Reserve Bank of India – Annual Report

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April 14, 2015





Dear All




Welcome to the refurbished site of the Reserve Bank of India.





The two most important features of the site are: One, in addition to the default site, the refurbished site also has all the information bifurcated functionwise; two, a much improved search – well, at least we think so but you be the judge.





With this makeover, we also take a small step into social media. We will now use Twitter (albeit one way) to send out alerts on the announcements we make and YouTube to place in public domain our press conferences, interviews of our top management, events, such as, town halls and of course, some films aimed at consumer literacy.




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Department of Communication

Reserve Bank of India


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Is there a case for a bad bank?

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The economic uncertainties from the Covid -19 pandemic has once again re-opened the debate on the need for setting up a bad bank to take care of the fresh wave of bad loans and also free up resources for lending.

While the Finance Ministry is understood to be examining such a proposal, Reserve Bank of India Governor Shaktikanta Das also recently said the central bank is open to look at such a plan.

Significantly, the Economic Survey 2020-21 has been silent on the issue of a bad bank but has pointed out the need for an asset quality review after the current forbearance ends and a re-capitalisation of banks to spur lending.

All eyes are now on whether Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman will announce such a plan in the Union Budget 2021-22 or will look at other ways to resolve the challenges in the banking sector.

The RBI in its latest Financial Stability Report has estimated that the gross NPAs of banks may increase from 8.5 per cent in March 2020 to 12.5 per cent by March 2021 under the baseline scenario and the ratio may escalate to 14.7 per cent under a very severely stressed scenario.

This is already becoming evident in the third quarter results of banks that reflect increased stress and lenders are gearing up to meet a fresh wave of NPAs.

 

HDFC Bank had said if it had classified accounts as NPA after August 31, 2020, the proforma gross NPA ratio would have been 1.38 per cent as on December 31, 2020 as against reported 0.81 per cent.

For Yes Bank, the proforma gross NPA would be nearly at 20 per cent as against the reported 15.36 per cent for the third quarter this fiscal.

In their pre-Budget interactions, setting up of a bad bank has been a key wish list for many stakeholders and experts. Industry chamber CII had urged the Finance Minister to consider such a proposal and allow multiple bad banks.

Explaining the rationale, veteran banker and CII President Uday Kotak had said, “In the aftermath of Covid-19 it is important to find a resolution mechanism through a market determined price discovery. With huge liquidity both globally and domestically multiple bad banks, can address this issue in a transparent manner and get the credit cycle back in action.”

Prashant Kumar, Managing Director and CEO, Yes Bank, also said it would be good for the economy. “We are the first ones to support the idea of a bad bank and we are working on our own ARC. I think a bad bank coming in any form would be really good for the economy,” he had recently told BusinessLine.

Analysts point out that a bad bank would lower the re-capitalisation need for public sector banks in the new fiscal year and boost incremental lending by banks.

Banks could become more cautious on lending if bad loans rise. The Survey highlighted that credit growth slowed down to 6.7 per cent as on January 1, 2021 from 14.8 per cent in February 2019.

Not a new idea

The idea of a bad bank is not a new proposal but has been revisited a couple of times in the last few years.

As the name suggests, a bad bank will buy the bad loans of financial sector entities so that they can clean up their balance sheets and move ahead with lending.

One such entity was set up in 1988 for US based Mellon Bank and other such agencies have been set up in countries including Ireland.

The proposal of setting up a bad bank in India had previously come up in the Economic Survey 2016-17, which had suggested setting up of a centralised Public Sector Asset Rehabilitation Agency (PARA) to take charge of the largest, most difficult cases, and make politically tough decisions to reduce debt.

In June 2018, then Finance Minister Piyush Goyal had set up a committee to examine whether transferring NPAs of PSBs to an ARC or a bad bank was a suitable proposal.

Many not in favour

But, there have also been many arguments against a bad bank, with reservations within the government and RBI at various points of time.

Funding could be an issue in a year when the government is hard pressed for resources. In its proposal submitted in May last year, Indian Banks’ Association had suggested an initial outlay of ₹10,000 crore.

But the main issue is that banks would have to sell the bad loans and take a haircut, which would impact its P&L. Until this issue is addressed, creating a new structure may not be as potent in addressing the problem.

A recent note by Kotak Institutional Equities had also said bad bank is perhaps well served in the initial leg of the recognition cycle.

“Today, the banking system is relatively more solid with slippages declining in the corporate segment for the past two years and high NPL coverage ratios, which enable faster resolution,” it said, adding that setting up such an agency today would aggregate but not serve the purpose observed in other markets.

As of now, the problem of NPAs are held at bay as the Supreme Court verdict is pending. Setting out a strategy to tackle the looming issue is critical – if not a bad bank, then via other options.

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RBI strengthens grievance redress framework

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Enhanced disclosures on customer complaints and operationalisation of a cost-recovery framework have been prescribed by the RBI to strengthen and improve the efficacy of the grievance redress mechanism of banks.

Further, the central bank will undertake intensive review of the grievance redress mechanism of banks having persisting issues. Based on the review, a remedial action plan will be formulated and formally communicated to the banks for implementation within a specific time frame.

RBI said it will operationalise the cost-recovery framework for banks, whereby the cost of redress of maintainable complaints will be recovered from the banks against whom the number of complaints received in OBOs are in excess of their peer group averages.

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Concerns ahead despite good Q3 results

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Third quarter results of banks have indicated banks show a rise in net profit but concerns are evident ahead. Bank of Baroda reported a standalone net profit of ₹1,061 crore in the third quarter against a net loss of ₹1,407 crore in the year-ago quarter. Private sector lender ICICI Bank reported a 19.1 per cent increase in its standalone net profit in the third quarter of the fiscal at ₹4,939.59 crore.

The bank had a net profit of ₹4,146.46 crore in the same period last fiscal. However, Axis Bank reported a 36.4 per cent drop in its net profit in the third quarter this fiscal despite a robust rise in net interest income as provisions rose sharply. For the quarter ended December 31, 2020, Axis Bank’s standalone net profit stood at ₹1,116.60 crore as against ₹1,757 crore in the same period a year ago.

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Economic Survey: Governance, key to end zombie lending

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The Economic Survey 2020-21 has raised the issue of zombie lending. It has noted that apart from from re-capitalising banks, it is important to enhance the quality of their governance.

“Ever-greening of loans by banks as well as zombie lending is symptomatic of poor governance, suggesting that bank boards are ‘asleep at the wheel’ and auditors are not performing their required role as the first line of defence,” it said, adding that to avoid ever-greening and zombie lending following the current round of forbearance banks should have fully empowered, capable boards.

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How Bajaj Allianz Life’s agency channel revved up to face pandemic woes

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A strong show by its agency channel in December 2020 has raised the confidence of Bajaj Allianz Life Insurance over meeting its last fiscal year performance despite the Covid-induced lockdown challenges impacting business during 2020-21, a top official said.

In December 2020, the agency channel recorded 23 per cent growth in Rated New Business at ₹131 crore as compared to ₹107 crore in same month in previous year. This is even as there was de-growth of about 12 per cent in the agency channel’s contribution during April – December 2020. In terms of the number of policies, there was a year-on-year growth of 10 per cent for the agency channel in December 2020, largely due to increased demand for term policies.

Key challenge

“When the pandemic happened, the biggest worry for us was that face to face meeting with customers was a complete no. As agency channel, how would our agents go and do basic work was a big question mark for us. Thankfully, all the investments we had done to create a digital agency really helped and we could get back to our prime objective of putting our insurance consultants back in action. It’s technology usage that saved the day for us and our agents,” Sameer Joshi, Chief Agency Officer, Bajaj Allianz Life Insurance, told BusinessLine.

Also read: Bajaj Allianz launches ‘BAGIC GOQii Co-pay Option’ under regulatory sandbox

Bajaj Allianz Life Insurance’s agency force including point of sale persons stood at 1.08 lakh, of which number of agents (excluding POSP) stood at 80,886 persons. In December 2020, the company onboarded 3,000 agents, which is a credible performance given that not a single new agent was onboarded for the first five months this fiscal.

“So far this fiscal, Bajaj Life Insurance has added 12,000 agents. This is a good achievement given that we lost some critical time. We are hopeful of crossing last year’s count. We are now almost at pre-Covid level in terms of business activity,” he said.

Joshi expressed confidence that the private life insurer’s agency channel would be able to achieve last fiscal’s performance in terms of new business of about ₹1,050 crore despite the gap as of end December.

“Going by the current trend, we should able to manage it and I am quite positive about it. Confidence I have got from December 2020 is impressive. Our March 2020 business was impacted due to lockdown in the last week. If we get a big March this year, we should be able to cover it,” he said.

Part-time agents

He also said that Bajaj Allianz Life had a lot of part-time agents and it took lot of work to convince them to accept digital, help them reach out to customers to get the forms filled digitally and teach them how can medicals be done digitally.

“For me the big victory was getting people to adapt to this change. This was a critical thing — for them to accept usage of digital technology,” Joshi said.

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Shriram Transport Fin may look at raising $250 mn via social bonds in Q4

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After raising USD 500 million through social bond issue earlier this month, non-banking financial company Shriram Transport Finance Company may look at raising another USD 250 million from such bonds before March, a top company official said.

As part of its USD 3 billion global medium-term note programme, the deposit-taking NBFC had raised USD 500 million at a coupon rate of 4.4 per cent.

As per the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) guidelines, eligible borrowers can raise external commercial borrowing (ECB) up to USD 750 million per financial year under the automatic route.

 

“It depends on international markets (conditions). We need to look for a very good window (to raise USD 250 million from social bonds). If there is a window available, we may raise it before March (2021),” the company’s managing director and CEO Umesh Revankar said. In the quarter ended December 31, the company’s deposits grew by around 19 per cent (y-o-y) to ₹14,335.36 crore from ₹12,027.72 crore last year. On a sequential basis, the increase was close to 11 per cent.

Revankar said the company was earlier using corporate channels to mobilise deposits but has now started accepting deposits across all its branches, resulting in good inflows.

“We feel a similar momentum to continue because right now deposit rates of banks are lower and so depositors are looking for better avenues. Also, inflows into mutual funds have reduced, and it is getting shifted to banks and a good part of it to non-banks. There is a big shift in our resource raising,” he said.

The NBFC offers an average interest rate of around 8 per cent on deposits.

Revankar said the company expects to mobilise deposits of around ₹2,000 crore in the current quarter.

In the third quarter of the current financial year, the company’s profit after tax dipped 17 per cent to ₹727.72 crore as against ₹879.16 crore in the same period of the previous year.

Revankar attributed the drop in profit to lower net interest margins (NIM) and higher provisions of around ₹220 crore related to Covid.

NIM stood at 6.88 per cent compared to 7.34 per cent.

As of December 31, 2020, additional expected credit loss (ECL) provision on loans assets on account of Covid-19 stood at ₹2,507.26 crore.

During the quarter, gross NPA improved to 5.33 per cent from 8.71 per cent. Net NPA eased to 3.22 per cent from 6.09 per cent.

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Four officers’ unions in banking sector caution government about privatisation

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The four officers’ unions in the banking sector have cautioned the government that any step towards privatisation, dilution of government equity and/or further mergers and amalgamations of Public Sector Banks (PSBs) would face stiff resistance.

The resistance would not only be from the four unions but also from all the major stakeholders, according to a letter written by unions to the Finance Minister.

The four officers’ unions are — the All India Bank Officers’ Confederation (AIBOC), the All India Bank Officers’ Association (AIBOA), the Indian National Bank Officers’ Congress (INBOC) and the National Organization of Bank Officers (NOBO).

The unions said“We consider that any proposal for privatisation of PSBs is retrograde, ill-conceived and thoroughly inimical to the national interest…It is as clear as daylight that the only beneficiaries of PSB privatisation would be those entities who still owe the state-owned banks thousands of crores in corporate debt.

“We urge upon your good office to kindly rescind any such privatisation proposal, if on the anvil, not only for the PSBs but for all the PSUs (public sector undertakings)”

The Union Government should rather initiate policy discussion on the ways and means of reforming and strengthening the PSBs, they added.

Privatisation of 8 PSBs?

The unions noted that even after the wave of mergers in PSBs undertaken by the Government, the number of PSBs stands currently at 12. These PSBs own around 60 per cent of the total banking assets in the country and account for 64 per cent of all bank deposits and 60 per cent of total loans and advances.

They observed that if the proposed privatisation policy is to be implemented, it would amount to privatisation of at least 8 PSBs, which will put an end to the market dominance of the PSBs.

The Unions referred to last year’s government the announcement, identifying “strategic sectors” where the number of PSUs would be brought down between one and four. Banking along with insurance, steel, fertiliser, petroleum, coal and minerals etc. figure in the list of 18 strategic sectors.

The unions underscored that the dominance of PSBs insulated the Indian economy from the worst consequences of the 2008-09 financial crisis. Further, crucial schemes of financial inclusion like the Jan Dhan Yojana and MUDRA have been implemented by the PSBs much more rigorously than the other segments of the banking industry.

The unions stated that despite the sordid saga of humongous bad-debt accumulation in the recent past, owing to big-ticket corporate debt-defaults, massive haircuts through the debt-recovery channel under the IBC (Insolvency & Bankruptcy Code) and burgeoning NPA (non-performing asset) write-offs, the PSBs have registered positive operating profits year after year, which stand testimony to the hard work and efficiency of the officers and employees of the PSBs.

“In this backdrop and at a time when the national economy is still reeling under the impact of a severe recession caused by the Covid-19 pandemic, we cannot fathom why the Union Government is keen on privatisation of PSUs in general and the PSBs in particular,” according to the letter.

The unions said it was the PSBs, Regional Rural banks and old generation private banks have successfully implemented all the schemes of the government to provide the much-needed fiscal stimulus during Covid times.

They stressed that the development of infrastructure can only be attributed to the contribution of PSBs in the absence of any major DFIs (Development Financial Institutions.

“While private sector banks like the Yes Bank, and earlier the Global Trust Bank, NBFCs like IL&FS and DHFL, co-operative banks like Punjab and Maharashtra Cooperative Bank (PMC) etc. have witnessed failures in the recent times, the PSBs have continued to ensure financial stability and security for the depositors.

“Experience tells us that strengthening the PSBs is the way forward for building an efficient, robust and stable financial sector in India,” the Unions said.

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Muthoot Capital Services reports decline in net profit in Q3

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The net profit of Muthoot Capital Services Ltd reduced to Rs 14 crore in Q3 of FY21 compared to Rs 19 crore in the same quarter last year.

The total income for the quarter touched Rs 120.7 crore. With things slowly starting to return back to normal, the company while continuing to adopt a conservative approach, disbursed two-wheeler loans amounting to Rs 304 crore only and had a total disbursement of Rs 326 crore during the quarter. The total AUM reached Rs 2,224 crore at the end of the quarter, including the assigned portfolio of Rs 25 crore.

For the same quarter last year, the company had a total disbursement of Rs 465.8 crore and AUM at the end of same quarter last year was at Rs 2,751 crore. During the same quarter last year, the company reported total revenue of Rs 150.9 crore.

Thomas George Muthoot, Managing Director, Muthoot Capital Services Ltd, said, “While we are seeing improvement on the ground and return of customers back to the dealer points, the challenging period still continues. The business is expected to do well going forward, various requirements such as social distancing, need for your own personal vehicle etc, as well as the trends seen during the current festive season, could mean that it would take a few more months before we go back to the pre-covid levels.”

“The GDP has already contracted, impacting the common man and his livelihood. This will increase our collection efforts and make us be circumspect during disbursement. Our liquidity position is strong, and our cost of funds is seeing a downward trend. With assistance offered by the Government / RBI, a loyal team of staff and a loyal customer base, the post Covid growth will be phenomenal,” he said.

Madhu Alexiouse, Chief Operating Officer, said, “After seeing good volumes in October and November, December was a lacklustre month in comparison. We expect volumes to pick-up in January and move to pre-covid levels by March.

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ICICI Bank net profit up 19% at Rs 4,940 crore

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The interest income (NII) increased 16% y-o-y and 6% q-o-q to Rs 9,912 crore. Provisions for the lender increased 32% y-o-y to Rs 2,742 crore, but declined 8% sequentially.

ICICI Bank on Saturday reported a 19% year-on-year (y-o-y) rise in its net profit at Rs 4,940 crore in the December quarter (Q3FY21) on the back of healthy interest income and improved asset quality. Sequentially, its net profit rose 16%. The operating profit of the lender increased 17% y-o-y and 7% quarter-on-quarter (q-o-q) to Rs 8,820 crore. The interest income (NII) increased 16% y-o-y and 6% q-o-q to Rs 9,912 crore. Provisions for the lender increased 32% y-o-y to Rs 2,742 crore, but declined 8% sequentially.

Sandeep Batra, executive director (ED), ICICI Bank, said the continued pickup in economic activity and tailwinds from the festive season combined with the bank’s digital initiatives and extensive franchise reflected in an increase in disbursements across retail products during Q3- 2021. Credit card spends also have reached pre-Covid levels in December thanks to increased spends in categories such as health & wellness, electronics and e-commerce, he added.

During Q3FY21, the bank has changed its provisioning policy on non-performing assets (NPA) to make it more conservative. As part of the revised policy, the bank has made contingency provision of Rs 3,012 crore for borrower accounts not classified as NPAs as per Supreme Court (SC) direction.

The apex court had earlier directed lenders not to classify borrowers as NPAs after August 31, 2020. ICICI Bank has utilised Rs 1,800 crore of Covid-19 related provisions made in the earlier periods. “We see provisioning around 25% of the operating profit in the financial year 2022 (FY22),” Batra said. The provisioning in the December quarter remained at 34% of the operating profit.

The asset quality of the lender showed an improvement during the December quarter. Gross non-performing assets (NPAs) ratio of the lender improved 79 bps to 4.38%, compared to 5.17% in the previous quarter. Similarly, net NPAs ratio came down 37 bps to 0.63% from 1% in the September quarter. The lender has not classified any NPAs since August 31, 2020, due to the interim order of Supreme Court. “The proforma gross NPA ratio would have been at 5.42% and net NPAs at 1.26%,” Batra said. The proforma gross NPAs in the retail segment remained over 3% during the December quarter.

The lender has provided one-time restructuring to borrowers worth Rs 2,536 core. The Reserve Bank of India had allowed restructuring for accounts impacted by Covid-19. The lender’s net interest margin (NIM) rose 10 bps on a sequential basis to 3.67%, but was down 10 bps on a y-o-y basis.

The fee income of the lender increased 15% q-o-q to Rs 3,601 crore, but remained flat on a y-o-y basis. Sandeep Batra said the sequential pick up in the fee income reflects normalisation.

Advances grew 10% y-o-y and 7% q-o-q to Rs 6.99 lakh crore. Deposits saw a robust growth of 22% y-o-y and 5% q-o-q at Rs 8,74 lakh crore, with average current account savings account (CASA) ratio of 41.8%. The capital adequacy ratio of the lender stood at 19.51% at the end of the December quarter, compared to minimum regulatory requirement of 11.08%.

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