NRB overtakes bank management
Kathmandu, Dec. 25
Nepal Rastra
Bank (NRB) has declared Karnali Development Bank Limited (KDBL) a 'troubled
institution' under Section 86(b) of the Nepal Rastra Bank Act, 2058.
The NRB informed
in a statement that a meeting of its board of directors on Wednesday made a
decision to this effect.
The NRB has
taken control of the bank’s management under the same provision until further
notice, and formed a three-member management team led by Deputy Director of the
central bank's Banks and Financial Institutions Regulation Department, Tikaram
Khatri, including Deputy Directors Bishnu Kumar Bishwokarma of Financial
Institutions Supervision Department and Jugal Kishor Kushwaha of Legal
Department, to oversee the operations of KDBL.
The management
team formed on Wednesday will assume its responsibilities from Thursday, December
26. The central bank has granted the team authority to manage the institution's
board, special general meetings, and other functions under the NRB Act, the
Banks and Financial Institutions Act (BAFIA), and other applicable laws.
According to the
NRB, the primary focus of the team will be to protect public interests by
prioritising deposit payments and loan recovery. "Additionally, the team
has been tasked with conducting due diligence audits, investigating financial
irregularities, and initiating legal action as required," it said.
NRB’s
investigation revealed several issues with KDBL, including failure to maintain
the minimum capital adequacy ratio, poor corporate governance, financial
irregularities, and liquidity problems. The Nepalgunj, Banke based regional
development bank (a class 'B' bank charted by the NRB) has been unable to meet
its deposit obligations, leading to concerns about safeguarding depositor
interests and maintaining trust in the banking system which forced the NRB to
overtake its management and operations.
KDBL has a
paid-up capital of Rs. 502.8 million and operates branches in Banke, Bardiya,
Dang, Pyuthan and Rolpa. It has mobilised Rs. 5.21 billion in deposits and Rs.
3.81 billion in loans. As of the end of first quarter of the current fiscal
year 2024/25, the bank reported a net loss of Rs. 19.8 million.
However, the NRB
found that the bank's non-performing loans exceeded 40 per cent – a massive
mismatch with the bank's reporting of NPL ratio at just 7.27 per cent. Under
these pretexts, the central bank had already initiated prompt corrective action
on the institution from November 27 this year under Regulation 3 of the Prompt
Corrective Action Regulation, 2074. The bank was established 21 years ago. Its
market capitalisation has reached Rs. 4.07 billion on Tuesday.
Meanwhile, the
share price of this troubled financial institution was Rs. 810 on Tuesday with
4.27 per cent growth in a day. But P/E (price to earnings) ratio of its shares
is -51.36 while its EPS (earning per share) is also negative by 15.77.
Published in The Rising Nepal daily on 26 December 2024.
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