The National Asset Reconstruction Company Limited (NARCL), often referred to as India’s “bad bank,” was established to address the issue of non-performing assets (NPAs) in the Indian banking system.
It was announced in the Union Budget 2021–22 and incorporated on July 7, 2021, under the Companies Act, 2013, with registration as an Asset Reconstruction Company (ARC) under the Securitisation and Reconstruction of Financial Assets and Enforcement of Security Interest (SARFAESI) Act, 2002 by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI).
NARCL is designed to acquire, aggregate, and resolve stressed assets (NPAs) with an exposure of ₹500 crore and above from commercial banks and financial institutions. It aims to clean up bank balance sheets, enabling banks to focus on new lending, improve credit growth, and enhance financial stability, which indirectly supports economic growth and financial inclusion.
NARCL: Acquires and aggregates stressed assets from banks, paying 15% in cash and 85% in Security Receipts (SRs), which are backed by a government guarantee of ₹30,600 crore(approved in September 2021) to cover potential losses.
NARCL started with a total capital of ₹6,000 crore, recently bolstered by a $9.18 million funding round from investors like ICICI Bank and Bank of India.
NARCL and IDRCL Dual Model : NARCL and IDRCL operate under an exclusive Principal-Agent agreement, with NARCL retaining final decision-making authority.
India Debt Resolution Company Limited (IDRCL): A private-sector entity (51% private banks, 49% PSBs) that manages and resolves the assets acquired by NARCL through strategies like debt restructuring, sale to investors, or liquidation under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC). Public Sector Banks (PSBs) hold a 51% stake, with Canara Bank as the sponsor bank (up to 12% shareholding), and private banks hold the remaining stake
Acquisition and Resolution Process: NARCL acquires fully provisioned stressed assets (loans where banks have set aside funds for potential losses) and partially provisioned assets in phases. The acquisition process follows a Financial Asset Acquisition Policy aligned with RBI guidelines, offering a mix of cash and SRs.
IDRCL employs resolution strategies such as restructuring, asset sales, or IBC proceedings, often using the Swiss Challenge method to ensure transparency and maximize recovery.
As of July 2024, NARCL had acquired 18 accounts worth ₹62,000 crore, with resolution plans approved for two accounts worth ₹33,000 crore. By February 2025, NARCL had acquired 24 accounts totaling ₹1.05 lakh crore, with plans to take over four more, targeting 28 accounts under resolution.
Pricing Mismatch: Banks have been reluctant to transfer NPAs due to NARCL’s lower-than-expected offers, leading to pricing discrepancies.
Dual Structure Inefficiencies: The NARCL-IDRCL model has faced criticism for operational complexities and high costs due to reliance on external consultants and slow due diligence. Suggestions for merging NARCL and IDRCL to streamline operations have been proposed but rejected by the government, citing the advantage of attracting talent through the dual structure.
RBI Guidelines: New RBI rules effective April 2024 require ARCs like NARCL to maintain a minimum Net Owned Fund (NOF) of ₹300 crore by March 2026 (up from ₹100 crore), with a transitional target of ₹200 crore by March 2024. Non-compliance may lead to restrictions on new business.
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