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PMO to review steps to check loan frauds on Thursday

NEW DELHI:  Amid a rising number of frauds and loan defaults in banking system, the Prime Minister's Office has called a meeting of Finance Ministry officials on Thursday to firm up measures to tackle such

PTI PTI Updated on: May 10, 2015 17:00 IST
pmo to review steps to check loan frauds on thursday
pmo to review steps to check loan frauds on thursday

NEW DELHI:  Amid a rising number of frauds and loan defaults in banking system, the Prime Minister's Office has called a meeting of Finance Ministry officials on Thursday to firm up measures to tackle such menaces.

The Prime Minister's Office in a meeting with top finance ministry officials on May 14 will review steps to check loan frauds, an official source said.

The finance ministry has already collected a comprehensive data on willful defaulters of public sector banks last month, sources said.

 
They further said that instances of corporate frauds were on increase in the recent past, leading to a rise in bad loans.

As per RBI data, gross NPAs of PSU banks have gone up to Rs 2,60,531 crore as on December, 2014.

The top 30 defaulters are sitting on bad loans of Rs 95,122 crore, which is more than one-third of the entire non-performing assets of public sector banks as on December 2014. In terms of percentage, it amounts to 36.5 per cent.

The total number of NPA borrowers having Rs 10 crore and above at the end of September 2014 stood at 2,897 with outstanding amount of Rs 1,60,164 crore.

Gross NPAs of public sector banks rose sharply to 5.33 per cent in September 2014 as compared to 4.72 per cent of total advances at the end of March 2014.

In order to check instances of fraud, the RBI had last week put in place a new framework to check loan frauds including by way of early warning signals at banks and red flagging of accounts, while swindlers will have no access to further banking finance.

Besides, the central bank would set up a Central Fraud Registry that can be accessed by all banks to identify borrowers having committed frauds with any bank in the past.

The CBI and the Central Economic Intelligence Bureau (CEIB) will also share their databases with banks.

The concept of a Red Flagged Account (RFA) is being introduced in the current framework as an important step in fraud risk control, the RBI said in guidelines for banks to deal with loan frauds.

"An RFA is one where a suspicion of fraudulent activity is thrown up by the presence of one or more early warning signals (EWS).

These signals in a loan account should immediately put the bank on alert regarding a weakness or wrong doing which may ultimately turn out to be fraudulent," the RBI had said statement.

No restructuring or grant of additional facilities may be made in the case of RFA or fraud accounts, it said.

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