NPA CLASSIFICATION
- October 11, 2020
- Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
- Category: DPN Topics
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What are NPA’s?
- NPA is any asset of a bank which is not producing any income. In other words, a loan or lease that is not meeting its stated principal and interest payments.
- On a bank’s balance sheet, loans made to customers are listed as assets. The biggest risk to a bank is when customers who take out loans stop making their payments, causing the value of the loan assets to decline.
Criteria
- Loans don’t go bad right away. Most loans allow customers a certain grace period. Then they are marked overdue. After a certain number of days, the loan is classified as a nonperforming loan.
- Banks usually classify as nonperforming assets any commercial loans which are more than 90 days overdue and any consumer loans which are more than 180 days overdue.
- For agricultural loans, if the interest and/or the installment or principal remains overdue for two harvest seasons; it is declared as NPAs. But, this period should not exceed two years. After two years any unpaid loan/installment will be classified as NPA.
Categories
- Sub-standard: When the NPAs have aged <= 12 months.
- Doubtful: When the NPAs have aged > 12 months.
- Loss assets: When the bank or its auditors have identified the loss, but it has not been written off.