At Over ₹1-lakh cr, Centre to Pay
Stiff Interest on Recap Bonds
Instruments
to bail out banks to add to Covid-induced fiscal stress
for the Govt
The bill for the much acclaimed ₹2.60-lakh-crore bank
recapitalisation programme of
the Centre is now becoming apparent. Recapitalisation
bonds were issued to banks in tranches between January 2018 and March 2020.
The Centre has had to cough up about ₹48,000 crore by
way of interest on the recap bonds between FY19 and FY21 (budgeted). Assuming that
there are no further issuances, the Centre could end up paying about ₹1.2
lakh crore as interest on these bonds over the next five fiscals (starting FY21)
and about ₹2.2 lakh crore until FY28, when the first set of bonds come up
for repayment.
These figures are worked out, based on the interest amount
put out in the Budget 2020-21 and details of bonds issued, compiled from the gazette
notifications issued by the government to the Ministry of Finance (Department of
Economic Affairs).
The bigger worry is that despite the humungous amount pumped
in till now, many PSBs still require a substantial amount of capital. Back-of-the
-envelope workings suggest that at least ₹1 lakh crore of recapitalisation will be required in FY21. Another round of
recap bonds to infuse capital into ailing banks would further increase the Centre’s
interest burden.
“The pandemic crisis has worsened the Centre’s finances and
widened the fiscal deficit. Interest on recap bonds will be an added burden for
the Centre, over the next few years,” says Soumya Kanti Ghosh, Group Chief Economic Advisor to State Bank of India.
The Centre will also have to start setting aside money to
repay the bonds when they come up for repayment eight years from now. Based on the
information available, it will have to repay about ₹21,000 crore in 2028,
then ₹40,000 crore annually between 2029 and 2033, and nearly ₹20,000
crore in 2034.
“Switching of government bonds — swapping bonds having shorter
maturity with longer tenure bonds — is often done to elongate the maturity and lower
the repayment burden of the government in a given year. But in the case of the special
recap bonds, such a switching may not be possible, which implies that the government
will have to repay bonds that come up for maturity in the next eight to ten years,”
explains Ghosh.
Special bonds
As part of the recapitalisation
programme, the Centre borrowed from banks by issuing bonds
to PSBs. This money was then pumped in as capital into public sector banks (hence
not counted under the fiscal deficit calculation). Recap bonds are special government
securities which can be subscribed to by only banks. The bonds are issued at par
and are not transferable.
These bonds are repayable at par on the date of maturity,
and interest will be payable at half yearly intervals. Banks can hold these securities
as held-to-maturity (HTM) to avoid reporting mark-to-market
losses every quarter.
In January 2018, the first of such bonds was issued to 20
banks, amounting to ₹80,000 crore, with maturity ranging from 2028 to 2033
and coupon rate of 7.35-7.68 per cent.
In the next set of bond issuances until September 2018, coupon
rates had climbed to 7.74-8.1 per cent. But since then rates on these recap bonds
have steadily declined, in line with the fall in interest rates in the economy.
The recap bonds issued in March 2020, carried coupon rate of 6.13-6.28 per cent.