Industry watchers, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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By Samuel Shen & Andrew Galbraith

Shanghai: China‘s latest salvo against cryptocurrencies has driven a brutal selloff in bitcoin markets but retail traders, miners and even crypto finance firms reckon Beijing’s bark is louder than its bite.

China extending its crypto ban to include banks and payments companies offering crypto-related services furthered a selloff that briefly wiped $1 trillion off crypto market capitalisation.

But fears that the rules would cripple cryptocurrency markets and mining on the Chinese mainland appear baseless. Cryptocurrencies could still be bought from China on Thursday and investment schemes promising juicy returns for mining them remained operational.

Bobby Lee, founder and chief executive officer of Ballet, a cryptocurrency wallet app, said he thought the announcement was merely an attempt by regulators to protect retail investors from volatile markets, but that it would be a challenge for banks to identify crypto-related dealings.

“If you look at the banking activity in China, millions or maybe billions of transactions happen on a daily basis. From all that…how many are actually really crypto services versus dining or e-commerce? It’s almost unknowable,” said Lee, formerly CEO of BTC China, China’s first bitcoin exchange.

It’s not the first time China has banned crypto-related financial and payment services. Beijing issued similar bans in 2013, and in 2017, though the latest one has expanded the range of prohibited services. The repeated bans highlight the challenge of closing the loopholes.

On Thursday, Reuters found it was still possible for Chinese individuals to buy bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies and trade them on overseas crypto exchanges such as Binance. Yuan payments for these purchases could be made via banks or commonly-used online payment platforms in over-the-counter (OTC) markets.

“If you have bitcoin or ethereum, and I want to buy some, I can just send money to you through banks. Just don’t write down anything like bitcoin or ethereum,” said Mr Li, who sells cryptocurrencies on behalf of miners.

“Of course, banks have internal risk-management. If the transaction volume is too big, you might be caught,” said Li, who was unwilling to give his full name because of the sensitivities of the issue.

Miners Undaunted

Players in China’s crypto mining industry were also broadly unfazed by the latest crackdown, again citing the difficulties regulators would have in identifying transactions.

China-based miners have the opposite problem to investors, as they already have bitcoin which they need to change for yuan to pay their electricity costs.

Mining is big business in China, which accounts for as much as 70% of the world’s crypto supply, according to some estimates, although others say that proportion has come down in recent years.

“The Chinese government does crack down from time to time, but currently it is not overly challenging to convert mined coins to RMB for Chinese miners,” said Thomas Heller, chief business officer of Compass Mining, using another word for China’s currency.

Although the new China crypto ban curtails cryptocurrency-related investment products, such schemes are still sold online. One platform offering retail investors a chance to quadruple their money over three years by buying computing power for miners of a smaller cryptocurrency, Filecoin, which has surged in popularity in China, still seemed to be accepting money on Thursday.

Flex Yang, chief executive officer of Babel Finance, a cryptocurrency financing firm, remained bullish. “Bitcoin prices dropped more than 50% last year in March but eventually rebounded back to a new record high,” Yang said. “In the long run, bitcoin still makes for an excellent asset class for portfolio managers seeking growth.”

Reuters’ Kevin Yao in Beijing contributed to this story.



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IDBI replaces CFO over RBI’s CA diktat, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Mumbai: IDBI Bank on Thursday said that it has appointed executive director P Sitaram as chief financial officer (CFO) and key managerial personnel of the bank. The appointment follows the RBI’s direction to ensure adherence to the minimum qualification criteria for the position of CFO. Sitaram is a qualified chartered accountant and has over 15 years of experience in handling finance and accounts and taxation matters in IDBI Bank.

The RBI’s directive to banks to appoint qualified CAs as CFO is compelling banks to cast a wider net in their search for candidates. Besides the academic qualification, RBI requires the CFO to have 15 years of experience in overseeing financial operations such as accounting and taxation and most of it in a bank or financial institution.

SBI had appointed former EY partner Charanjit Surinder Singh Attra as CFO in September last year after advertising for the position. The bank had offered an annual cost to the company of Rs 75 lakh to Rs 1 crore which was almost thrice of what the chairman earned at that time.

The RBI too hired laterally for the CFO position. The central bank had appointed Sudha Balakrishnan a CA and former director with National Securities Depositories Limited (NSDL) as its CFO in 2018.

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Union Bank of India mops up ₹1447 cr via QIP issue

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Union Bank of India (UBI) received application forms for an aggregate amount of ₹1447.17 crore from eligible Qualified lnstitutional Buyers (QIBs) under Qualified Institutions Placement (QIP) of equity shares.

The public sector bank’s Committee of Directors for Raising of Capital Funds approved the closure of QIP issue on May 20, 2021. The issue had opened on May 17, 2021.

Also read: New EDs take charge at UBI, CBoI, BoM and BoI

The Committee determined and approved the issue price of ₹33.82 per equity share of ₹10 each (including a premium of ₹23.82 per equity share), the bank said in a regulatory filing on Thursday evening.

The issue price is at a discount of 5 per cent (₹1.78 per equity share) to the floor price of ₹35.60 per equity share for the equity shares to be allotted to QIBs in the issue, it added.

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Govt garners Rs 4,000 cr via 1.95% stake sale in Axis Bank, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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NEW DELHI: The government has raised about Rs 4,000 crore from sale of 1.95 per cent stake in Axis Bank held through SUUTI, DIPAM Secretary Tuhin Kanta Pandey said on Thursday.

“The OFS of Axis Bank got good response from investors with SUUTI garnering about Rs 4,000 cr (subject to reconciliation). Thanks to all for their participation,” the Department of Investment and Public Asset Management (DIPAM) secretary tweeted.

Through the two-day offer for sale (OFS), the government sold around 5.80 crore shares or 1.95 per cent stake held in Axis Bank through the Specified Undertaking of the Unit Trust of India (SUUTI) at a floor price of Rs 680 a share.

This includes a base issue size of 3.60 crore shares and a greenshoe option of over 2.20 crore shares.

At the cut off price of Rs 701 a share, the 1.95 per cent stake sale fetched around Rs 4,000 crore to the exchequer.

SUUTI held 3.45 per cent stake in Axis Bank at the end of March 2021.

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EU fines UBS, Nomura, UniCredit $452 million over bond cartel, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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European Union antitrust regulators fined UBS, UniCredit and Nomura 371 million euros ($452 million) on Thursday in connection with a European government bond trading cartel.

The penalties are the latest to punish the financial industry for alleged involvement in foreign exchange cartels, Euribor and Libor benchmark cartels, and bonds cartels.

The three banks said in statements that they would appeal or were considering doing so.

The European Commission said the European government bond cartel ran from 2007 to 2011, with traders from the banks informing each other on their prices and volumes offered in the run-up to the auctions and the prices being shown to their customers or to the market in general via multilateral chatrooms on Bloomberg terminals.

“A well-functioning European government bonds market is paramount both for the eurozone member states issuing these bonds to generate liquidity and the investors buying and trading them,” European Competition Commissioner Margrethe Vestager said in a statement.

UBS said the fine related to “a legacy issue” and it had since taken action to improve its processes.

“Taking into account relevant provisions, this matter may have an impact of up to $100 million on UBS’s second quarter 2021 results,” it said.

UniCredit said the findings did not show any “wrongdoing on its part”.

“UniCredit will appeal the decision before the European Courts,” the Italian bank said in a statement.

Nomura said it had introduced measures to ensure “the highest levels of integrity at all times” and would consider all options, including an appeal.

“The decision issued today by the European Commission and associated fine imposed on Nomura relates to historic behaviour by two former Nomura employees for an approximate 10 month period in 2011,” it said.

The European Commission said Bank of America, RBS (now known as NatWest), Natixis and WestLB (now known as Portigon) also took part in the cartel.

NatWest escaped a 260-million-euro fine as it alerted the cartel to the EU competition watchdog. Bank of America and Natixis were also not fined because their infringement falls outside the limitation period for imposition of fines, the Commission said.

It said Portigon, the legal and economic successor to WestLB, received a zero fine as it did not generate any net turnover in the last business year.



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Sundaram Home Finance reports Rs 37-crore net in Q4

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The company said it is looking to raise Rs 2,500 crore this year through a mix of debt instruments and bank funding for funding its growth plans.

Sundaram Home Finance, the wholly owned subsidiary of Sundaram Finance, has reported a net profit of Rs 36.60 crore for the Q4 of FY21, compared with Rs 82 crore for the corresponding period in the previous year. The net profit for the quarter ended March 31, 2020 included a one-time exceptional item of Rs 60 crore, on account of write back of deferred tax liability. Hence the net profit for the two periods was not comparable, the company said in a statement.

Disbursements for Q4 went up 18% to Rs 459.38 crore, against Rs 389.60 crore. The company said it is looking to raise Rs 2,500 crore this year through a mix of debt instruments and bank funding for funding its growth plans.

For FY 21, the company registered a net profit of Rs 191 crore, compared with Rs 218 crore logged in the previous year. The net profit for the two periods was not comparable due to the inclusion of one-time exceptional item of Rs 60 crore. It registered disbursements of Rs 1,254.05 crore for the full year as against Rs 2,112.09 crore.

The deposit base went up to Rs 1,810 crore as on March 31, 2021, a net accretion of Rs 204 crore, it said. Lakshminarayanan Durais-wamy, MD, Sundaram Home Finance, said, “While it was a gloomy start to FY21, marked by lockdown in the first couple of months, the latter half of the year panned out well and we saw a gradual but certain recovery. The real estate sector showed remarkable tenacity in 2020 against unprecedented odds. Over the five month period between November 2020 and March 2021, we saw demand getting back to pre-Covid levels and a nice momentum was starting to build. The fourth quarter was the silver lining in the last financial year with the return of customer confidence.”

The company, which has 115 branches across the country, provides home loans, plot loans, home improvement and extension loans and loans against property.

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HDFC Bank’s credit card base shrinks by 3L during Dec-Mar

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According to an HDFC Bank official who spoke on condition of anonymity, the lender is gearing up to return to the market once the regulatory penalty is reversed.

The Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI) embargo on sourcing of new credit card customers by HDFC Bank may have started to affect the lender’s card base. According to data released by the central bank, the number of credit cards outstanding at HDFC Bank fell by about 3.23 lakh between December 2020 and March 2021 to 1.5 crore.

The lender has long been the market leader in terms of cards in circulation as also spends, but the RBI’s decision to penalise the lender for lapses in its digital services may be slowing down the growth. It was not immediately clear whether the card base shrank due to a churn in cards or a conscious weeding out of inactive cards by the bank. Queries sent to the bank remained unanswered till the time of going to press.

ICICI Bank may turn out to be the biggest beneficiary of HDFC Bank’s absence from new issuances. In March, it continued to lead in fresh issuances, accounting for nearly 52% of new cards, showed data released by the RBI. The total number of new credit cards issued during the month stood at 4.02 lakh.

According to an HDFC Bank official who spoke on condition of anonymity, the lender is gearing up to return to the market once the regulatory penalty is reversed. “We are using this time to build up our liability base and keep our system ready to hit the market once the embargo is lifted,” he said. Historically, the bank has issued a majority of its credit cards to its own deposit holders.

During a call with analysts after HDFC Bank’s Q4FY21 results, the management said it had opened about 2 million new liability relationships in the March quarter and about 7 million liability during the full year. It has more than 2.5 million corporate salary customers during the year.

Chief financial officer Srinivasan Vaidyanathan said the bank is continuously investing in increasing spends, depth and width, revolve behaviours, product upgrades, line enhancements and loans on cards. “The impact of the non-issuance of cards is on new employees in corporates, new corporates on-boarding, etc. This loss of new customers can normally be made up within a few quarters of stoppage being lifted, since the bank continues to source liability customers who will be pre-approved,” he said, adding, “About three-fourths of our sourcing comes from existing customers of the bank.” In the meantime, the lender is focused on engaging with existing card customers who are dormant or inactive in order to “resuscitate” them.

So far, analysts have been hopeful about the bank’s ability to bounce back in its traditional area of strength. After the Q4 results, Kotak Institutional Equities said in a note, “Overall, we have not seen any business impact as the liability franchise is holding up well. The bank is working with its existing credit card base to generate business currently, but this issue would have an impact in the medium term if not resolved soon.”

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Should Retirees Or Those Near Retirement Invest In Cryptocurrencies/Bitcoin?

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Questions To Answer To Decide On Cryptocurrency/ Bitcoin Investment

1. Can you accept wide swings in the cryptocurrency that sometime occur by a minute?

2. Do you understand the technology running the cryptos or bitcoin and other altcoins?

3. Will you be willing to invest in an asset that operates on Decentralised finance with no central regulatory or authority overseeing it?

Positives of the cryptocurrency/bitcoin as pointed out by experts

Positives of the cryptocurrency/bitcoin as pointed out by experts

Also one you discuss an asset you can also point to its positives as seen by experts:

As only recently the inclination for the asset category has spiked only to exponential gains in their prices, there have come up some views by experts that can also be highlighted here:

1. Cryptos have the potential to come out as primary currency form and thus could radically change the banking landscape.

2. Because of its limited supply it has also been accorded the tag similar to gold of being a ‘store of value’ and even having the functionality to serve as a inflation hedge and some even call it as a digital gold.

Points to decide on your cryptocurrency or bitcoin purchase decision:

Points to decide on your cryptocurrency or bitcoin purchase decision:

1. No one holistic view on cryptos in terms of their prospects:

Even as some experts see cryptos to be performing good over the long term, nobody can with certainty assert about their future prospects. Some of the leading names in India and across say for instance Kamath of Zerodha he said he doesn’t invest in them because he does not understands them.

Likewise, Charlie Munger, VP-Berrkshire Hathaway called ‘bitcoin or crypto investment ” disgusting and contrary to the interest of civilization.

And so for a retired or near retirement person considering that his other retirement savings are well in sync with the retirement needs one should be better off refraining from them as cryptos being a highly risky investment.

2. Higher volatility to which these instruments are exposed to shouldn’t go well in the retirement age:

Say when you are depended on meeting your retirement age’s various expenses such as fixed and other medical expenses through earnings from your deposits say you have made in MIS scheme or fixed deposits, how can you expose your investment to such a volatility, so better not get into them.

Say only on May 19, the crypto bitcoin crashed by a huge 30 percent in a day and recovered most of the losses to again hit levels of over $40000 per coin the next day.

So, if a suitable retirement savings plan is already in place for you, do not get yourself into a trouble by investing in these new cryptocurrenies.

But nonetheless, if your risk appetite and wealth allows to test such a novel investment too and have the capacity to absorb the huge risk, go the SIP-way and avoid lump sum investments in cryptocurrencies or bitcoin. As it is some of the cryptos are highly priced say for instance bitcoin which in rupee terms is priced at Rs. 30.51 lakhs.

Options Other Than Cryptocurrencies/ bitcoin for making good returns

Options Other Than Cryptocurrencies/ bitcoin for making good returns

Options which retirees can consider if they still have ample free cash or want to tap higher returns

1. Index funds:

Index funds in India which largely mimic the performance of a particular index are less risky and can even help you earn inflation beating high returns. Probably a SIP in index fund can be a best idea.

2. Dividend stocks:

These stocks which earn you dividend consistently help you supplement your passive income stream and thus can provide you a diversification from your regular conventional savings plan.

GoodReturns.in



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RBI mandate: Wallets, cards to be made interoperable

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The requirement of submitting data on cash withdrawals to the RBI mentioned has been dispensed with.

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has mandated that all prepaid payment instruments (PPIs) or wallets that are fully KYC-compliant be made interoperable by March 31, 2022. The central bank announced this through a notification issued late on Wednesday.

“It shall be mandatory for PPI issuers to give the holders of full-KYC PPIs (KYC-compliant PPIs) interoperability through authorised card networks (for PPIs in the form of cards) and UPI (for PPIs in the form of electronic wallets),” the notification said.

Interoperability shall be mandatory on the acceptance side as well and it will be enabled by March 31, 2022. PPIs for mass transit systems (PPI-MTS) shall remain exempted from interoperability, while gift PPI issuers have the option to offer interoperability.

As announced during the last monetary policy review on April 7, the notification increased the maximum amount outstanding in respect of full-KYC PPIs to Rs 2 lakh from Rs 1 lakh.

The notification also laid down the rules for enabling cash withdrawal from full-KYC PPIs issued by non-banks. There will be a maximum limit of Rs 2,000 per transaction with an overall limit of Rs 10,000 per month per PPI. All cash withdrawal transactions performed using a card or wallet shall be authenticated by an additional factor of authentication (AFA) or PIN. Issuers offering withdrawals shall put in place proper customer redressal mechanisms. They will also be required to put in place a suitable cooling period for cash withdrawals upon opening the PPI or loading or re-loading of funds into the PPI to mitigate the risk of fraudulent use.

The cash withdrawal limit from points of sale (PoS) terminals using debit cards and open system prepaid cards issued by banks has also been rationalised to Rs 2,000 per transaction within an overall monthly limit of Rs 10,000 across all locations. Earlier, withdrawals via this mode were capped at Rs 1,000 for tier I and II centres, and Rs 2,000 for other centres. The requirement of submitting data on cash withdrawals to the RBI mentioned has been dispensed with.

Last month, RBI had said interoperability, cash withdrawals and opening the use of RTGS and NEFT to non-banks was aimed at achieving parity between the two sets of entities. Then executive director and now deputy governor T Rabi Sankar had said, “The idea behind allowing cash withdrawals, etc from non-bank PPI issuers is essentially to level the playing field between banks and non-banks, and also achieve the comfort that it reduces the need to hold cash. The fact that a PPI holder has this comfort that I can whenever I want access cash reduces the actual need to hold cash. That, we believe, will give a big fillip to digitisation in the system.”

Industry players have earlier lauded these moves, saying that interoperability might help wallets claw back the space they had lost to banks and other players with the rise of Unified Payments Interface (UPI) and the new KYC requirements. There is also a view that non-banks will thus be able to effectively compete for micro-savings from the under-banked segments.

Shilpa Mankar Ahluwalia, partner – fintech, Shardul Amarchand Mangaldas & Co, said, “RBI has made four key changes that will create a much greater level playing field between bank and non-bank PPI issuers…These quasi bank payment features will enable much wider usage and penetration of PPIs pushing the growth of digital payments.”

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Dec quarter saw rise in home loan delinquencies: CRIF High Mark

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CRIF High Mark, however, mentioned that active housing loan borrower base has witnessed a growth during the December quarter.

Credit bureau CRIF High Mark, in its quarterly report, on Wednesday said that delinquencies in the housing loan book of banks as well as NBFCs increased during the third quarter of the last financial year (Q3FY21). The report said that delinquencies in the housing loan book increased 23 basis points (bps) year-on-year (y-o-y) to 2.49%. These are the accounts where instalments were due for more than 90 days (90+ DPD). The report from the credit bureau comes at a time when lenders are likely to face more stress in their loan book due to second wave of Covid-19.

The highest stress was seen in the small ticket housing loans below Rs 5 lakh. While housing finance companies (HFCs) faced 7.84% delinquencies, public sector banks saw 6.3% loans under stress during Q3FY21. Similarly, private banks were dealing with 5.28% delinquencies in the same period. The credit bureau also analysed delinquencies based on locations. The housing loan delinquencies of borrowers in the metro cities rose 21 bps y-o-y to 2.4%. However, in tier 2 cities delinquencies dipped 33 bps y-o-y to 3.27%.

CRIF High Mark, however, mentioned that active housing loan borrower base has witnessed a growth during the December quarter. The active housing loan borrower base as of December 2020 registered a 5% growth, compared to pre-pandemic levels of December 2019. The third quarter of last fiscal (Q3FY21) witnessed 28% quarter-on-quarter growth in disbursements compared to 6% growth in the same period in 2019-20.

Vipul Jain, head of products, CRIF High Mark, said: “Almost 50% of all loans sourced in the year was in the last three months of 2020.” Affordable Housing (loans up to Rs 35 lakh) contributed to 82% of sourcing volumes with growth driven by Tier II and Tier III cities, he added.

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