BACKGROUND
Livemint and the Wall Street Journal (2013) reported:
1. Many of the infrastructure projects would reach their project completion deadlines from the next fiscal year onwards, the time when they are required to start making the loan repayments;
2.
Outstanding bank loans to infrastructure firms rose to Rupees (Rs.) 6.9 trillion as of 31 December 2012, up from Rs. 5.96 trillion a year earlier; and3. Growth of such credit slowed to 16% in the 12 months ending in December, 2012 down from 20.5%.
Dun and Bradstreet (2012) observed that many retailers on the supply side are slowing down their expansion plans and many real estate developers are falling behind schedules in their shopping mall projects due to the continuing credit crunch. The economic slowdown has deeply affected the Indian organized retail sector in terms of deceleration in retail sales growth, footfalls, store expansions, employment rates and, most importantly, profitability. Previously in a similar note, the Indian Express (2010) observed that: (i) the RBI hiked the risk weight on commercial real estate project loans to 1% from 0.4%; and (ii) there was more than a 40% increase in loans to commercial real estate, but side by side nearly 14% of commercial realty assets were restructured by banks.
CRISIL (2011) observed the number of defaults in real estate doubled in December 2011 over the previous year. In 2011, ICRA observed the following:
1. Historically banks have been taking exposure for state power projects as well as for independent power proj ects, but many banks are approaching the exposure cap on lending to the power sector;
2. Given the concerns hovering over the prospects of the sector itself, the pace of growth of credit to this segment could slow down. Standard & Poor’s (2012) warned that India could become the first of the BRIC (Brazil, Russia, India, China) economies to lose its investment-grade status due to bad loans which continue to threaten growth prospects of the economy.
Considering the above dismal state of corporate lending business facing Indian banks, there is a need to reexamine the implications of different aspects of the games between the banks and their borrowers, and between the banks themselves as competing lenders.