

by positioning its treasury strategy to benefit from the decline in yields on government bonds.

• Operating expenses decreased 19% to Rs. 1,680 crore (US$ 345 million) in Q3-2010 from

Rs. 2,080 crore (US$ 427 million) for Q3- 2009. The cost/average asset ratio for Q3-2010

was 1.8% compared to 2.2% for Q3-2009.

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Capital adequacy

The Bank’s capital adequacy at December 31, 2009 as per Reserve Bank of India’s revised

guidelines on Basel II norms was 15.6% and Tier-1 capital adequacy was 12.1%, well above

RBI’s requirement of total capital adequacy of 9.0% and Tier-1 capital adequacy of 6.0%.

Asset quality

At December 31, 2008, the Bank’s net non-performing asset ratio was 1.95% on an

unconsolidated basis. The consolidated net NPA ratio of the Bank and its subsidiaries was

1.6%. The specific provisions for nonperforming assets (excluding the impact of farm loan

waiver) were Rs. 868 crore (US$ 185 million) in Q2-2009 compared to Rs. 878 crore (US$

187 million) in Q1-2009.

� Consolidated net NPA ratio of the Bank and its subsidiaries at 1.6%

� Gross retail NPLs of Rs. 69.57 bn and net retail NPLs of Rs. 26.77 bn at September 30,

2008

� Unsecured products constitute 57% of net retail NPLs

Performance highlights of insurance subsidiaries

ICICI Prudential Life Insurance Company (ICICI Life) increased its overall market share in

retail new business weighted received premiums from 12.7% in the year ended March 31,

2008 (FY2008) to 13.7% during April- August 2008. New business weighted received

premium increased by 22% in H1-2009 to Rs. 2,650 crore (US$ 564 million). While ICICI

Life’s results reduced the consolidated profit after tax of ICICI Bank by Rs. 466 crore (US$

99 million) in H1-2009, ICICI Life’s unaudited New Business Profit (NBP)2 in H1-2009 was

Rs. 522 crore (US$ 111 million). Assets held increased to Rs. 30,107 crore (US$ 6.4 billion)

at September 30, 2008.

ICICI Lombard General Insurance Company (ICICI General) increased its overall market

share from 11.9% in FY2008 to 12.5% during April-August 2008. ICICI General’s premiums

increased 12.2% on a year-on-year basis to Rs. 1,925 crore (US$ 410 million) in H1-2009.

Other subsidiaries (Rs in billion)

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PROFIT AFTER TAX H-1 20009 H-1 2010ICICI Securities Ltd. 0.37 0.24ICICI Securities PD 0.99 0.21ICICI Venture 0.27 1.39ICICI AMC 0.53 0.44ICICI Home Finance 0.29 0.39

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Comparison

Items 2004-

05

2005-

06

2006-

07

2007-

08

2008-

09

Group

Average

All Banks'

Average 2008-09 2008-09No. of offices 419 515 569 716 1268 359 795No. of employees 13609 18029 25384 33321 40686 7232 11573Business per

employee (in Rs.

lakh)

1010.

00

880.0

0

905.0

0

1027.

00

1008.

00

717.52 634.09

Profit per employee

(in Rs. lakh)

12.00 11.00 10.00 9.00 10.00 5.72 4.67

Capital and

reserves & surplus

8360 12900 22556 24663 46820 3973 3994

Deposits 68109 99819 16508

3

23051

0

24443

1

29351 42026

Investments 43436 50487 71547 91258 11145

4

12096 14888

Advances 62648 91405 14616

3

19586

6

22561

6

22539 31355

Interest income 9002 9410 14306 21996 30788 3093 3919Other income 3065 3416 4181 6928 8811 733 751Interest expended 7015 6571 9597 16358 23484 2108 2633Operating expenses 2571 3299 5001 6691 8154 881 977Cost of Funds

(CoF)

3.59 3.02 4.01 5.34 6.40 6.13 5.81

Return on advances

adjusted to CoF

6.94 5.75 4.58 4.08 4.33 4.87 4.11

Wages as % to total

expenses

5.70 7.47 7.41 7.01 6.57 10.34 13.96

Return on Assets 1.31 1.48 1.30 1.09 1.12 1.15 1.16CRAR 10.36 11.78 13.35 11.69 13.97 14.30 13.00Net NPA ratio 2.21 1.65 0.72 1.02 1.55 1.09 1.00

COMPARISON OF BANKS ON VARIOUS PARAMETERS

I analysed the above banks on various parameters to find out how they are placed in terms of

business growth, efficiency and the comfort they provide in terms of their current financial

standing and business exposures.

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The growth-related variables indicate the last 5-year CAGR banks achieved in advances and

deposits. It also carries a ranking of these banks in terms of their latest CASA ratio. Axis

Bank emerges as an out-performer in this category.

On efficiency-related parameters, the cost/income ratio, quality of advances and the extent of

loan loss-loss provision coverage have been reviewed, and banks have been accordingly

ranked.

PNB leads the pack with high scores in each variable.

In the next segment, certain comfort-related yardsticks have been compared. Capital-raising

by banks to bolster future growth, real estate exposure and overseas dependence for the

business have been compared. Although PNB did not raise any fresh capital and ranks last on

that metric, it ranks as the best bank with lower real estate and foreign exposure, which is

critical during a global economic slowdown. Also, we analysed banks that generate the

maximum core interest income as a proportion of total income. ICICI Bank and Axis Bank

have greater proportions of their income coming from 'other income' and these segments

might have greater tendency to show slower growth in the current scenario. A detailed

analysis of the above parameters is presented in the ensuing paragraphs.

GROWTH METRIC - LOAN GROWTH COMPARISON

The chart below shows that the last 5 years loan growth achieved by India's major banks.

HDFC Bank showed consistent growth over the last 3 years (even though it shows a slight

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falling trend in the 5-year chart). Axis Bank achieved a high compounded annual growth

during this period, followed by ICICI Bank.

Loan growth CAGR (from FY04 to FY08)

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GROWTH METRIC - DEPOSIT COMPARISON

In terms of the deposit growth (CAGR) achieved by these banks during the last 5 years, Axis

Bank and ICICI Bank retain top two slots as seen in loan growth. ICICI Bank registered a

deposit growth of just 6% in FY08. This was in sharp contrast to the 40% growth the bank

achieved in the 4 years before FY08. PSU banks, on the other hand, grew at a much slower

pace.

Deposits growth CAGR (from FY04 to FY08)

AXIS

BANK

BOB BOI HDFC ICICI PNB SBI

43% 20% 20% 35% 38% 17% 14%

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LOAN BOOK ANALYSIS - UNSECURED LOANS AND NPAS

Unsecured loans primarily include personal loans and credit card exposures, priority sector

lending in rural areas, education loans, credits to SMEs (small and medium entrepreneurs) up

to Rs 5 lakh, etc. Exposure of Indian banks towards unsecured loans rose consistently over

the years. As shown in the chart below, HDFC Bank has the highest, with around 30% of its

total loans exposed to such loans.

Though there is no direct correlation between loan losses and unsecured loan exposure, in an

economic slowdown scenario, such exposure will carry a greater stress, and hence, a higher

probability of default. Banks need to be extremely vigilant in terms of monitoring these loans

regularly, so that losses in the form of NPAs do not increase unreasonably and dent the

quality of the loan book.

However, a review of the gross NPA ratio, i.e., GNPA as a percentage of advances indicates

that HDFC Bank and other banks have ensured that the NPA increase is proportionate to that

of the loan growth. In fact, PSU banks have shown tremendous improvement in terms of loan

quality, as the GNPA ratio for these banks fell from average 8-9% levels to less than 3%

levels in the last 5 years. Only ICICI Bank has shown deterioration of its loan quality as

reflected in its increasing GNPA ratio. The main reason for this increase is that the bank has

substantial exposure to the retail segment, including huge exposure to the real estate segment

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at almost 36% of total loans that includes close to 30% exposure in the form of housing loans.

The retail segment constitutes close to 75% of ICICI Bank's NPAs.

COMPOSITION OF LOAN BOOK: December 31, 2010

Total loan book: Rs. 2,125 bn Total retail loan book: Rs. 1,145 bn

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GROSS NPA RATIO

Gross NPA is the ratio of gross NPA to gross advances of the bank. Gross NPA is the

sum of all loan assets that are classified as NPA as per the RBI guidelines. The ratio is to be

counted in terms of percentage and the formula for GNPA is as follows:

The table above indicates the quality of the credit portfolio of the banks. High gross NPA

ratio indicates the low credit portfolio of bank and vice-versa.

Gross NPA of all the banks decrease from year 2005 to 2006. But from year 2006 onwards

it starts increasing. Similiary, GNPA of ICICI bank first decrease to 1.5% from 4.7 in year

2005. But than increasees to the level of 4.14 % in December 2008.

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Gross NPA ratio = gross NPA/Gross advances *100

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NET NPA RATIO:

The Net NPA ratio is the ratio of net NPA to advances, in which the provision is to be

deducted from the gross advance. The provision is to be made for NPA account. The formula

for that is:

Net NPA Ratio = Gross NPA-provision / Gross Advances- provision * 100

The ratio indicates the degree of risk in the portfolio of the banks. High NPA ratio indicates

the high quantity of risky assets in the banks for which no provision are made.

Here, NNPA ratio decrease from year 2004 to 2009. But in last two years NNPA ratio

increase little bit due to global meltdown. Same is the case with ICICI bank. Whose NNPA

ratio decreases to .72% in year 2006 from 2.21% in year 2004. But it increases to 1.95% in

December 2008.

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CAPITAL ADEQUACY RATIO

Capital adequacy ratio can be defined as ratio of the capital of the bank, to its assets,

which are weight/adjusted according to risk attached to them i.e.

Capital Adequacy Ratio = capital / risk weighted assets * 100

As per prudential norms banks were required to achieve 8% CAR, increased to 9% by March

2000.

It is clear from the graph that in last few year CAR increases which indicates that indian

banks are in more strong position than theiar counter parts in rest of the world.

ICICI bank also maintains good CAR than required as per norms. Which shows that despite

of exposure of global melt down health of ICICI remains unaffect.

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EFFICIENCY COMPARISON - COST / INCOME RATIOS OF BANKS

In terms of control over costs, the below table explains cost/income ratios of these banks over

the last 5 years. At the end of FY08, all banks have a similar cost/income ratio averaging

between 48- 50%. However, Bank of India has substantially lower cost-to-income ratio of

42%.

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LOAN LOSS COVERAGE RATIO

A not-so-encouraging sign in terms of NPA management of Indian banks is the fact that the

loan loss coverage ratio for banks as a group has reduced over the last 2 years. From 60%

levels, the coverage ratio has fallen to around 55%.

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PROVISION COVERAGE OF BANKS

In terms of provision coverage for specific banks, Axis Bank has a low coverage ratio in the

private bank group at around 50%, and the SBI has a ratio of 42%, the lowest in PSU banks

in the comparison chart below.

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ICICI BANK

Basel II Disclosures Q1-FY 2009 Capital adequacy as at December 31, 2008 (Standalone)

INR in billions, except ratiosTier - 1 capital

433.57 Tier - 2 capital

124.94 Total capital funds of the Bank

558.51 Total capital reqiured

332.68Tier - 1 capital adequacy ratio

12.09%Total capital adequacy ratio

15.58%

CAPITAL ADEQUACY

Table 14 Rupees in billion

Risk area AmountCredit risk 310.61Market risk 18.35Operational risk 18.51Total capital requirement at 9% 347.47Total capital funds of the Bank 540.79Total risk weighted assets 3,860.87Capital adequacy ratio 14.01%

CONCLUSION AND SUGGESTIONS

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The issue of Non-Performing Assets (NPAs) in the financial sector has been an area of

concern for all economies and reduction in NPAs has become synonymous with functional

efficiency of financial intermediaries. Although NPAs are a balance sheet issue of individual

banks and financial institutions, it has wider macroeconomic implications. It is important

that, if resolution strategies for recovery of dues from NPAs are not put in place quickly and

efficiently, these assets would deteriorate in value over time and only scrap value would be

realized at the end. It should, however, be kept in mind that NPAs are an integral part of the

business financial sector and the players are in as they are in the business of taking risk and

their earnings reflect the risk they take. They operate in an environment, where there would

be defaults as well as deterioration in portfolio value, as market movements can never be

predicted with certainty. It is in this context, that countries have adopted regulatory measures

and the guiding structure has been provided by the Basel guidelines.

There are various reasons for assets turning non-performing and there can be alternative

resolution strategies. Identification of the reasons and timely action are the key to improved

profitability of financial sector intermediaries. In this context, the details of the CAMEL

model that RBI introduced for evaluating performance of banks and the need for this arose

from the systemic generation of large volume of NPAs. CAMEL covers capital adequacy,

asset quality, management quality, earnings ability and liquidity.

Indian economy and NPAs

Undoubtedly the world economy has slowed down, recession is at its peak, globally stock

markets have tumbled and business itself is getting hard to do. The Indian economy has been

much affected due to high fiscal deficit, poor infrastructure facilities, sticky legal system,

cutting of exposures to emerging markets by FIIs, etc.

Further, international rating agencies like, Standard & Poor have lowered India's credit rating

to sub-investment grade. Such negative aspects have often outweighed positives such as

increasing forex reserves and a manageable inflation rate.Under such a situation, it goes

without saying that banks are no exception and are bound to face the heat of a global

downturn. One would be surprised to know that the banks and financial institutions in India

hold non-performing assets worth Rs. 1,10,000 crores.

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Global Developments and NPAs

The core banking business is of mobilizing the deposits and utilizing it for lending to

industry. Lending business is generally encouraged because it has the effect of funds being

transferred from the system to productive purposes which results into economic growth.

However lending also carries credit risk, which arises from the failure of borrower to fulfill

its contractual obligations either during the course of a transaction or on a future obligation.

A question that arises is how much risk can a bank afford to take ? Recent happenings in the

business world - Enron, WorldCom, Xerox, Global Crossing do not give much confidence to

banks. In case after case, these giant corporates became bankrupt and failed to provide

investors with clearer and more complete information thereby introducing a degree of risk

that many investors could neither anticipate nor welcome. The history of financial institutions

also reveals the fact that the biggest banking failures were due to credit risk.

Due to this, banks are restricting their lending operations to secured avenues only with

adequate collateral on which to fall back upon in a situation of default.

Performance in terms of profitability is a benchmark for any business enterprise including the

banking industry. However, increasing NPAs have a direct impact on banks profitability as

legally banks are not allowed to book income on such accounts and at the same time banks

are forced to make provision on such assets as per the Reserve Bank of India (RBI)

guidelines.

Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has issued guidelines on provisioning requirement with respect

to bank advances. In terms of these guidelines, bank advances are mainly classified into:

Standard Assets: Such an asset is not a non-performing asset. In other words, it carries not

more than normal risk attached to the business.

Sub-standard Assets: Which has remained NPA for a period less than or equal to 12 months.

Doubtful Assets: This has remained in the sub-standard category for a period of 12 months

.Loss Assets: Here loss is identified by the banks concerned or by internal auditors or by

external auditors or by Reserve Bank India (RBI) inspection.

In terms of RBI guidelines, as and when an asset becomes a NPA, such advances would be

first classified as a sub-standard one for a period that should not exceed 12 months and

subsequently as doubtful assets.

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It should be noted that the above classification is only for the purpose of computing the

amount of provision that should be made with respect to bank advances and certainly not for

the purpose of presentation of advances in the banks balance sheet.

Provision

Standard Assets – general provision of a minimum of 0.25%

Substandard Assets – 10% on total outstanding balance, 10 % on unsecured exposures

identified as sub-standard & 100% for unsecured “doubtful” assets.

Doubtful Assets – 100% to the extent advance not covered by realizable value of security. In

case of secured portion, provision may be made in the range of 20% to 100% depending on

the period of asset remaining sub-standard

Loss Assets – 100% of the outstanding

Management of NPA

During initial sage the percentage of NPA was higher. This was due to show ineffective

recovery of bank credit, lacuna in credit recovery system, inadequate legal provision etc.

Various steps have been taken by the government to recover and reduce NPAs. Some of

them are.

• Formation of the Credit Information Bureau (India) Limited (CIBIL)

• Release of Wilful Defaulter’s List. RBI also releases a list of borrowers with

aggregate outstanding of Rs.1 crore and above against whom banks have filed suits

for recovery of their funds

• Reporting of Frauds to RBI

• Norms of Lender’s Liability – framing of Fair Practices Code with regard to lender’s

liability to be followed by banks, which indirectly prevents accounts turning into

NPAs on account of bank’s own failure

• Risk assessment and Risk management

• RBI has advised banks to examine all cases of wilful default of Rs.1 crore and above

and file suits in such cases. Board of Directors are required to review NPA accounts

of Rs.1 crore and above with special reference to fixing of staff accountability.

• Reporting quick mortality cases

• Special mention accounts for early identification of bad debts. Loans and advances

overdue for less than one and two quarters would come under this category. However,

these accounts do not need provisioning

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NPA MANAGEMENT - RESOLUTION

• Compromise Settlement Schemes

• Restructuring / Reschedulement

• Lok Adalat

• Corporate Debt Restructuring Cell

• Debt Recovery Tribunal (DRT)

• Proceedings under the Code of Civil Procedure

• Board for Industrial & Financial Reconstruction (BIFR)/ AAIFR

• National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT)

• Sale of NPA to other banks

• Sale of NPA to ARC/ SC under Securitization and Reconstruction of Financial Assets

and Enforcement of Security Interest Act 2002 (SRFAESI)

• Liquidation

The description of these points are as below

1. Restructuring and Rehabilitation

a. Banks are free to design and implement their own policies for restructuring/

rehabilitation of the NPA accounts

b. Reschedulement of payment of interest and principal after considering the Debt

service coverage ratio, contribution of the promoter and availability of security

2. Corporate Debt Restructuring

a. The objective of CDR is to ensure a timely and transparent mechanism for

restructuring of the debts of viable corporate entities affected by internal and external

factors, outside the purview of BIFR, DRT or other legal proceedings

b. The legal basis for the mechanism is provided by the Inter-Creditor Agreement (ICA).

All participants in the CDR mechanism must enter the ICA with necessary

enforcement and penal clauses.

c. The scheme applies to accounts having multiple banking/ syndication/ consortium

accounts with outstanding exposure of Rs.10 crores and above.

d. The CDR system is applicable to standard and sub-standard accounts with potential

cases of NPAs getting a priority.

e. Packages given to borrowers are modified time & again

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f. Drawback of CDR – Reaching of consensus amongst the creditors delays the process

3. DRT Act

a. The banks and FIs can enforce their securities by initiating recovery proceeding under

the Recovery if Debts due to Banks and FI act, 1993 (DRT Act) by filing an

application for recovery of dues before the Debt Recovery Tribunal constituted under

the Act.

b. On adjudication, a recovery certificate is issued and the sale is carried out by an

auctioneer or a receiver.

c. DRT has powers to grant injunctions against the disposal, transfer or creation of third

party interest by debtors in the properties charged to creditor and to pass attachment

orders in respect of charged properties

d. In case of non-realization of the decreed amount by way of sale of the charged

properties, the personal properties if the guarantors can also be attached and sold.

e. However, realization is usually time-consuming

f. Steps have been taken to create additional benches

4. Proceeding under Code of Civil Procedure

a. For claims below Rs.10 lacs, the banks and FIs can initiate proceedings under the

Code of Civil Procedure of 1908, as amended, in a Civil court.

b. The courts are empowered to pass injunction orders restraining the debtor through

itself or through its directors, representatives, etc from disposing of, parting with or

dealing in any manner with the subject property.

c. Courts are also empowered to pass attachment and sales orders for subject property

before judgment, in case necessary.

d. The sale of subject property is normally carried out by way of open public auction

subject to confirmation of the court.

e. The foreclosure proceedings, where the DRT Act is not applicable, can be initiated

under the Transfer of Property Act of 1882 by filing a mortgage suit where the

procedure is same as laid down under the CPC.

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5. BIFR AND AAIFR

a. BIFR has been given the power to consider revival and rehabilitation of companies

under the Sick Industrial Companies (Special Provisions) Act of 1985 (SICA), which

has been repealed by passing of the Sick Industrial Companies (Special Provisions)

Repeal Bill of 2001.

b. The board of Directors shall make a reference to BIFR within sixty days from the date

of finalization of the duly audited accounts for the financial year at the end of which

the company becomes sick

c. The company making reference to BIFR to prepare a scheme for its revival and

rehabilitation and submit the same to BIFR the procedure is same as laid down under

the CPC.

d. The shelter of BIFR misused by defaulting and dishonest borrowers

e. It is a time consuming process

6. SALE OF NPA TO OTHER BANKS

a. A NPA is eligible for sale to other banks only if it has remained a NPA for at least

two years in the books of the selling bank

b. The NPA must be held by the purchasing bank at least for a period of 15 months

before it is sold to other banks but not to bank, which originally sold the NPA.

c. The NPA may be classified as standard in the books of the purchasing bank for a

period of 90 days from date of purchase and thereafter it would depend on the record

of recovery with reference to cash flows estimated while purchasing

d. The bank may purchase/ sell NPA only on without recourse basis

e. If the sale is conducted below the net book value, the short fall should be debited to

P&L account and if it is higher, the excess provision will be utilized to meet the loss

on account of sale of other NPA.

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7. SARFESI Act 2002

a. SARFESI provides for enforcement of security interests in movable (tangible or

intangible assets including accounts receivable) and immovable property without the

intervention of the court

b. The bank and FI may call upon the borrower by way of a written legal notice to

discharge in full his liabilities within 60 days from the date of notice, failing which

the bank would be entitled to exercise all or any of the rights set out under the Act.

c. Another option available under the Act is to takeover the management of the secured

assets

d. Any person aggrieved by the measures taken by the bank can proffer an appeal to

DRT within 45 days after depositing 75% of the amount claimed in the notice.

e. Chapter II of SARFESI provides for setting up of reconstruction and securitization

companies for acquisition of financial assets from its owner, whether by raising funds

by such company from qualified institutional buyers by issue of security receipts

representing undivided interest in such assets or otherwise.

f. The ARC can takeover the management of the business of the borrower, sale or lease

of a part or whole of the business of the borrower and rescheduling of payments,

enforcement of security interest, settlement of dues payable by the borrower or take

possession of secured assets

g. Additionally, ARCs can act as agents for recovering dues, as manager and receiver.

h. Drawback – differentiation between first charge holders and the second charge

holders

8. Second Amendment & SARFESI

a. The second amendment and SARFESI are a leap forward but requirement exists to

make the laws predictable, transparent and affordable enforcement by efficient

mechanisms outside of insolvency

b. No definite time frame has been provided for various stages during the liquidation

proceedings

c. Need is felt for more creative and commercial approach to corporate entities in

financial distress and attempts to revive rather than applying conservative approach of

liquidation

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d. Tribunals have largely failed to serve the purpose for which they were set up. NCLT

would be over-burdened with workload. Change in eligibility criteria for making a

reference would itself generate a greater workload.

e. The second amendment stops short of providing a comprehensive bankruptcy code to

deal with corporate bankruptcy.

f. Does not introduce the required roadmap of the bankruptcy proceeding viz:

• Application for initiating

• Appointments & empowerment of trustee

• Operational and functional independence

• Accountability to court

• Monitoring and time bound restructuring

• Mechanism to sell off

• Number of time bound attempts for restructuring

• Decision to pursue insolvency and winding up

• Strategies for realization and distribution

g. Need for new laws & procedures to handle bankruptcy proceedings in consultation

with RBI

Perceived Impact

Adapting to Basel II will be more demanding for some institutions than for others, based on

factors including current risk management practices, business size, geographical spread, risk

types, specific business, portfolio, and market conditions

Impact on various entities in financial markets

Apart from banks and regulators, who are directly affected by Basel II, customers, rating

agencies, capital markets and other financial companies (outside the scope of Basel II) will

also be affected. Banks will have to implement an enterprise-wide risk management

framework, which will entail establishing relevant processes and gathering, integrating and

analysing large amount of data. Using quantitative methods to manage risk - and to deploy

capital based on risks - requires high quality and high frequency data.

Customers will find that they have to cope with increased demands for timely information

from banks that are on IRB approaches. Risk-based pricing of credit products will become

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the norm as banks begin differentiating customers as per their risk profiles. Riskier borrowers

are likely to find their borrowing costs going up and/or credit lines tightened up.

Rating agencies may face more competition as the market for them will expand and deepen,

which will be a driver for them to be more transparent in their rating process.

Good quality rated corporates will prefer capital markets to banks for their funding.

Securitisation and credit derivatives will increasingly be used as credit risk hedging tools.

Basel II is also likely to impact financial institutions that do not have to comply with it. Non-

banking corporations such as credit card companies, leasing companies, auto manufacturers

and financiers, or retailers’ financing arms may not have to fulfill the potentially extensive

disclosure requirements prescribed by Basel II nor make investments in managing operational

risk, which will put them at a competitive advantage vis-à-vis banks.

Impact on emerging markets and smaller banks

In an attempt to assess the impact of Pillar 1 requirements of capital adequacy, BCBS did

undertake a few quantitative impact surveys (QIS), the last of which is referred to as QIS-3.

The results indicated that, in general, banks’ required capital will decrease with respect to

credit risks and increase with respect to operational risks. However, in Asia and other

emerging markets, several factors may raise the required capital even for credit risks, as real

estate continues to be widely used as collateral for business loans, and the standardised

approach, which is the most likely approach for many banks, places a 150 per cent risk

weight on non-performing loans. Basel II will increase the level of capital that is required for

banking institutions in the emerging markets, mainly owing to the new operational risk

charge, which will be higher if the basic indicator approach is used.

By application of differential risk weights on the basis of sovereign rating as a benchmark,

the capital inflows in emerging markets could be seriously affected as most of the borrowers

in such markets will be categorised under the speculative grade.

Smaller banks would find the investments on Basel II compliance too big for their existing

budgets.

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SUGGESTION

After all these points, I just want to say that NPA is a big problem of banks. Due to this crisis

the NPA are also increased. That’s why all the banks are facing problems and ICICI bank is

top most in those banks, ICICI banks has a big exposure in that crisis as compare to other

banks. So banks have to take care of those banks. My recommendations are:

1. Strengthening provision norms and loan classification standards based on

forward looking criteria (like future cash flows) were implemented.

2. Through securitization they can reduce NPA

3. Speed of action- the speedy containment of systematic risk and the domestic

credit crunch problem with the injection of large public fund for bank

recapitalization are critical steps towards normalizing the financial system.

4. Strengthening legal system

5. Maintain required capital adequacy ratio as per basel 2 norms. That means

now the provision for NPL will be more. This may look a conservative

approach. But it should be implemented to reduce risk.

6. Modification in accounting system

7. Use the concept of credit derivative

8. Aligning of prudential norms with international standard.

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LIMITATION OF THE STUDY

The limitation that I felt in my study are:

• It was critical for me to gather the financial data of the every bank of the public sector

banks so the better evaluation of the performance of the banks are not possible.

• Since my study is based on the secondary data, the practical operation as related to

the NPAs are adopted by the banks are not learned.

• Since the Indian banking sector is so wide so it was possible for me to cover all the

banks of the Indian banking sector.

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REFERENCES

Pandey I M , financial management, Vikas publication, new Delhi, 2007

Khan M Y and K Jain “management accounting: Tata Mcgraw-Hill Publishing

Company Limited, New Delhi 1999

Malhotra Naresh, Marketing Research

Annual reports of ICICI bank from year 2004 to 2009

Annual reports of HDFC from year 2004 to 2009

Annual reports of SBI from year 2004 to 2009

Annual reports of Bank of Boarda from year 2004 to 2009

Annual reports of Bank of India from year 2004 to 2009

Research paper of Prasanta K Reddy

www.geocities.com/kstability/content/index.html

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/banking in india

www.rbi.org.in

www.moneycontrol.com

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