PMVVY Vs SCSS: Where Should I Invest?

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Tenure

Both PMVVY and SCSS are applicable only to senior citizens with a minimum age limit of 60 years and over. Both PMVVY and SCSS are applicable only to senior citizens with a minimum age limit of 60 years and over. So this is your guide to who can invest in SCSS and who can invest in PMVVY. Only, SCSS can also be acquired from those who have received VRS. PMVVY’s maturity period is 10 years. Whereas the maturity period of SCSS is 5 years which can be further extended to a block of 3 years.

Interest rate

Interest rate

One has to address LIC and invest either offline or online through the official portal of LIC in order to invest in PMVVY. Investment in PMVVY can be made till March 31, 2023 and with a policy duration of 10 years you will get an interest rate of 7.4 per cent. That being said, in the instance of the SCSS, at the beginning of each quarter of the financial year, returns are set by the government. For the quarter of January to March 2021, the interest rate is kept at 7.4 per cent same as that of PMVVY. Under PMVVY the minimum pension amount is capped at Rs 1000 per month up to Rs 9250 per month. The maximum pension cap will not be met by the total amount of pension approved per senior citizen. The minimum contribution was also updated to Rs 1,5 6,658 for an annual pension of Rs 12,000 and Rs 1, 62,162 for a minimum monthly pension of Rs 1000 under PMVVY.

Maximum deposit limit

Maximum deposit limit

Rs 15 lac is the maximum amount that can be invested in PMVVY (for monthly pension alternative). For other pension kinds, it is marginally lower (such as quarterly, half-yearly, annually) but because the PMVVY’s upper limit of Rs 15 lac is per elderly people, if both the husband and wife are senior citizens, the family can spend Rs 30 lakhs towards PMVVY. Per senior citizen, the overall investment in SCSS is also capped at Rs 15 lac. Multiple SCSS accounts can be opened, but the cumulative total of all contributions in all SCSS accounts for each senior citizen should not surpass Rs 15 lac.

Payout frequency

Payout frequency

In general, PMVVY is a pension scheme which provides regular income on a monthly, quarterly and semi-annual and annual basis. In SCSS, having quarterly returns is the only alternative. Depending on the individual criteria, a senior citizen must decide appropriately.

Can I go for both SCSS and PMVVY?

Can I go for both SCSS and PMVVY?

In case you and your spouse are over 60 both of you will be entitled to spend Rs 15 lac in both strategies. In sum, a senior citizen couple with Rs 15 lac in SCSS for Husband, Rs 15 lac in SCSS for Wife, Rs 15 lac in PMVVY for Husband, Rs 15 lac in PMVVY for Wife, can spend Rs 60 lac in both the schemes.

Maturity benefit

Maturity benefit

The pensioner gets the full tax-free interest amount at the completion of the 10-year under PMVVY. Similarly, after the maturity period of 5 years one can withdraw the entire corpus from his or her SCSS account. The matured SCSS account can also be extended for another 3 years, although the interest rate will be according to the prevailing rates at the time and not exactly the same as the initial one in the initial 5-year term.

Premature exit

Premature exit

Only in exceptional situations PMVVY account can be closed prematurely. But in this case a penalty of 2 per cent will be charged only 98% of the invested amount will be credited back to the bank account of the subscriber. SCSS makes it possible to close prematurely any time after the date of opening the account, but no interest will be charged if the account is closed before the completion of 1 year of service. A penalty of 1.5 per cent will be deducted from the principal amount if the account is closed after 1 year but before 2 year from the date of opening. Whereas a penalty of 1 % will be deducted from the principal amount if the account is closed after 2 year but before 5 year from the date of account opening.

Taxation

Taxation

For PMVVY investors, no tax benefits are eligible. But tax benefit under Section 80C is available for the contribution made to SCSS. Interest income earned from both PMVVY and SCSS is fully taxable according to the tax slabs of the senior citizen and under the category of ‘Income from Other Sources’.

Our take

Our take

Instead of investing in each of these two investment alternatives a senior citizen should consider investing in both PMVVY and SCSS after making a distinction between PMVVY and SCSS. Though SCSS may be the first option, it is also possible to invest a portion of the funds in PMVVY for 10 years. There are clearly a few variations. Compared with the lock-in period of 10 years of PMVVY, SCSS has a lesser lock-in of 5 years. But again, it also implies that at the end of 5 years, there will be a reinvestment possibility in SCSS in order to pursue a comparable return-yielding player. So if anyone determines that the rate will be lower than what they are now after 10 years, then PMVVY is a safer alternative than SCSS.



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Federal Bank Q3 net slips 8%

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Federal Bank reported an 8 per cent decline in third quarter net profit at ₹404 crore against ₹441 crore in the year-ago quarter.

The bottomline was weighed down by a 161 per cent year-on-year (yoy) jump in provisions (other than tax) and contingencies at ₹421 crore (₹161 crore in the year-ago period).

Also read: Federal Bank reports 12 per cent increase in total deposits

Net interest income was up 24 per cent yoy to ₹1,437 crore (₹1,155 crore). Other income increased by 18 per cent to ₹482 crore (₹408 crore).

Gross non-performing assets (NPAs) declined to 2.71 per cent of gross advances against 2.84 per cent in the preceding quarter.

Net NPA position improved to 0.60 per cent of net advances against 0.99 per cent in the preceding quarter.

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Reserve Bank of India – Press Releases

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I. T-Bill 91 days 182 days 364 days
II. Total Face Value Notified ₹4,000 Crore ₹7,000 Crore ₹8,000 Crore
III. Cut-off Price and Implicit Yield at Cut-Off Price 99.1781
(YTM: 3.3240%)
98.2650
(YTM: 3.5410%)
96.5100
(YTM: 3.6261%)
IV. Total Face Value Accepted ₹4,000 Crore ₹7,000 Crore ₹8,000 Crore

Ajit Prasad
Director   

Press Release : 2020-2021/970

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Home Prices To Increase From 2021: End Users And Investors Need To Act Now

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Investment

oi-Roshni Agarwal

|

After a prolonged downturn, the residential real estate market in India is set to pick up as both the end users as well as investors are now showing interest. As per report from a leading research firm Jefferies, there is an expectation that the inventory in the segment could go down to an 8-year low and prices shall also spike by over 10 percent in the next two years.

Home Prices To Increase From 2021: End Users And Investors Need To Act Now

Home Prices To Increase From 2021: End Users And Investors Need To Act Now

Real estate market in 2020

While the sales of residential units across 7 major cities saw a decline, there is seen a decline in inventory overhang by 19 percent from the peak levels of 2016. Also, prices during the Covid 19 hit year were largely steady and infact to push sales, there were offers being put on by developers in the market.

“In the southern cities, price discounts were limited to 1-2 per cent as these markets remained correctly priced and were driven by stable economic activity and end-user demand. In other cities, where inventory levels remained high, developers had to offer slightly higher discounts to push sales. But, even there they were not very high. Developers had limited headroom to cut prices as they have been trending down since 2017”, said Shalin Raina, managing director – residential services, Cushman & Wakefield.

And as the financially distressed players are finally expected to move out there is consolidation currently vigilant in the real estate market.

Real Estate Price appreciation of a meager 25-30% in 8 Years

In the year gone by there was seen a push in demand for residential real estate in the second half and this is positive for the ongoing year. And now, after just 25-30% rise in residential unit prices in eight years, it is highly likely that prices shall again trend higher beginning second half of 2021 as raw material prices are also surging such as those of steel and cement.

So what prospective real estate buyers should do?

Now as interest rates on home loan as well as prices remained and continue to be low, prospective buyers should seal the deal at the earliest. And buying real estate is lucrative owing to various incentives such as GST (goods and services tax), stamp duty, and registration costs.

Also, instead of price appreciation, investors can for now focus to get rental income as price appreciation can be reaped over the long term.

For better and yet more optimal cost on your purchase, you can avail of benefits under Pradhan Mantri Awas Yojana. Also, when buying for investment purposes, go for areas where there is a flux of economic activity as there is no extra efforts required to scout for tenants at such a place and you can also expect rental appreciation.

GoodReturns.in



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Reserve Bank of India – Tenders

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1. Name of the Department Protocol and Security Cell, Reserve Bank of India, Chandigarh
2. e-Tender no: RBI/Chandigarh/Others/12/20-21/ET/443
3. e-Tender name Service Contract for Providing Fire Fighting Staff (Fire Supervisor and Firemen at the office premises of Reserve Bank of India, Chandigarh)
4. Mode of Tender e-Procurement System Online
(Part I – Technical Bid and Part II – Financial Bid through https://www.mstcecommerce.com/eprochome/rbi)
5. Estimated value of tender (including Taxes) Rs 36.00 Lakh (Rupees Thirty-Six Lakh Only)
6. Date of Tender available to the parties to download January 21, 2021 (1000 hrs)
7. Start date of Technical Bid and Financial Bid at MSTC January 21, 2021 (1000 hrs)
8. Date of Pre-Bid Meeting at P&S Cell, RBI Chandigarh January 28, 2021 (1100 hrs)
9. Earnest Money Deposit (EMD) ₹ 72,000.00 (Rupees Seventy-Two Thousand Only), by NEFT towards:
Beneficiary Name: Reserve Bank of India, Chandigarh
Beneficiary A/c No: 186003001
IFSC: RBIS0CGPA01 (5th and 10th digits are Zeros)
10. Last date for submission of EMD February 11, 2021 (1000 hrs)
11. Last date for online submission of Technical Bid & Financial Bid February 11, 2021 (1000 hrs)
12. Date & time of opening of Part-I, i.e., Technical Bid February 11, 2021 (1500 hrs)
13. Date & Time of opening of Part- II, i.e., Financial Bid Part-II (Financial Bid) of only those bidder(s) whose Part-I (Technical Bid) is found acceptable by RBI, Chandigarh will be opened electronically. Such bidder(s) will be intimated regarding date of opening of Part- II (Financial Bid) through valid email given by them.

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Reserve Bank of India – Tenders

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Reserve Bank of India, Hyderabad intends to prepare a panel of suppliers / stockists /chemists having minimum annual turnover of ₹ 1.75 Cr for the last three years for supply of medicines to its dispensaries at Hyderabad. The panel is expected to remain operational for a period of three years from April 2021 subject to satisfactory performance.

Accordingly, Reserve Bank of India, Hyderabad invites applications from Hyderabad based suppliers / stockist / chemists who fulfil the eligibility criteria and agree to abide by the terms and conditions mentioned in the Request for Empanelment (RFE) Document. The Request for Empanelment (RFE) Document can be obtained from the Establishment Section, 4th Floor, Reserve Bank of India, Saifabad, Hyderabad from Wednesday, January 20, 2021 to Wednesday, February 03, 2021 from 10.00 AM to 5.45 PM (on all working days) and also from the “Tenders” Section of our Website www.rbi.org.in from January 20, 2021.

Reserve Bank of India, will host the tendering process online for supply of medicines through e-tendering web portal www.mstcecommerce.com

The duly filled in application in the prescribed form (RFE) should reach the Regional Director for Andhra Pradesh and Telangana, Reserve Bank of India, Saifabad, Hyderabad by 3.00 PM on Wednesday, February 17, 2021. Reserve Bank of India reserves the right to accept any application or reject any or all of the applications received without assigning any reason therefor.

Regional Director for Andhra Pradesh and Telangana

Hyderabad

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Reserve Bank of India – Tenders

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Reserve Bank of India, Chandigarh invites E-tender for Comprehensive Annual Maintenance Contract of Kent Ultra 3Stage Advanced UV water purifier at officers’ flats and Staff colony 44B and 30A RBI Chandigarh.

2. The work is estimated to cost ₹9,73,500/-. This is an Open Tender. Only those firms, who are registered on MSTC portal will be able to take part in the Tender process. The tender document is available on website www.rbi.org.in for download from January 20, 2021.

3. Tender shall be submitted online in two parts. Part-I of the tender will contain the Bank’s standard technical and commercial conditions for the proposed work, which must be agreed to by the tenderers. Part-II of the tender will contain Bank’s schedule of quantities and tenderer’s price bid to be submitted online.

4. The firms fulfilling the eligibility criteria and desirous of being considered for award of the work should upload all the required documents at www.mstcecommerce.com/eprochome/rbi on or before February 11, 2021 (02:00 PM).

5. Part-I of the tender will be opened at 03:00 pm on February 11, 2021 on MSTC website.

The timeline of the tender is as follow:

a. e-Tender Name Comprehensive Annual Maintenance Contract of Kent Ultra 3Stage Advanced UV water purifier at officers’ flats and Staff colony 44B and 30A RBI Chandigarh
b. e-Tender no RBI/Chandigarh/Estate/316/20-21/ET/447
c. Mode Of Tender e-Procurement System
(Online Part I – Techno-Commercial Bid and Part II – Price Bid through (www.mstcecommerce.com/eprochome/rbi)
d. Date of NIT available to parties to download from RBI website www.rbi.org.in January 20, 2021 (Wednesday)
e. Pre-Bid meeting (Off-line) January 28, 2021 (Thursday) 11:00 am to 12:00 pm at Estate Department, 3rd floor, MOB, RBI Chandigarh
f. Last date for submission of e-Tender February 11, 2021 (Thursday) 02:00 pm
g. Earnest Money Deposit ₹. 19470/- in the form of NEFT in favour of Reserve Bank of India, Chandigarh
Address:
Reserve Bank of India, Sector 17, Chandigarh – 160017
Details for NEFT
Beneficiary Name: Estate Your Firm’s Name
Beneficiary Ac No: 186003001
IFSC: RBIS0CGPA01 (5th and 10th being zero)
h. Last date of submission of EMD February 11, 2021 (Thursday) 02:00 pm
i. Date of Starting of e-Tender for submission of on line Techno-Commercial Bid and price Bid at www.mstcecommerce.com/eprochome/rbi January 21, 2021 (Thursday) from 2:00 pm
j. Date of closing of online e-tender for submission of Techno-Commercial Bid & Price Bid February 11, 2021 (Thursday) 02:00 pm
k. Date & time of opening of Part-I
(i.e. Techno-Commercial Bid)

Date & Time of opening of Part- II (Price Bid)

a. February 11, 2021 (Thursday) 03:00 pm

b. May be opened online on the same or a later date.

l. Transaction Fee ₹. ———– (inclusive of GST @18%)
To be paid through MSTC Payment
Gateway/NEFT/RTGS in favour of MSTC Limited or as advised by M/s MSTC Ltd.
Please do not transfer the transaction fee to Reserve Bank of India, Chandigarh
m. Estimated cost of work ₹. 9,73,500/- (Rupees Nine Lakh Seventy-three thousand Five hundred only)

The Bank is not bound to accept the lowest tender and reserves the right to accept either in full or in part any tender. The Bank also reserves the right to reject all the tenders without assigning any reason thereof.

Regional Director
Reserve Bank of India
Chandigarh Regional Office

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Aditya Puri backs corporates in banking, says no harm in trying it, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Former HDFC Bank chief executive Aditya Puri on Tuesday backed the proposal to allow deep-pocketed corporates into banking in India.

Puri, the founder chief executive of what has become the largest private sector lender who retired recently, said the country needs more banks to fuel its economic growth ambitions and capital will have to come from somewhere.

Late last year, an internal working group of RBI had proposed to re-allow corporates into banking, leading to a huge controversy on concerns over potential conflicts of interest.

“Giving (banking licences) to individuals didn’t work, public ownership didn’t work either. There is no harm trying it,” Puri said during an online event.

He named Yes Bank, started by two individuals, and also infra lender IL&FS which faced troubles over governance as cases which did not work and underlined the need to try something new.

In order to become a $5 trillion economy, India needs to have more banks and a corporate with a good set of ethics and a strong brand might just be the right candidate, Puri argued.

Puri, who has taken up an advisory role at a private equity fund and also a corporate directorship since retirement, however, did not favour the idea of having a bad bank to house dud debt and also that of a development finance institution (DFI).

Rather than bad bank, Indian banks can follow the remedial banking unit approach which has been successfully used to resolve bad debt issues in the US by the likes of Citibank and JPMorgan, he said, adding the RBI and the ministry of finance can supervise and oversee functioning of such a platform.

For the DFI, he said mistakes which were committed in the past should be avoided.

Puri further said the banking system has sufficient capital to see through the asset quality reverses and is sitting on excess liquidity of over Rs 6 lakh crore to take care of lending needs of the economy at present.

For the 8.5 per cent in non-performing assets, the system is carrying provisions of 7 per cent, he said and added that from a net NPA perspective, the Indian system is at par with any other in the world.

The challenges facing Indian banking are solvable, he emphasised.

On the future of state-run lenders, Puri said the government’s approach to have five large banks is a welcome one, but warned that there are a few more whose fates continue to be undecided and some choices will have to be made.

Terming it a sad eventuality, he said over the next few years the state-run banks, which currently possess over 65 per cent of the loans, will see a faster depletion in their market share than they have seen in the last two decades.

Puri said over 40 per cent of the payment volumes handled by banks are of third-party service providers like Amazon Pay, Google Pay or PhonePe, and demanded that the banks should be allowed to charge for rendering such services.

He justified the demand saying banks are the entities making upfront investments in the infrastructure and need to be compensated.

After cashbacks, none of the payment platforms are making profits, he added.

On the pandemic, he said the world underestimated India’s capabilities, pointing out that the recovery is faster in the country and it has come out better than most others.



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IIFL Finance, Standard Chartered enter into co-lending partnership, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Fairfax and CDC-backed IIFL Finance on Tuesday said its wholly-owned subsidiary IIFL Home Finance Ltd and Standard Chartered Bank have entered into a co-lending arrangement for extending MSME loans. Under this partnership, IIFL Home Finance Ltd and the Standard Chartered Bank will co-originate these loans and the IIFL Home Finance Ltd will service the customers through the entire loan life-cycle including sourcing, documentation, collection and loan servicing, IIFL Finance said in a regulatory filing.

“We believe this is one of the first co-lending partnerships after the RBI’s revised guidelines,” Monu Ratra, the CEO of IIFL Home Finance, said.

IIFL Home Finance in December partnered with ICICI Bank to provide affordable housing and MSME loans as a sourcing partner. In October CSB Bank had also partnered with IIFL Finance for sourcing and managing retail gold loan assets.

IIFL Finance is a retail-oriented non-banking finance companies (NBFC) with about 90 per cent of its Rs 41,000 crore loan book under the retail category.

In November last year, the Reserve Bank had came out with a Co-Lending Model (CLM) scheme under which banks can provide loans along with NBFCs to priority sector borrowers based on a prior agreement.

The CLM, an improvement over the co-origination of loan scheme announced by the RBI in September 2018, seeks to provide greater flexibility to the lending institutions. NKD MR



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RBI, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) on Tuesday said state-owned SBI, along with private sector lenders ICICI Bank and HDFC Bank continue to be domestic systemically important banks (D-SIBs) or institutions which are ‘too big to fail’.

SIBs are subjected to higher levels of supervision so as to prevent disruption in financial services in the event of any failure.

The Reserve Bank had issued the framework for dealing with D-SIBs in July 2014.

The D-SIB framework requires the central to disclose the names of banks designated as D-SIBs starting from 2015 and place these lenders in appropriate buckets depending upon their Systemic Importance Scores (SISs).

“SBI, ICICI Bank, and HDFC Bank continue to be identified as Domestic Systemically Important Banks (D-SIBs), under the same bucketing structure as in the 2018 list of D-SIBs,” RBI said in a statement.

The additional Common Equity Tier 1 (CET1) requirement for D-SIBs was phased-in from April 1, 2016 and became fully effective from April 1, 2019. The additional CET1 requirement will be in addition to the capital conservation buffer, the central bank said.

The additional CET1 requirement as a percentage of Risk Weighted Assets (RWAs) in case of the State Bank of India (SBI) is 0.6 per cent, while for the other two banks it is 0.2 per cent.

Based on the bucket in which a D-SIB is placed, an additional common equity requirement has to be applied to it.

In case a foreign bank having branch presence in India is a Global Systemically Important Bank (G-SIB), it has to maintain additional CET1 capital surcharge in the country as applicable, proportionate to its RWAs.

SIBs are seen as ‘too big to fail (TBTF)’, creating expectation of government support for them in times of financial distress. These banks also enjoy certain advantages in funding markets.



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