Recently, the bad credits on India's biggest five state-run banks were recorded about Rs 456.8 billion ($6.8 billion). The recorded states are more than bankers had valued. According to the audits by the regulator for the year revealed stated differences. They say that these differences triggered large losses as the banks raised their provisions. The audit is said to be ended on March 31, 2017. If you add IDBI Bank Ltd., which doesn’t come among the largest but got the biggest piece of a public bailout, the figure rises to about $8.3 billion, reports Hindustan Times. Reserved bad debt is a hit to the division given that half of India’s 22 government-controlled banks are already under the Reserve Bank of India’s strict Prompt Corrective Action program that limits the lending and extension. Asset status may worsen as stronger laws boot in this year and pressure issues in the critical power sector. A few of the banks bearing PCA may find it difficult to persist, the RBI’s former deputy governor SS Mundra said. This indeed raises the reliance on loan recoveries from India’s new bankruptcy process. This process reported its first big success this month but is going behind program between multiple constitutional and logistical difficulties. According to Hindustan Times, shares of Bank of India, which grew the latest to report the change, collapsed 5.7% as of 9.30 a.m. in Mumbai on Tuesday. Loss tripled to Rs 39.7 billion for the fourth finished March 31, 2018, from Rs 10.5 billion a year earlier, the banker told the stock exchange late on Monday. Bank Divergence: