NBFCs can initiate recovery in Rs 20-lakh loan default under SARFAESI Act: FM

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In the absence of lower threshold limits, NBFCs had to file cases at civil courts for recovery.

Finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman has proposed to lower the threshold for non-banking financial companies (NBFCs) to initiate recovery proceedings against loan defaulters under the Securitisation and Reconstruction of Financial Assets and Enforcement of Security Interest (SARFAESI) Act, 2002. In her Budget speech, the FM proposed to lower the threshold of loan defaults to `20 lakh, compared to `50 lakh earlier.

“To improve credit discipline while continuing to protect the interest of small borrowers, for NBFCs with minimum asset size of `100 crore, the minimum loan size eligible for debt recovery under the SARFAESI Act, 2002, is proposed to be reduced from the existing level of `50 lakh to `20 lakh,” she said.

Veena Sivaramakrishnan, partner, Shardul Amarchand Mangaldas, said reducing the amount for taking SARFAESI action will provide lenders better access to fast track and out of court enforcement mechanism, which would lead to better discipline in the financing world. “The borrowers can no longer use long-drawn litigation as an excuse to delay on their contractual obligations and it is, therefore, a crucial step in ensuring quick recovery, which is a critical pillar in any financing,” she added.

Sonam Chandwani, managing partner at KS Legal and Associates, said relaxation in threshold for NBFCs under SARFAESI is likely to strengthen financial health of lenders and simultaneously improve credit discipline while continuing to safeguard borrowers’ interests.

“This move enables NBFCs to recover smaller loans thereby catering to a larger pool of loans, which ultimately strengthens their balance sheets and overall financial health,” she said.

FE learned that NBFCs had earlier requested the finance minister to reduce threshold limits for initiating recovery proceedings. In the absence of lower threshold limits, NBFCs had to file cases at civil courts for recovery. The recovery under SARFAESI is applicable only to secured loans. Under the SARFAESI Act, a lender can take possession of the property or mortgaged assets after a 60-day notice. The Act is applicable to home loans, loan against property and loan against collateral for micro small medium enterprises (MSMEs).

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Reserve Bank of India – Tenders

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Reserve Bank of India, Jammu invites e-tender for “Providing Services for Housekeeping /Cleaning of Washrooms (Under Annual Maintenance Contract) at Main Office Building and Annexe Building, RBI Jammu (from April 01, 2021 to March 31, 2022)”. The e-tendering shall be done through the e-tendering portal of MSTC Ltd. (https://www.mstcecommerce.com/eprochome/rbi/). All eligible and interested companies / agencies / firms must register themselves with MSTC Ltd. through the above-mentioned website to participate in the e-tendering process. The Schedule of e-tender is as follows:

Estimated cost of the work ₹ 40,00,000 (Rupees Forty Lakh only)
Online application form available from February 03, 2021, 0800 hours onwards
Last date and time for submission of online application March 03, 2021 up to 1700 hours.
Date of opening of the online applications (Part-I) March 04, 2021 at 1100 hours

Regional Director

Date: 03.02.2021

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Governance structures, liability key to DFI success

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The experience of DFIs globally holds proof that the government needs to be involved in a hands-on fashion.

The assurance of sustainable sources of long-term liabilities and a strong governance framework will be crucial for the success of the proposed new development finance institution (DFI), industry participants and market experts said. The government will have to play a role not just as a provider of capital, but also as a facilitator of policy tweaks like credit enhancements for projects financed by the DFI. There is also speculation that India Infrastructure Finance Company (IIFCL) may be merged into the new sovereign-backed DFI.

Before 1992, DFIs enjoyed a set of benefits which made it easy for them to tap into long-term liabilities. They had access to funding at concessional rates from multilateral agencies. DFI bonds enjoyed a statutory liquidity ratio (SLR) status, which meant that banks were a captive source of funds for these institutions. They also received direct funding from the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) through long-term operations (LTO).

Niranjan Rajadhyaksha, research director and senior fellow, IDFC Institute, said of these three routes, only the first still remains an option. “Maybe this DFI with some sovereign guarantee could raise money and then give rupee loans to local infrastructure companies. So we will have to await the details and see if the government comes up with a new rupee instrument to bridge the long-term liability gap,” he said.

Some industry executives believe that the pre-1992 concessions for DFIs may have to be brought back to make the structure effective. RK Bansal, who heads Edelweiss ARC and has earlier worked with IDBI, explained that if the older funding benefits are not restored, the bond market will have to be deepened significantly for DFIs to work.

“The government will also need to offer credit enhancement because new infra projects cannot be highly rated. Finally, a high degree of policy support will be required from the government and they must ensure that different departments coordinate among themselves to help complete the projects,” he said.

The experience of DFIs globally holds proof that the government needs to be involved in a hands-on fashion. Without policy-level handholding from the government, infrastructure projects cannot achieve fruition and it will be the DFI that will be left holding the can, experts said.

There is also a view that the new DFI must on-board private partners in order to establish a strong governance framework. Ashvin Parekh, managing partner, Ashvin Parekh Advisory Services (APAS), said, “Apart from raising long-term liabilities to fund long-term assets, the other challenge would be to develop a sound governance framework. That was what distinguished the better-managed private DFIs ICICI and HDFC from the others. If the government can conceive of some measure by which the DFI can raise long-term liabilities, then it could sustain with the help of good governance practices.”

Sound governance practices will also inspire confidence among potential long-term investors such as pension funds and sovereign wealth funds, Parekh added.

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Reserve Bank of India – Press Releases

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(Amount in ₹ crore, Rate in Per cent)

  Volume
(One Leg)
Weighted
Average Rate
Range
A. Overnight Segment (I+II+III+IV) 4,43,529.25 3.18 0.01-5.30
     I. Call Money 10,036.54 3.20 1.90-3.55
     II. Triparty Repo 3,52,444.55 3.21 2.90-3.35
     III. Market Repo 80,518.16 3.05 0.01-3.38
     IV. Repo in Corporate Bond 530.00 3.62 3.30-5.30
B. Term Segment      
     I. Notice Money** 158.30 3.06 2.50-3.40
     II. Term Money@@ 123.00 3.05-3.45
     III. Triparty Repo 417.00 3.17 3.17-3.17
     IV. Market Repo 325.00 2.05 2.00-2.70
     V. Repo in Corporate Bond 0.00
  Auction Date Tenor (Days) Maturity Date Amount Current Rate /
Cut off Rate
C. Liquidity Adjustment Facility (LAF) & Marginal Standing Facility (MSF)
I. Today’s Operations
1. Fixed Rate          
     (i) Repo          
     (ii) Reverse Repo Tue, 02/02/2021 1 Wed, 03/02/2021 5,79,114.00 3.35
2. Variable Rate&          
  (I) Main Operation          
     (a) Reverse Repo          
  (II) Fine Tuning Operations          
     (a) Repo          
     (b) Reverse Repo
3. MSF Tue, 02/02/2021 1 Wed, 03/02/2021 1.00 4.25
4. Long-Term Repo Operations    
5. Targeted Long Term Repo Operations
6. Targeted Long Term Repo Operations 2.0
7. Net liquidity injected from today’s operations
[injection (+)/absorption (-)]*
      -5,79,113.00  
II. Outstanding Operations
1. Fixed Rate          
     (i) Repo          
     (ii) Reverse Repo          
2. Variable Rate&          
  (I) Main Operation          
     (a) Reverse Repo Fri, 29/01/2021 14 Fri, 12/02/2021 2,00,007.00 3.54
  (II) Fine Tuning Operations          
     (a) Repo          
     (b) Reverse Repo          
3. MSF          
4. Long-Term Repo Operations# Mon, 24/02/2020 365 Tue, 23/02/2021 15.00 5.15
  Mon, 17/02/2020 1095 Thu, 16/02/2023 499.00 5.15
  Mon, 02/03/2020 1094 Wed, 01/03/2023 253.00 5.15
  Mon, 09/03/2020 1093 Tue, 07/03/2023 484.00 5.15
  Wed, 18/03/2020 1094 Fri, 17/03/2023 294.00 5.15
5. Targeted Long Term Repo Operations^ Fri, 27/03/2020 1092 Fri, 24/03/2023 12,236.00 4.40
  Fri, 03/04/2020 1095 Mon, 03/04/2023 16,925.00 4.40
  Thu, 09/04/2020 1093 Fri, 07/04/2023 18,042.00 4.40
  Fri, 17/04/2020 1091 Thu, 13/04/2023 20,399.00 4.40
6. Targeted Long Term Repo Operations 2.0^ Thu, 23/04/2020 1093 Fri, 21/04/2023 7,950.00 4.40
D. Standing Liquidity Facility (SLF) Availed from RBI$       29,770.06  
E. Net liquidity injected from outstanding operations [injection (+)/absorption (-)]*     -93,139.94  
F. Net liquidity injected (outstanding including today’s operations) [injection (+)/absorption (-)]*     -6,72,252.94  
G. Cash Reserves Position of Scheduled Commercial Banks
     (i) Cash balances with RBI as on 02/02/2021 4,39,254.69  
     (ii) Average daily cash reserve requirement for the fortnight ending 12/02/2021 4,44,286.00  
H. Government of India Surplus Cash Balance Reckoned for Auction as on¥ 02/02/2021 0.00  
I. Net durable liquidity [surplus (+)/deficit (-)] as on 15/01/2021 8,08,585.00  
@ Based on Reserve Bank of India (RBI) / Clearing Corporation of India Limited (CCIL).
– Not Applicable / No Transaction.
** Relates to uncollateralized transactions of 2 to 14 days tenor.
@@ Relates to uncollateralized transactions of 15 days to one year tenor.
$ Includes refinance facilities extended by RBI.
& As per the Press Release No. 2019-2020/1900 dated February 06, 2020.
* Net liquidity is calculated as Repo+MSF+SLF-Reverse Repo.
# As per the Press Release No. 2020-2021/287 dated September 04, 2020.
^ As per the Press Release No. 2020-2021/605 dated November 06, 2020.
¥ As per the Press Release No. 2014-2015/1971 dated March 19, 2015.
Ajit Prasad
Director   
Press Release : 2020-2021/1035

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Bank Nifty constituents hit new highs after Budget 2021, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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by Syed Fasiuddin

Bank Nifty constituents hit new highs shortly after Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman announced her budget for 2021. The Bank Nifty, since the announcement of the budget, which included numerous reforms aimed towards the BFSI sector, including the setting up of a bad bank, amendments towards the Insurance Act of 1938, the recapitalisation of public sector lenders, and the proposed divestment of two public lenders and one general insurer, amongst others, sparked cheer in the market – recording a 3074 point jump.

Public Bank stocks jump
Government owned lenders and constituents of the Bank Nifty Index – including the State Bank of India, Punjab National Bank (PNB), Bank of Baroda, recorded sharp single and double digit rises in values since February 1, when the budget was first announced. SBI within the day recorded a spectacular jump of 7.21%, closing at Rs 333.10 – rising by Rs 22.40. PNB and BoB recorded jumps of 1.26% and 1.01%, respectively, on February 2. PNB at the end of day traded at Rs 36.20, whilst BoB traded at Rs 74.65 – rising by 0.45 and 0.75 points, respectively.

Private lender stocks cheer
Private lenders RBL Bank, Federal Bank, HDFC Bank and Bandhan Bank recorded the highest jumps since the budget was first announced, rising by 11.52%, 10.08%, 9.9% and 9.84% respectively. RBL Bank recorded a jump of 25 points, closing at RS 242.00 at the end of market hours. HDFC Bank alone rose by 140.9 points, trading at Rs 1560, since the budget was announced, whereas Bandhan Bank rose by 30.40 points, to close at Rs 339.35, on February 2. Kerala based Federal Bank also recorded a 7.35 point jump to trade at Rs 80.25 by the close of the BSE.


Other constituents of the Bank Nifty, including ICICI Bank, Kotak Mahindra Bank and Axis Bank, recorded similar gains, jumping by 9.61%, 8.47% and 8.13%, respectively. ICICI Bank rose by 54.20 points to close at Rs 618.45, whereas Kotak Mahindra Bank and Axis Bank recorded an increase of 145.50 points and 53.65 points, respectively, to close at Rs 1863.50 and Rs 713.70.

Bankers remain optimistic
Both public and private bankers expressed optimism at the budget unveiled by Nirmala Sitharaman, on February 1. Dinesh Kumar Khara, Chairman of the State Bank of India (SBI), said “The Union Budget has unveiled a set of well-crafted and robust policies that encompasses the vision of an Atmanirbhar Bharat. The Budget has rightly envisaged a substantial jump in capital expenditure that has a strong multiplier impact on the economy. The decision to open up the insurance sector, setting up a DFI and an ARC, privatizing a couple of public sector banks are all positive steps for the financial sector.”

The Chairman of India’s largest lender further said “One of the cornerstones of this budget is fiscal numbers that are transparent and has the potential to surprise us on the upside. In principle, the budget has rationalized the off-balance-sheet borrowings and headline fiscal deficit numbers, which will overtly please markets and even rating agencies. The fact that the expenditure announcements in the budget have been matched with the status quo on taxes will please everyone and bolster market sentiments.”

Kotak Mahindra Bank founder Uday Kotak, expressing his views on the budget, tweeted “A Budget for growth with next-gen reforms. Focus on healthcare, infra, financial sector. A stable tax regime, higher borrowings for capex. Specific reforms: disinvestment & monetization, opening up of insurance, cleanup plan for stressed assets. Sign of a self confident India.”

Chandra Shekhar Ghosh, MD & CEO, Bandhan Bank, noted “The government has prioritised spending on growth at this stage, in the hope that such growth would help manage the fiscal deficit subsequently. A substantial increase announced in the expenditure on healthcare and infrastructure will help boost economic growth, including the MSME sector and generate employment. Overall, it was a growth-centric Budget aimed at securing India’s long-term economic interest.



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Service outages: RBI appoints firm to audit IT infra of HDFC Bank

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After the implementation of the short-term strategy, the lender expected RBI to inspect its progress.
from the top and get embeddedin
business strategies.

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has appointed an external professional information technology (IT) firm to carry out a special audit of the entire IT infrastructure of HDFC Bank.

In a notification to the exchanges, the lender said the audit will be carried out under Section 30 (1-B) of the Banking Regulation Act, 1949, at the cost of HDFC Bank under Section 30 (1-C) of the Act. “The Bank shall accordingly extend its cooperation to the external professional IT firm so appointed by RBI for conducting the special IT audit as above,” the notification said.

On December 2, 2020, RBI had barred HDFC Bank from launching any new digital initiatives and issuing fresh credit cards. The penalty was issued in view of repeated outages at the bank’s data centres. In a recent post-results call, the bank management said it has envisaged two legs to its action plan for remedying its digital strategy. One is its cloud strategy, which involves a 12-18-month plan, and the other entails the implementation of other aspects of the plan over 10 to 12 weeks.

After the implementation of the short-term strategy, the lender expected RBI to inspect its progress.
The bank said it opened two million new accounts during the December quarter and the RBI directive to stop issuing new credit cards has not affected its deposit accretion. More than two-thirds of its credit card accounts come from its existing liability base.

Srinivasan Vaidyanathan, chief financial officer, HDFC Bank, said, “We haven’t seen any kind of an impact on that sense on an immediate basis, but to the extent that these are all temporary, we should get back and we know that the life cycle of a card to become a little meaningful is actually a two-year journey.”

In the meantime, the bank has to run programmes for activation and engagement. “There is enough room for having various intervention programmes to accelerate,” Vaidyanathan told analysts, adding, “It depends on what sort of programmes we implement at what time period so that we can crunch this build-up life cycle to a shorter one as we go along.”

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Reserve Bank of India – Tenders

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Regional Director, Reserve Bank of India, Chandigarh invites e-Tender for Supply of Mazdoors (Labourers) from reputed and experienced Labour Contractors (with at least 3 years’ experience) 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.

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 ₹ 25 lakh (approx.), however, the actual cost may vary.

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

  e- Tender Schedule Schedule Date and Time
1 e-Tender view date at MSTC website February 02, 2021 (Tuesday) onwards
2 Date of starting of e-Tender February 02, 2021 (Tuesday) onwards
3 Pre Bid Meeting (optional) February 11, 2021 (Thursday) at 11.00 AM
Issue Department, 1st Floor
Reserve Bank of India
Central Vista, Sector 17
Chandigarh – 160 017
4 Last date of submission of e-Tender February 23, 2021 (Tuesday) upto 04.00 PM
5 Date of opening of Part – I February 23, 2021 (Tuesday) at 4.00 PM

6. 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 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
Chandigarh

February 02, 2021

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‘Proposed LIC Act tweaks aimed at getting insurance behemoth ready for listing’

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Budget 2021 not only had loads of goodies on the privatisation front, it also has taken special efforts to expedite the process of legislative amendments to enable the government shed stakes in both Life Insurance Corporation and IDBI Bank.

A day after the Budget was presented in Parliament, Debashish Panda, Secretary, Department of Financial Services, shared the various aspects of changes related to financial services sector introduced through the Finance Bill 2021. Excerpts:

Why use the Finance Bill to bring amendments in LIC Act?

The last Budget had announcements about LIC IPO and IDBI. The Finance Minister made announcements this time too. We had to bring necessary legislative changes. For LIC, we have brought 26-27 consequent amendments through the Finance Bill. The LIC Act 1956 did not have provisions for listing or how shares will be distributed.

In both LIC and IDBI, the Consolidated fund of India will receive the funds. So it becomes part of the money bill and to expedite the process, the changes has been put as part of Finance Bill – which is a money Bill.

Will the intent be to corporatise LIC under Companies Act or will it remain a corporation even after listing?

No, the Life Insurance Corporation of India Act will remain. The character of LIC will remain. We are only enabling compliance with listing regulations and allowing shares to be issued. We are specifying an authorised capital (₹25,000 crore from the current level of ₹ 100 crore) and detailing the Board structures etc in the amendments

How much will the government look to dilute in LIC? Will it be 5 per cent or 10 per cent?

It is for the DIPAM (disinvestment department) to take a call on this. We are looking at other aspects like getting the legislative changes done, get embedded value calculated, appointing actuarial consultants for this etc. Based on the embedded value, the enterprise value will be calculated and then listing will happen. I cannot say anything about the timing.

What was the purpose of going in for a new Development Financial Institution when you could have used an existing entity?

The proposed government-owned DFI — National Bank for Financing and Infrastructure Development — will play a catalytic role in development of the corporate bond market. It will also be a market maker and do technology-based monitoring of projects – which is missing in today’s infrastructure financing. The first pillar of this new DFI is the developmental role while financing role will be its second pillar. Going forward, the government may even look to bring down its holding, in this DFI, to 26 per cent. The new DFI Bill will also open the doors for private owned DFIs to enter this space. IIFCL can also be subsumed for a quick start as it already had domain expertise and trained manpower in this field. This new DFI will start a post Covid-19 new investment cycle in project financing. It will anchor the new ₹111-lakh crore National Infrastructure Pipeline of projects for the next five years.

Budget has proposed a new structure of ARC and AMC to deal with bad loans of public sector banks (PSBs). Will government put money in these entities towards capital?

The government will not and has no plans to put any equity in the new mechanism. It is for the banks to come together and set them up. The bad assets will get transferred from the banks to the ARC entity at net book value (book value-provision made) and as consideration for this 15 per cent cash and 85 per cent securities receipts will be issued.

Budget has proposed privatisation of two PSBs. Will the exiting prompt corrective action banks be eligible as candidates for privatisation?

All of them are eligible. It could be anyone from one to twelve PSBs. The three level of committees as mentioned in the recently approved policy – NITI Aayog, core group of secretaries and alternate mechanism. Also the banks that are now under prompt corrective action have been doing well in recent months and hopefully could come out soon.

Will government ask LIC to join the centre in shedding stake in IDBI Bank?

That will be for the LIC Board to take. It is not for us to determine how much and when they should sell.

So what is the purpose of bringing amendments to the IDBI repeal Act?

The main purpose is to take care of the licensing issue and how it should be dealt with if the control of the bank changes hands.

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SC asks Franklin to disburse ₹9,000 crore to investors

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The Supreme Court on Tuesday ordered that ₹9,122 crore be disbursed within three weeks to the unitholders of Franklin Templeton’s six mutual fund schemes that are proposed to be wound up.

A Bench of Justices SA Nazeer and Sanjiv Khanna said the disbursal of money would be done in proportion to unitholders’ interest in the assets.

In the proceedings conducted through video conferencing, the Bench asked State Bank of India Mutual Fund to disburse the money as all the counsels gave consent to the court’s order.

The Bench granted liberty to the litigating parties to approach the court in case of any difficulty in the disbursal of money to the unitholders. The court also gave the parties liberty to move applications in case of any difficulty arising out of the process.

The lawyer, representing Franklin Templeton Trusts Services Limited, told the Bench that the company would render cooperation to SBI Mutual Fund.

A Franklin Templeton spokesperson said: “We are pleased that, as requested by us and in the best interests of unitholders, the court has directed the distribution of ₹9,122 crore (distributable surplus as of January 15, 2021) to unitholders. As previously stated, we went ahead with the difficult decision of winding up these schemes because of our firm belief that this was the right decision to preserve value for investors, as evidenced by the generation of cash in these schemes over the last 9 months.”

The Bench, had on January 25, said it would first deal with the issues related to objections to the e-voting process for winding up of the six mutual fund schemes and distribution of money to the unitholders. Prior to this, the apex court had granted three days for filing of objections to the e-voting on winding up of six mutual fund schemes of the company. It was also told by counsel for Franklin Templeton that an order be passed for allowing distribution of money to the unitholders.

E-voting process

Earlier, the apex court had asked the Securities and Exchange Board of India to appoint an observer for overseeing the e-voting process.

The voting on the winding up of Franklin Templeton’s six mutual fund schemes had taken place in the last week of December and was approved by the majority of unitholders.

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Pragmatic in approach, nuanced by construction

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Against the backdrop of sharp deceleration in growth in the wake of an unprecedented global health crisis, the FY22 Budget has emphatically provided a much needed thrust for healthcare spending, job creation, and overall economic recovery, all within the ambit of deft fiscal rectitude. The announcements made by the Finance Minister should be seen in conjunction with government’s previous announcements under various fiscal packages encompassing Pradhan Mantri Garib Kalyan Yogana and Atma Nirbhar Bharat Abhiyan.

From an objective standpoint, in a year of difficult fiscal computations, the Finance Minister has walked a tightrope to balance the stretched revenue receipts with necessary expenditure support. At 6.8 per cent of GDP, FY22 fiscal deficit is a realistic display of support to reinvigorate India’s Real GDP growth, which is projected at 11 per cent, albeit supported by low base.

The Basics: Healthcare and Capex

With the pandemic exposing the vulnerabilities in the healthcare sector, the FY22 Union Budget makes a bold attempt to improve the situation allocating ₹2.23-lakh crore — an increase of 137 per cent from the last year’s budget. For Covid-19 vaccines itself, a significant allocation of ₹35,000 crore has been provided, with more support likely in case required

I reckon the government’s thrust on increased capex spending — budgeted to rise by 26.2 per cent over FY21 — will provide the much-needed supply side push to the economy

Creation of an Asset Reconstruction Company was the need of the hour, to reinvigorate risk taking appetite that was getting bogged down by the monumental requirements for provisioning on account of stressed assets. In my opinion, this singular step, with active participation from the financial sector, should help in de-clogging of investments in the country in a formal institutionalised setup

The laying out of the DFI structure is a structural medium term reform to garner infrastructure financing, which is currently being carried out by banks, which as an entity is prone to ALM mismatches as far as financing long term infrastructure projects are concerned. Earmarking of ₹20,000 crore for bank recapitalisation is a step in the right direction. With fiscal situation expected to get comfortable in the coming quarters, possibility of a top-up in this case cannot be ruled out

Continued capital account liberalisation in insurance, with FDI cap getting raised to 74 per cent from 49 per cent is a fantastic move and is likely to pave way for greater insurance penetration in the country The disinvestment target of ₹1.75-lakh crore is bound to unlock value while also leading to diversification of ownership under the Net Public Sector Enterprises Policy

The significant others

Government’s allocation of ₹15,700 crore for MSMEs will bolster growth further. The earlier allocation towards Production Linked Initiative Scheme (PLI), creation of Mega Investment Textiles Parks, and adjustment in customs duty on a range of products will provide protection to this segment to recover from the Covid-19 shock. Further, change in the definition for Small Companies by increasing the thresholds for paid-up capital by 4 times and turnover by 10 times is a welcome move as it eases the compliance requirements of more than two lakh small companies

For incentivising start-ups as well, extending the eligibility for claiming tax holiday and capital gains exemption for investment in start-ups by one more year, until 31st March 2022, will not only free up the working capital of these firms but also revive entrepreneurial spirits

Overall, FY22 Budget is a pragmatic and visionary statement which distinctly lays its focus on consumption and investment drivers to speed-up the economic recovery. The government has prudently laid its long term focus on nurturing growth while also consolidating its fiscal position. Accordingly, it plans to trim fiscal deficit to 4.5 per cent by FY26. This should be broadly acceptable at the time when India needs a strong engine of growth to push it towards achieving the goal of a $5 trillion economy.

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