NABARD disburses ₹16,500 cr under rural infra fund till Jan 31 this fiscal

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The National Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development (NABARD) has disbursed ₹16,500 crore under the Rural Infrastructure Development Fund (RIDF) during the current financial year so far (up to January 31, 2021).

Cumulative disbursements under the fund, which was started in 1995 to create social assets in rural India, stood at ₹3,10,849 crore as on January 31, 2021, NABARD said in a statement.

Also read: Enhanced MIF to support irrigation coverage for 1 crore ha

Disbursements in financial year ending 2020 under the ongoing tranches of RIDF aggregated ₹26,266 crore, according to NABARD’s annual report.

Under RIDF, low-cost funds are provided to States to facilitate completion of incomplete rural infrastructure projects.

The eligible activities under RIDF cover 37 activities of rural life, broadly categorised under Agriculture and Irrigation, Rural Connectivity and Social Sector, including drinking water, primary health and education.

Also read: IIT-Kharagpur, NABARD to organise Agri-Food Techathon event

GR Chintala, Chairman, NABARD, said: “The increased allocations (in the Union Budget for 2021-22) to RIDF and Micro Irrigation Fund (MIF) at ₹40,000 crore (from ₹30,000 crore) and ₹10,000 crore (from ₹5,000 crore) respectively, will help push rural infrastructure projects across States.”

As per the statement, doubling the MIF to ₹10,000 crore will promote water use efficiency in agriculture.

NABARD said, over the last two years, an amount of ₹3,970 crore has been sanctioned to seven States — Andhra Pradesh, Gujarat, Tamil Nadu, Haryana, West Bengal, Punjab and Uttarakhand, which would help bring around 13 lakh hectares of land under micro irrigation.

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PNB on track to achieving proit of ₹ 2,000 crore this fiscal despite Covid-19 challenges

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Punjab National Bank, Inida’s second largest public sector bank, is confident of recording profits in the fourth quarter as well as achieving the overall indicated profit of ₹2,000 crore for the current fiscal despite pandemic induced challenges, Ch. SS Mallikarjuna Rao, Managing Director & CEO, has said.

The public sector bank is also confident of keeping the gross NPA level as a percentage of advances below 14 per cent and net NPA level below 5 per cent by end-March this fiscal, Rao told a virtual press conference on Saturday, after the announcement of the Q3 financial performance.

It maybe recalled that PNB senior management had at end of September this fiscal guided for gross NPA of less than 14 per cent and net NPA of 5 per cent by end March 2021.

“We still retain that (guidance). While challenge has been there for Q3 and SC judgement is holding back on identification of NPA, January 2021 appears to be better in terms of collections. We are very confident we will be able to control. Our effort will be to maintain at the same level as we have declared today…but the stress in the system for which we have done provisioning, we would like to see that stress removed in Q4,” he said.

Although the Supreme Court is yet to pronounce final judegment on the NPA recognition matter, PNB has made an assessment, and based on that made adequate provisioning in the financial statements for the quarter ended December 31, 2020, he said.

As of end December 2020, PNB had gross NPA of 12.99 per cent and net NPA of 4.03 per cent. This was lower than the gross NPA of 13.43 per cent and net NPA of 4.75 per cent in September 2020.

On Friday, PNB reported a net profit of ₹506 crore for the third quarter ended December 31, 2020. For the first half this fiscal, PNB had reported a net profit of ₹929 crore.

“We are looking at market conditions to optimise the profitability in terms of credit and treasury,” he said, exuding confidence of good fourth quarter performance. “If you look at the performance of PNB in last three years, it is slowly and steadily coming to profitability in terms of business and strengthening of asset quality,” he said.

Bad bank

Rao said that the concept of a bad bank was welcome initiative. He that the proposed initiative is going to be a facilitator to bring all the approvals for the bidder at one go and that it is going to be a single window process.

In his view, the bad bank at the initial stage will only see “transfer” of assets from the lender and will not be a “purchase” transaction. “Because this is only a transfer of assets, I don’t expect any bottlenecks. Within one year bad bank will get settled and attain maturity,” he said.

Although the Finance Ministry has categorically said that government will not infuse any capital in the bad bank, Rao felt that capital requirement will only be moderate and the banks themselves will be able to fork this out. “Capital requirement will arise only when bad bank purchases from the banks. It will not be a purchase as I understand it will be a transfer which will not require capital at the higher level. It will require moderate capital,” he said.

Engaging with investors

Rao indicated that PNB would begin engaging with investors to gauge the appetite for further qualified institutional placement (QIP) from Monday. It maybe recalled that PNB had in December 2020 raised ₹3,788 crore via QIP, which fell short of the announced targeted mop up of ₹7,000 crore. “We will do the remaining portion of QIP at an appropriate time. It could happen even before this fiscal end,” he said.

Rao also said that PNB would raise Additional Tier 1 (AT-1) capital of ₹2,500 crore before end March.

Till date, PNB has raised ₹8,283 crore out of the ₹14,000 crore capital that it last year set out to raise from the market. Rao also said that PNB is not looking to seek any capital support from the government and would look to “stand on its own legs” and mobilise capital from the market.

As regards plans for life insurance companies which it has invested in and whether the bank would review shareholding now that FDI limit has been raised to 74 per cent in budget, Rao said that no such immediate plans are there on this front.

PNB chief pointed out that both PNB MetLife (PNB holds 30 per cent) and CHOICE (PNB holds 23 per cent) are unlisted companies, and would first be required to be listed to discover the right enterprise valuation.

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Reserve Bank of India – Tenders

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Gist of Tender Events

e-Tender no RBI/RBSC/516/21-22/ET/516
e-Tender name Annual Maintenance Contract (AMC) and Facility Management Service (FMS) for Computer Hardware, Software and Peripherals at Reserve Bank Staff College (RBSC), Chennai
Mode of Tender e-Procurement System
(Online Part I – Pre-qualification criteria and Techno-Commercial Bid and Part II – Price Bid through www.mstcecommerce.com/eprochome/rbi)
Date of NIT available to parties to download 06.02.2021 from 10:00 a.m.
Pre-bid Meeting 15/02/2021 at 11:00 a.m. at RBSC
Estimated cost of work ₹ 23.00 Lakh
Earnest Money Deposit ₹ 46,000/- from each bidder
Due date of submission of EMD Up to 12.00 noon of 08/03/2021
Date of Starting of e-Tender for submission of online Pre-qualification for criteria and Techno-Commercial Bid and price Bid at www.mstcecommerce.com/eprochome/rbi From 02.00 p.m of 18/02/2021
Date of closing of online e-tender for submission of Pre-qualification for criteria and Techno-Commercial Bid & Price Bid. 02:00 p.m. of 08/03/2021
Date & time of opening of Tender Part I

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

03.00 p m of 08.03.2021 at RBSC

Opening of Financial Bid will be intimated to all the eligible bidders later

Transaction Fee Payment of Transaction fee as mentioned in the MSTC portal through MSTC payment gateway /NEFT/RTGS in favour of MSTC LIMITED

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Why Are Analysts Bullish On SBI After Q3?

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Investment

oi-Olga Robert

By Staff

|

On Friday, shares of the State Bank of India (SBI) closed 11.24% high and even hit a new all-time high of Rs 408.35 in intraday trade as analysts hiked their target prices on the stock post its financial results for the December-ended quarter.

The bank’s market cap crossed the Rs 3.5 trillion mark for the first time ever.

Why Are Analysts Bullish On SBI After Q3?

A day earlier, the public-sector bank had reported a 6.9% fall in its standalone profit at Rs 5,196.22 crore for the third quarter of the financial year 2020-21, due to higher provisions and slower NII (Net Interest Income) growth.

Why have analysts turned bullish on SBI?

In a note titled “The elephant has started dancing”, Macquarie said, “SBI’s 3QFY21 asset quality performance was very strong, as seen in its much lower slippages, fewer restructured assets, stable margins, and improving return on assets.”

The brokerage also raised its 12-month price target for the stock to Rs 450, raising earnings forecasts and assigning a higher trading multiple.

SBI said that its gross non-performing assets (NPA) as a percentage of gross advances was at 4.77% in the December-ended quarter, a 51 basis points decline and net NPA at 1.23%, down 36 basis point from the previous quarter. All segments of loan books reported a decline in NPA QoQ with NPA from the corporate book down 35 basis points and retail 62 basis points.

On a proforma basis without reference to the Supreme Court interim order, the gross NPA would have been at 5.44% and net NPA at 1.81% in Q3FY21.

As for fresh slippages, they were reported sharply lower at Rs 237 crore for the December-ended quarter when compared to Rs 3,085 crore in September 2020, but proforma slippages for the quarter were at Rs 2,073 crore and proforma slippages for 9 months of FY 21 at Rs 16,461 crore, said SBI.

Slippages ratio declined significantly to 0.04% in the third quarter of 2020-21, compared with 0.46% in the second quarter and 2.94% in December 2019.’

CLSA has increased its target price on SBI to Rs 560 per share from Rs 385 earlier, in a note titled “Breaking all barriers” wherein it said that the bank’s retail asset quality has been impeccable over the last decade and with the end of the corporate credit cycle, SBI’s asset quality is finally delivering better asset quality outcomes when compared to private banks.

“We revise up our earnings by 15-26% and now expect ROEs (return on equity) of 14 per cent by FY23. SBI has been a consistent market-share gainer over the last decade and now with a dual benign credit cycle from FY22, we now expect SBI to rerate materially beyond 1x book,” the brokerage added.

“SBIN reported robust operating performance in a challenging environment. Loan growth is showing a healthy recovery in retail portfolio, with disbursements in many business segments surpassing pre-Covid levels,” said Motilal Oswal while raising its target price to Rs 475.

Credit Suisse has raised the target price by 70.4% to Rs 460 from Rs 270 while Morgan Stanley raised its target price by 50% to Rs 525 from Rs 350.

Disclaimer

The article is purely informational and is not a solicitation to buy, sell in securities mentioned in the article. Greynium Information Technologies Pvt Ltd, its subsidiaries, associates and the author do not accept culpability for losses and/or damages arising based on information in this article.



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Budget 2021: Here’s How Senior Citizens Can Avail Exemption From ITR Filing

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Taxes

oi-Roshni Agarwal

|

To relax compliance norms for senior citizens, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman in the Union Budget 2021, exempted pensioners aged 75 years and above from income tax return (ITR) filing in case the full amount of tax payable has been deducted by the paying bank. Further as per experts this exemption in ITR filing shall be available in a case if the pension income of the senior citizen is being credited into the same bank from which the interest income is being earned and the bank deducts the TDS at the applicable rate from the sum of such income.

Budget 2021: Here's How Senior Citizens Can Avail Exemption From ITR Filing

Budget 2021: Here’s How Senior Citizens Can Avail Exemption From ITR Filing

In simple words, if the annual tax liability on interest and pension income is cleared by deduction of TDS by the interest paying bank then filing of income tax return shall not be an obligation for the senior citizen. In the Finance Bill there has been introduced a new provision 194P as per which the bank which pays the pension will compute the tax on the total income (pension and interest) after considering any deductions under Chapter VI-A.

“The bank will do the necessary TDS deductions from the pension and senior citizens aged 75 years and above will be absolved from the filing of tax returns. However, if there are any other sources of income or deductions, then such senior citizens will need to file the tax returns,” states Sandeep Sehgal, director-taxes and regulatory, AKM Global, a consulting firm.

Moreover, as per Kapil Rana, founder & chairman, HostBooks, the liability to make necessary tax deduction will be transferred to the paying bank that means paying bank will deduct the tax as per the slab applicable on such senior citizen after giving effect to the deduction allowable under Chapter VI-A, rebate allowable under section 87A provided such person has furnished a declaration to the specified bank containing such particulars in such form and verified in such manner as may be prescribed.

GoodReturns.in



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How To Avoid TDS And Avail Tax Deductions On FD?

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Planning

oi-Vipul Das

|

Fixed deposits have been a rebuttal to the financial requirements of many individual investors, particularly senior citizens, who have been searching for a low risk return portfolio for their savings and creating wealth for better retirement planning. That being said, as a prospective fixed deposit investor, it is worthwhile for you to consider how the government can tax these returns and whether there is any tax gain on fixed deposit investments. Bank fixed deposits (FDs) normally deal with a huge variety of tenures, from 7 days to 10 years, in which the principal balance is deposited to get a fixed rate of interest against the capital parked. Premature withdrawals on FDs, though, are not available without paying a penalty. In the case of liquidity, only for the time retained will the interest available to the depositor will be paid. There are other methods that can be followed while investing in FDs to prevent such a circumstance.

How To Avoid TDS And Avail Tax Deductions On FD?

Taxation and TDS applicable on FDs

For you, fixed deposits are a perfect way to secure capital from volatility and thus provide assured returns. Fixed deposit interests, though, contribute to a spike in your personal finance. Therefore, under income tax rules, the net gains you receive from a fixed deposit account are entitled to be taxed. Fixed deposit returns are taxed under the heading ‘Income from Other Sources’ under tax regulations. If the interest amount in a fiscal year reaches Rs 10,000, the TDS rate on fixed deposits (FDs) is 10 percent. This TDS deduction cap on FD is raised to Rs. 40,000 annually in the budget speech of 2019, which is effective in AY 2020-21. The TDS limit on fixed deposit interest is 20 percent under existing income tax laws if you do not furnish the bank with your PAN Card.

The TDS rate is 30 per cent for NRO (Non-Resident Ordinary) FDs. There are no TDS on FDs for NRE (Non-Resident External) and FCNR (Foreign Currency Non-Resident) as these are completely free from tax. In Form 26AS, the TDS specifics subtracted by the bank are recorded. For either Time Deposit (FD) or Recurring Deposit (RD) rendered with a post office, no TDS is withheld. Elderly people (those over 60) will get up to Rs 50,000 per year tax-free interest income and no TDS will be withheld for interest earned for them up to Rs 50,000 per annum. If the amount of TDS withheld increases the overall tax liabilities, the account holder can then modify the TDS against its overall tax liability or even seek a refund. On your fixed deposit, TDS is automatically imposed by the bank where you have established your FD account.

Many depositors for instance receive interest income in excess of Rs 40,000 or Rs 50,000 per year, but their net earnings plus interest received is less than the lowest possible exempt earning. The bank will not subtract TDS when there is no tax payable by the account holder or depositor. That being said, in such situations, you will have to submit Form 15G or 15H to the bank to welcome interest free income without TDS. Ideally, at the beginning of a fiscal year, Form 15G for non-senior citizens and 15H for senior citizens should be submitted at the bank to prevent the full inconvenience of the additional TDS deduction and seek ultimate refund from the IT department.

Tax benefits on FDs

In a fiscal year (under the Section 80C of the Income-Tax Act, 1961), an individual can seek an exemption of up to Rs 1,50,000 for capital invested in tax-saving FDs. These deposits will, though, have a 5-years of lock-in period and premature withdrawals are not permitted. In her Budget speech, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman declared that senior citizens above the age of 75 will not be necessary to file income tax returns if they receive only pension and interest income. That being said, if they have some other means of income, this benefit will not be applicable.

The best ways to manage your FD

Depositors can avail a loan against the FD instead of withdrawing the fixed deposit and this facility is supported by most of the banks to their customers. The FD loan interest rate is typically 1-2% higher than the interest charged on the deposit, which, though, differs across the banks. Instead of going for a personal loan, analysts claim taking a loan against fixed deposits will help the depositor to make the best use of their deposit as the interest rates on loans against FDs are usually lower than the interest charged on personal loans. As some banks still offer the alternative to opt 90 per cent of the amount as a loan against your deposit.

For instance, without any processing fee and prepayment penalties, the SBI charges interest on a regular reducing balance for fixed deposit loans. The bank provides loans at a rate of 1% above the reasonably fixed rate of deposit. A sweep-in FD account can also be preferred by investors who are concerned for liquidity. Sweep-in accounts deliver not only the satisfaction of a savings account’s liquidity, but also the rate of return of a fixed deposit. The interest rates are therefore similar to the standard if opposed to sweep-in fixed deposit account, and the liquidity advantages of a savings account can be add-on for depositors.

The penalty is therefore not charged for the use of proceeds or for early withdrawals from a sweep-in account. For this account, any balance in the saving account above the maximum cap is automatically transferred towards the FD account of the account holder. Additionally, withdrawals from the fixed deposit account can be rendered if there are inadequate deposits in the savings account, and deposits will be transferred back towards the savings account to cover the shortfall. Therefore, in the savings account, one is mandated to retain enough balance so that his or her fixed deposits are not affected. The laddering strategy, in which the depositor can best handle the interest rate exposure and thus have funds with liquidity, is another alternative.

A depositor can extend their investment through different tenures with this possibility. For e.g., you can deposit in one or more investment vehicles with different maturity dates, and even though you can diversify your portfolios through 1, 3, and 5-year FDs which can be a smart approach.



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What are Indians buying with Buy Now Pay Later?, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The ‘Buy Now Pay Later’ segment is seeing larger adoption across different geographies and product segments from earlier dominated by smartphone purchases on BNPL mode.

On assessing the BNPL transactions on its Brand EMI platform, leading POS player Mswipe said they’re witnessing BNPL mechanism being used to purchase musical instruments, mechanization of kitchen, hair treatment, Mobiles, Consumer Durables, Education, Health, Furniture, Wellness and Luxury segments.

Leading digital consumer lender Zest Money on its platform saw the demand for credit in BNPL with 20% growth in women customer base with spends on Edtech and men splurging on fashion, high end smartphones, laptops, fitness watches, electric vehicles were driving the larger transactions.

Geographically, Zest Money saw a demand for BNPL across 18,921 pin codes with customers in Bengaluru looking for online electronics and fashion, Mumbai – Education & Travel, Delhi NCR- Fashion & Travel, Hyderabad – Offline Electronics & Personal Loans, Pune: Fashion & Education, Chennai: Education & offline-electronics.

Mswipe on its platform saw a unique trend with customers in Mumbai, Bengaluru & Delhi saw a growing use of BNPL for hair loss and thinning treatment and the average transaction size at Rs 43,000.

On the western part of the country M-swipe observe people are using BNPL to buy musical instruments like Guitar and Piano, whereas in the North and Eastern parts of India, BNPL is being used to BNPL for mechanisation of the kitchen with customers buying Chimney, Cooktops, Hobs, Built-in Oven, Cooking Range among others. Mswipe saw an average ticket size of INR 20, 000 for these products purchased on BNPL.

In the South, especially in cities of Chennai, Coimbatore and Erode in Tamil Nadu and Trivandrum, Ernakulam, Angamaly, Calicut and Kannur in Kerala, BNPL was used to purchase formal clothing.

Manish Patel, Founder and CEO, Mswipe said, “The insights reveal a fundamental shift in the behaviour of consumers both in terms of their lifestyle choices and their financing preferences. The growing EMI economy creates opportunities for small businesses that have not been using checkout finance as an incentive for their customers up until now.

According to Zest Money, the BNPL option offers greater flexibility to spread the cost and has noticed that the average ticket size for BNPL is higher and it plays a crucial role in reviving consumer demand, especially for large ticket products. It also observed that the highest volume of premium products were purchased on Fridays. High end smartphones, laptops, large appliances, and fitness watches drove demand in the category.

Lizzie Chapman, CEO and Co-Founder ZestMoney said, “2020 will be remembered as one of the most pivotal years in the adoption of Buy Now, Pay Later in India. We saw an increased trend of digitally savvy customers who prefer transparent financing options like BNPL over unfair and hidden fees associated with traditional products. The category is poised for massive growth this year as the consumer habit is here to stay. Consumers are clearly loving the all-digital experience for credit. We strongly feel India will emerge as the largest market for BNPL and will leapfrog credit cards entirely.”

Zest Money is looking to ramp up their BNPL presence to 400,000 touch points in 2021 from current 15,000.

The Other Side

On a different note, BNPL has grown exponentially in United Kingdom . UK’s Financial Conduct Authority is set to regulate the BNPL segment with new rules as fears mount over the growing debt burden for cash-strapped consumers and shoppers.

The use of BNPL has grown four times in 2020 and is now at £2.7 billion in UK over 5 million people using the product since the onset of Covid-19 pandemic. Early trends show that consumers are taking on debt which they cannot afford.

The exponential growth of BNPL has given consumers a significant alternative to a more expensive credit as per the FCA but it also has “significant potential for consumer harm”.

According to FCA one in ten customer of a major bank using BNPL are already failing to clear their dues.

“Changes are urgently need to bring BNPL into regulation to protect consumers to ensure that there is a secure provision of debt advice to help all those who may need it and to maintain a sustained regulatory response to the pandemic,” states Chritopher Woolard, chairing a review into the unsecured credit market at the FCA.



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RBI to integrate consumer grievance redressal scheme, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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MUMBAI: The Reserve Bank on Friday announced it will be integrating consumer grievances redressal under a single ombudsman as against three schemes working at present.

There are dedicated ombudsman schemes devoted to consumer grievance redressal in banking, non-bank finance companies and digital transactions, respectively, at present.

“To make the alternate dispute redress mechanism simpler and more responsive to the customers of regulated entities, it has been decided to implement, inter alia, integration of the three Ombudsman schemes and adoption of the ‘One Nation One Ombudsman‘ approach for grievance redressal,” governor Shaktikanta Das said on Friday.

The move is intended to make the process of redress of grievances easier by enabling the customers of the banks, NBFCs and non-bank issuers of prepaid payment instruments to register their complaints under the integrated scheme, with one centralised reference point, he said.

The RBI is targeting to roll out the e-Integrated Ombudsman Scheme in June 2021, he said.

Das said financial consumer protection has gained significant policy priority across jurisdictions and the RBI has been taking a slew of initiatives on the same.

“In line with the global initiatives on consumer protection, RBI has taken various initiatives to strengthen Grievance Redress Mechanism of regulated entities,” he said.

The RBI had operationalised complaint management system (CMS) portal as one stop solution for alternate dispute resolution of customer complaints not resolved satisfactorily by the regulated entities.



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Reserve Bank of India – Tenders

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Reserve Bank of India, CBD Belapur, Navi Mumbai invites E-tender under Two-Bids System (Technical & Financial Bid) from all eligible vendors for the captioned work. Tender document can be downloaded from February 06, 2021 at 3.00 PM to March 04, 2021 at 6.00 PM under the “Tender’’ Section at RBI’s website (www.rbi.org.in). The tenderers should electronically submit their proposal, as per the instructions regarding E-Tender, along with all the supporting documents on or before March 04, 2021 up to 06.00 PM. The tenderers shall submit their tender proposal along with Earnest Money Deposit (EMD) of ₹42,000/- (Rupees Forty-two thousand only), as prescribed in the tender document. The Technical Bids (Part I) will be opened electronically on March 05, 2021 at 11.00 AM at Reserve Bank of India, Sector-10, Plot No. 3, H. H. Nirmaladevi Marg, CBD Belapur, Navi Mumbai-400614. In the event of any date indicated above being declared a holiday, the next working day shall become operative for the respective purpose mentioned herein. Financial Bids (Part II) of only those bidders, who are found to be eligible on evaluation of their Part I documents, etc; as prescribed in the tender, will be opened on a later date, after intimating them.

Details of the proposed work are as under:

Estimated Cost of Work ₹21,00,000/- (Rs. Twenty-one lakhs only)
Earnest Money Deposit ₹42,000/- (Rs. Forty-two thousand only),
Last date/time for submission of Tender March 04, 2021 up to 6:00 PM
Date/time of opening of Part – I Tender March 05, 2021 at 11:00 AM

(Shri Jaikish)
Chief General Manager
Reserve Bank of India, CBD Belapur
Navi Mumbai

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Asset Class: RBI allows retail buyers to open gilt accounts

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The experts added that this is one reason fixed deposits are popular.

Retail investors can soon buy gilts, both in the primary and secondary markets, by opening accounts with Reserve Bank of India (RBI).

While the move is reformist, experts noted the initial response may be lukewarm, given gilt funds offer reasonably good returns with indexation benefits if held for over three years. “Unless primary dealers offer liquidity or the trading volumes on the stock exchanges go up meaningfully, savers may not want to lock themselves into the product for long tenures,”they said.

The experts added that this is one reason fixed deposits are popular.

The total AUM in gilt funds is just about Rs 20,000 crore.

At the same time, PF professionals observed, gilt funds are actively managed in terms of duration and savers who want to buy and hold for a fixed period may want to buy gilts directly. Currently, the process of buying gilts is cumbersome since these are issued via the Securities General Ledger.

However,a direct account with the central bank would make the process easier.

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