Should seniors go for special FD rates offered by some banks?

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In May last year, a few banks came up with special rates on certain long-tenure fixed deposits for senior citizens, in a bid to protect them from the blow of falling interest rates. Under the SBI Wecare Deposit, ICICI Bank Golden Years FD and HDFC Bank’s Senior Citizen Care FD schemes, the banks offer an extra 25-30 basis points (bps) interest on deposits with tenures of 5 years and above. This is over and above the 50 bps higher interest usually offered to senior citizens. The special FD rates apply on fresh deposits as well as renewals.

The closing date for investments in these schemes (of above mentioned banks only) has been extended to March 31, 2021.

The additional 25-30 bps interest offered over and above the usual senior citizens rates might have caught your attention. But we do not recommend locking in sums for such long periods. Besides, the current rates on these FD schemes are not attractive enough. Other private banks offer senior citizens better rates for even shorter tenures (up to two years). And, given that we are at a bottom in the interest rate cycle, shorter tenures are better now.

How they fare on rates

After the recent revision in rates, SBI Wecare offers 6.2 per cent interest per annum on deposits of less than ₹2 crore with tenures of five years and above.

Senior Citizen Care FD of HDFC Bank gives a tad higher rate of 6.25 per cent on deposits of less than ₹5 crore with tenures between five years and one day and 10 years.

For a similar tenure, ICICI Bank Golden Years FD offers 6.3 per cent on deposits under ₹2 crore.

While most public sector banks offer up to 6.1 per cent for senior citizens currently, the interest offered by some private banks go up to 7.45 per cent for a similar tenure. Small finance banks offer 7.5-8 per cent.

Another option available is the Post Office Senior Citizen Savings Scheme (SCSS) that pays 7.4 per cent per annum for a maturity period of five years.

Besides its implicit government backing, SCSS scores over bank FDs, given the tax benefit upon investment, under section 80C of the Income Tax Act (available only if you opt for the old regime tax rates).

However, interest under the SCSS is paid on a quarterly basis only, while banks generally offer investors the option to choose from monthly/quarterly payouts or cumulative payout at the time of maturity.

Should you go for it?

The prevailing interest rates in the country are close to bottoming out and may remain at these levels till the economy recovers.

At the same time, the rate cycle cannot persist at the current levels for a long period, given the elevated inflation and signs of green shoots in the economy.

Hence, locking your deposit into a tenure of more than five years now, that too at relatively lower rates, may not be a wise decision.

This is because you can lose out the opportunity to reinvest at higher rates once interest rates begin to inch up.

It makes sense to opt for shorter-term deposits of up to two years.

For a tenure of up to two years, SBI offers senior citizens up to 5.6 per cent interest, while HDFC Bank and ICICI Bank offer up to 4.25 per cent only. Other private banks (such as DCB Bank) offer up to 7.2 per cent.

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Reserve Bank of India – Tenders

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Reserve Bank of India, Bengaluru intends to prepare a panel of vendors for Sale of empty wooden boxes, steel strappings (Good and Rusted), Plastic Scrap, Dead wood Planks of Currency note packing boxes (Good and Damaged) from the RBI premises and repair of wooden boxes (service contract). The panel will be valid from April 01, 2021 to March 31, 2024.

Application form can be obtained from the General Manager, Issue Department, Reserve Bank of India, 10/3/8 Nrupthunga Road, Bengaluru, Karnataka-560001 from January 11, 2021, during office working hours from 10.00 A.M. to 5.00 P.M up to February 01, 2021, or may be downloaded from the RBI website (www.rbi.org.in under the menu “Tenders”). Last date for downloading of application form is February 01, 2021.

Duly completed application forms super-scribed “Application for empanelment of vendors for lifting of wooden, steel straps, plastic waste and repair of wooden boxes” may be submitted in sealed covers to the Regional Director, Reserve Bank of India, 10/3/8 Nrupthunga Road, Bengaluru, Karnataka-560001, not later than 5:00 PM on February 01, 2021.

Tenders will be opened on February 02, 2021, at 03:00 pm in the presence of the tenderers or their authorized representatives, who choose to be present. The Bank is not bound to accept the highest or any other tender and reserves the right to reject any or all applications/quotations without assigning any reason there for.

For any queries, please contact Records Section, Issue Department, Reserve Bank of India, at 080-22180108/ 22180111.

Regional Director
RBI, Bengaluru

January 10, 2021

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Reserve Bank of India – Tenders

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RBI/Bengaluru/Issue/6/20-21/ET/412

Reserve Bank of India, Bengaluru invites e-Tender for Sale of Briquettes of Shredded Currency Notes from reputed and experienced contractors for the period April 01, 2021 to March 31, 2022.

2. The e-Tender along with the detailed tender notice is available at MSTC website https://www.mstcecommerce.com/eprochome/rbi and the website of the Bank at https://www.rbi.org.in. under the menu ‘Tenders”.

3. All interested bidders must register themselves with MSTC through the above referred website to participate in the e-Tendering process.

4. The estimated cost of work is ₹10 lakhs (approx.) per year, however, the actual amount may vary.

5. The schedule for the e-Tendering process is as under:

Sr. No. e-Tender Schedule Scheduled Date and Time
1) e-tender view date on MSTC Website From 10:00 AM of January 10, 2021 (Sunday) to February 01, 2021 (Monday) till 05:00 PM
2) Date of starting of e-tender January 10, 2021 (Sunday) at 10:00 AM
3) Last date of submission of e-tender February 01, 2021 (Monday) till 05:00 PM
4) Date of opening of Part-I Technical Bid February 02, 2021 (Monday) at 11:00 AM

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

Note: All the tenderers may please note that any amendments / corrigendum to the e-Tender, if issued in future, will only be notified on the website of RBI and MSTC as given above and will not be published in the newspaper.

Regional Director
Reserve Bank of India
Bengaluru.

January 10, 2021

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Reserve Bank of India – Press Releases

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The Reserve Bank of India issued Directions to Sri Guru Raghavendra Sahakara Bank Niyamitha, Bengaluru, Karnataka under Section 35A read with Section 56 of the Banking Regulation Act, 1949 vide Directive DOS.CO.UCB.BSD-III/D-2/12.23.283/2019-20 dated January 02, 2020, the validity of which was extended from time to time, last been vide Directive DOR.AID.No.D-02/12.23.283/2020-21 dated July 07, 2020 upto January 10, 2021.

2. The Reserve Bank of India is satisfied that in the public interest, it is necessary to extend the period of operation of the Directive DOS.CO.UCB.BSD-III/D-2/12.23.283/2019-20 dated January 02, 2020, issued to Sri Guru Raghavendra Sahakara Bank Niyamitha, Bengaluru, Karnataka, and as last modified vide Directive DOR.AID.No.D-02/12.23.283/2020-21 dated July 07, 2020. Accordingly, the Reserve Bank of India, in exercise of powers vested in it under sub-section (1) of Section 35A read with Section 56 of the Banking Regulation Act, 1949, hereby directs that the Directive DOS.CO.UCB.BSD-III/D-2/12.23.283/2019-20 dated January 02, 2020 issued to Sri Guru Raghavendra Sahakara Bank Niyamitha, Bengaluru, Karnataka, as modified vide Directive DOR.AID.No.D-02/12.23.283/2020-21 dated July 07, 2020, the validity of which was upto January 10, 2021, shall continue to apply to the bank for a further period of six months from January 11, 2021 to July 10, 2021, subject to review.

3. Other terms and conditions of the Directives under reference shall remain unchanged.

(Yogesh Dayal)     
Chief General Manager

Press Release: 2020-2021/918

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How you can take the benefit of indexation

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With the deadline for filing tax returns approaching, two friends, share their tax woes.

Ram: I made a neat gain of ₹1 lakh when I sold some of my old mutual funds (MF). But what the market giveth, the taxman taketh. I wonder what will be left after the taxman’s cut.

Shyam: Worry not. Let’s see if you can apply indexation.

Ram: What is indexation and what has it got to do with my taxes?

Shyam: Well, indexation is one of the few acts of kindness from the tax department. So, accept it graciously when you can! Under the Income-tax Act, you can apply indexation, that is, adjust the purchase price of an asset for inflation while calculating capital gains.

Ram: As if taxes were not enough, you want me to deal with inflation too!

Shyam: No. You see, this is one time, you wish inflation were higher! To calculate capital gains, you must deduct the purchase price of an asset from its sale price. But you also need to account for the erosion in the value of that asset over time due to inflation. So, the tax laws allow you to adjust your purchase price for inflation before you calculate your capital gain.

Ram: So, I can finally put the soaring Consumer Price Index inflation to some use.

Shyam: Not so fast. You can only use the Cost Inflation Index (CII), published by the Indian Income Tax Department for indexation. Let me give you an example. If you invested ₹2 lakh in debt MF schemes and redeemed your investments at ₹3 lakh a few years later, then your capital gain isn’t really ₹1 lakh.

Ram: Then what is it?

Shyam: If the CII for the year of purchase is 100 and for the year of sale, 120, then you can adjust your purchase cost by a multiple of 1.2 (120 / 100). That is, your inflation- adjusted purchase cost is ₹2.4 lakh (and not ₹ 2 lakh) and your capital gain effectively becomes ₹60,000 (₹3 lakh minus ₹2.4 lakh). It’s on this amount, that you pay 20 per cent tax.

Ram: Let me use indexation to get whatever I can out of my MF investments.

Shyam: It’s not that simple. You can seek refuge in indexation for investments made in debt MF schemes, but not equity schemes. Also, you can do this only for long-term capital gains, that is, only if you held on to your debt MF investments for 36 months or longer.

Ram: Should have known that ‘terms and conditions apply’ always!

Shyam: Don’t be disappointed. You can also use indexation for other assets such as property (land/ house) and gold (jewellery / ETF). Gains made on sale of property held for more than two years and gold held for more than 3 years are considered ‘long-term’.

Ram: Maybe I shouldn’t crib when my wife buys and sells gold. As long as she does it after three years!

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Why IPO stocks need close watching

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You may have hit the jackpot after bagging allotment in some of the recent initial public offers (IPOs), with the stock prices doubling or more on listing. But given the leverage and bidding frenzy that accompany IPOs in bull markets, such stocks can crash and burn after the initial excitement wears off. ICICI Securities, TCNS Clothing, Sterling & Wilson Solar are some stocks from the 2018-19 crop of offers that now trade 12-60 per cent below their offer prices. You need to run four key checks on your IPO companies after listing to satisfy yourself that they are worth holding on to.

Use of proceeds

Usually, a company going public raises new equity capital to invest in new projects, repay debt, build brands or otherwise expand the business so that profits can scale up. If you invested in an IPO because its mega expansion plans or store-opening targets excited you, be sure to keep track of whether the IPO proceeds are indeed being used to put the plans into action. This can be done by tracking the company’s filing with stock exchanges on its ‘Utilization of IPO proceeds.’

After observing many instances of rampant misuse of IPO money, SEBI has mandated a standard disclosure from IPO firms on any deviation in the use of their IPO proceeds against the promises made in their prospectus, from the December quarter of 2019. This statement is filed quarterly along with the results until the IPO money is fully utilised. The deviation statement must contain the comments of the company’s audit committee too. Be suspicious of companies that divert too much of the IPO proceeds to ‘general corporate purposes’ or working capital while leaving their expansion plans in the lurch. The use of IPO proceeds is more important for companies raising fresh equity than for those making offers for sale by promoters or private equity investors. But not sticking to promises can sometimes cause a fracas in the latter too. The share price of Sterling & Wilson Solar – a 2019 IPO – now trades at one-third of the IPO price, after it came to light that the company’s promoters did not use the offer-for-sale proceeds, within 90 days as promised, to repay loans taken from the company.

Shareholder shuffle

When bidding for IPOs, retail investors are often influenced by institutions queuing up to subscribe as anchor investors. But with anchor investors subject to just a 30-day lock-in, you can’t gauge at the allotment stage if these institutions are in the stock for a speculative punt or intend holding it long term. Large chunks of a company’s outstanding equity often change hands immediately following a new listing, like IRCTC which saw over 75 per cent of publicly held shares traded on Day 1.

To know if the anchor investors you emulated are long-term holders, it is important to track shareholding pattern disclosures of IPO firms. IPO companies are mandated by SEBI to file their shareholding patterns with the exchanges one day before the IPO as well as at the end of every quarter after listing, along with the quarterly results.

Shareholder shuffles between pre-IPO filings and subsequent updates can tell you whether the big fish who lapped up the IPO have added or pruned their holdings since.

Pay special attention to the lock-in periods for institutional shares and the identity of investors with large holdings. In the SBI Cards IPO in March 2020, mutual funds nearly doubled their holdings from 1.6 per cent just before the offer day to 3 per cent by end of March.

Drop-off in performance

Like newly weds decking up for the big day, companies preparing to go public are often not averse to dressing up their financials to make their growth rates, profit margins or return parameters look better than their peers or industry in their prospectus.

Once the listing is done, quarterly results turn tepid. So if the company you invested in showed a miraculous acceleration in its sales, operating profit margins or return on equity in the quarter or half-year immediately preceding its IPO, keep a close eye on its quarterly results for a few quarters after listing. If you spot a drop-off in business metrics, be prepared to bail out.

Corporate actions

Old habits die hard. Therefore, for some closely held companies that go public, promoters may disregard minority shareholder interest when initiating significant corporate actions even after listing. In many PSU stocks, disinvestment hasn’t made much of a difference to their promoter – the government – subjecting them to untimely takeovers, mergers and share buybacks by diktat, denting their investor perception and market valuations.

A study by Institutional Investor Advisory Services showed markedly lower governance scores for newly listed companies compared to the veterans.

In 2019, barely four years after its IPO in March 2015, the promoters of Prabhat Dairy decided to sell the company’s main revenue source, its dairy business to Groupe Lactalis, a French dairy major, without sharing any plans on how they proposed to compensate shareholders.

Soon after the sale, they came up with a proposal to delist the stock which ran into hot waters with SEBI, with the stock languishing 35 per cent below its offer price. Keep a close watch on the stock exchange filings of IPO firms to ensure that the investment thesis based on which you bought the IPO still holds good.

(This is a free article from the BusinessLine premium Portfolio segment. For more such content, please subscribe to The Hindu BusinessLine online..)

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RBI approves re-appointment of Vishakha Mulye as ICICI Bank ED

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The Reserve Bank of India has approved the re-appointment of Vishakha Mulye as an Executive Director of the ICICI Bank for a three-year period.

The re-appointment is effective January 19, ICICI Bank said in a regulatory filing.

“…Shareholders at the Annual General Meeting held on August 14, 2020 had already approved the re-appointment of Ms Mulye for a period of five years effective January 19, 2021,” it further said.

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RBI weighs trade credit insurance for financiers on TReDS

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The Reserve Bank of India is weighing the possibility of allowing financiers on the Trade Receivables Discounting System (TReDS) to take trade credit insurance (TCI).

This insurance cover can protect financiers– Banks, Non-Banking Finance Companies- Factors, and other financial institutions — on TReDS platform against the risk of default when they finance/discount trade receivables of Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (MSMEs).

TCI, if allowed, can help financiers on TReDs to minimise bad debts and reduce provisions, thereby supporting their bottomline.

The current regulations do not allow financiers to take TCI as the expectation is that their financing activity should be solely based on their credit appraisal and not on insurance.

TCI is currently offered by general insurers to suppliers of goods and services against delay in payment or non-payment of trade credit.

TReDS is an electronic platform for facilitating the financing/discounting of trade receivables of MSMEs drawn against buyers (large corporates, public sector undertaking companies, and government departments) are financed by multiple financiers through a competitive auction process.

Three entities — Receivables Exchange of India Ltd., A.TReDS, and Mynd Solutions — have been operating TReDS for more than three years.

A senior public sector bank official said Banks’ have requested RBI to allow them TCI cover on TReDS platform initially in view of the rising stress in the MSME segment.

Moreover, this can buoy MSME financing activity, which is one of the priority areas for the Government as part of its Atmanirbhar Bharat Abhiyan (Self-Reliant India campaign), on the platform.

If the central bank allows TCI coverage to financiers on TReDS platform initially and it proves successful, this could be extended to other financing activities at a later stage, the Banker quoted opined.

According to RBI’s Report on Trend and Progress of Banking in India 2019-20, the number of MSMEs customers availing Covid-19 related moratorium increased to 78 per cent in August 2020, reflecting the stress in the sector.

As per RBI data on “Progress in MSME Financing through TReDS”, in FY2020, the number of invoices uploaded on TReDS platforms jumped 111 per cent year-on-year (yoy) to 5,30,077, with the amount involved rising 95 per cent yoy to ₹13,088.27 crore.

The number of invoices financed in the reporting year rose 106 per cent yoy to 4,77,969, with the amount involved rising 91 per cent yoy to ₹11,165.86 crore.

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