State Bank of India (SBI) Chairman Pratip Chaudhuri has said the bank is taking all steps to recover the loan given to
Vijay Mallya's grounded Kingfisher Airlines.
SBI is
the lead banker to the cash-strapped airline.
"We are blazing all guns and taking all steps to recovery (of Kingfisher loans)," Chaudhuri said after a meeting of heads of PSU banks and financial institutions with Finance Minister P Chidambaram.
The finance minister asked the banks to take firm steps to recover loans saying that the country cannot afford to have "affluent promoters and sick companies".
"We cannot have an affluent promoter and a sick company. Promoters must bring in money," Chidambaram had said.
The consortium of 17 banks, led by SBI, has an outstanding of over Rs 7,000 crore from Kingfisher Airlines but has shares of listed entities like United Spirits as collaterals which should realise Rs 500 crore. That apart, they have the brand Kingfisher as a security.
Additionally, the consortium has a residual right over the securities held by
Srei Infrastructure Finance, which comes to Rs 500 crore. Srei bought this from ICICI Bank in April last year.
"There is a core group. They are assessing what are securities, what can be disposed of quickly, then they are put on auction... That is how it goes," Chaudhuri said.
SBI has
the maximum exposure, over Rs 1,600 crore, in the Vijay Mallya-led airline, followed by Punjab National Bank (with Rs 800 crore), IDBI at Rs 800 crore, Bank of India at Rs 650 crore and Bank of Baroda has Rs 550 crore.
On Chidambaram's direction on bad loans recovery, Chaudhuri said: "We are taking all steps to recover our NPAs and make the situation better. Wherever they can't pay full amount at least part recovery is made so that these are upgraded and the accounts on CDR that process are being expedited."
With PTI inputs