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This Article is From Sep 26, 2019

India Central Bank Denies Rumors of Bank Closures

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(Bloomberg) -- Indian authorities are scrambling to suppress speculation about bank closures a day after the regulator imposed restrictions on a local lender, the latest indication of how jittery savers are amid a slowing economy and scandals in the financial system.

“Reports appearing in some sections of social media about RBI closing down certain commercial banks are false,” the Reserve Bank of India said in a terse Twitter message on Wednesday.

The nation's top banking sector bureaucrat elaborated in another tweet.

This is the second time in less than two years that policy makers have had to publicly come out in support of Indian banks, which are grappling with the world's worst stressed loan ratio and allegations of impropriety. The latest trigger was the imposition of regulatory curbs on regional lender Punjab & Maharashtra Co-operative Bank Ltd., which pushed depositors to swarm branches to withdraw their savings.

Read more: ‘Risky' Cash Crunch Pushes India to Defend Its Scam-Hit Banks

While PMC is far smaller than India's top tier of lenders known as “commercial banks,” it is one of the biggest lenders in the second tier known as cooperative banks. At 0.2% of the sector's total loans, PMC doesn't immediately pose a systemic risk.

Authorities however seem concerned about an erosion of confidence after the Reserve Bank of India on Tuesday capped withdrawals from PMC at 1,000 rupees ($14) -- just about enough to buy a quarterly train pass in Mumbai -- and barred the lender from fresh lending for six months.

It didn't offer any reasons for the move but PMC's Managing Director Joy Thomas told BloombergQuint on Wednesday that the regulator is investigating the bank's books for bad loans and the bank has enough cash to repay all deposits and other obligations without any support from the government.

To contact the reporter on this story: Suvashree Ghosh in Mumbai at sghosh186@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Marcus Wright at mwright115@bloomberg.net, Jeanette Rodrigues, Abhay Singh

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.

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