How can risk management professionals switch between banking & insurance?, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Life insurance and the banking sector are the two core sectors where customers keep money with the trust that their money is safe. Both the sectors protect the customer’s money. This article looks at both the assets and liabilities of the banking and insurance sector to find out the similarities and differences. The article also looks at the risks of both sectors to find whether there are opportunities for cross-pollination of people working from both sides.

In both sectors, customers place their money with the respective institutions such as banks and insurance companies. In the banking sector, deposited money creates liability to be returned upon withdrawal. Similarly, in the insurance sector, the premium received creates liability which is paid when a claim arises (death, maturity, and surrender). So, money placed by customers in both sectors creates liability.

Safer asset creation accords secured returns

On the other hand, the money collected by both institutions is invested to back the liabilities which create assets. Under the insurance sector, the money received in the form of a premium is used to purchase the assets like government securities, corporate bonds, equities, and other assets. These assets so purchased to match the amount and tenure of liabilities.

In the banking sector, the money deposited by customers is used to create assets in the form of Government securities, corporate bonds, and equities while other assets are created by giving loans. The bank charges a higher rate of interest from the loanee compared to the depositor to meet expenses and profit margin.

Both the institutions take credit risk by investing to back their liabilities. In the insurance sector, investments are highly regulated with a high percentage of investment in Government bonds and a relatively lower percentage in corporate bonds, and even lesser in equities, thereby having relatively lower credit risk from the point of the probability of default. On the other hand, in banks, most of the assets are created by giving loans to individuals and institutions subject to higher default risk, thereby they have high credit risk. The mechanism of the creation of credit risk under both institutions is similar.

Managing the risk of liquidity

Liquidity risk in the banking sector is a key risk from the customer’s deposit point of view, that is, customers to be paid on demand. Therefore, the banks in India are to maintain a certain Cash Reserve Ratio (CRR). The money kept under CRR may be used to pay when the demand arises from bank customers. The CRR is the ratio of cash required to keep as a reserve as a percentage of total deposits. This cash is either stored in the bank’s vault or deposited with the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) on which no interest payment is made. The current CRR is 4% of Net Demand and Time Liabilities (NDTL). This money cannot be used for investment and lending.

One of the applications of CRR is to control inflation as high CRR will reduce the amount available for lending in a form of loan thereby reducing banks’ liquidity leading to reduced circulation of money in the economy.

Similar to CRR, another tool used to manage the liquidity in the banking system is the Statutory Liquidity Ratio (SLR) is the minimum percentage of deposits (NDTL) that is to be invested in gold, cash, and other securities. These deposits are kept with banks and not with RBI. The current SLR is 18%.

Similar to CRR, SLR is also used to trap the circulation of money in the economy which can control inflation. Also, SLR is used to control the ability of the banks to lend; higher SLR would restrict bank’s ability to give loans.

The restrictions applied in the banking system in a form of CRR and SLR helps in managing the liquidity position of the banks to enable payment to depositors. Similarly, in the insurance sector, to enable the payment of claims, the regulator has prescribed a very strict investment norm with a high percentage of investment in government bonds for the security of money. Such investment in government bonds can be easily liquidated to help maintain liquidity in the insurance sector. Both the sectors use the same methodology of either cash flows or liquidity coverage ratio to assess the liquidity position along with stress tests to identify higher requirements of liquid cash.

In the banking sector, CRR and SLR act like a reserve to be used when required paying to customers on increase in withdrawals, similarly, in the insurance sector, insurance companies are to keep reserves to pay claims when arises. These reserves are calculated at prudential assumption based on guidelines given by the insurance regulator. Such reserves are to be invested based on the regulatory investment guidelines. The purpose of the reserve is to meet the customer’s claims when they arise. In both sectors, there are prudential norms to safeguard the money of the customers in meeting liabilities.

There is a similar inherent mechanism under both the banking and insurance sector to protect the customer’s money, managing the credit and liquidity risk. There can be opportunities for cross-pollination of skills between the two sectors. Actuaries are very strong on the liability side while banking folks are strong on the asset side, an amalgamation is possible.

The blog has been authored by
Sonjai Kumar, Certified Risk Management Professional from IRM London

DISCLAIMER: The views expressed are solely of the author and ETBFSI.com does not necessarily subscribe to it. ETBFSI.com shall not be responsible for any damage caused to any person/organisation directly or indirectly.



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SC seeks response of Centre, RBI on plea of PNB against disclosure of info under RTI, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court has refused to grant interim stay on the RBI‘s notice asking Punjab National Bank to disclose information such as defaulters list and its inspection reports under the RTI Act, and sought responses from the Centre, federal bank and its central public information officer.

The apex court tagged the plea of the Punjab National Bank (PNB), which is a public sector unit bank, with a similar pending case filed by HDFC Bank against the RBI’s direction.

“Issue notice. Tag with writ petition (Civil) No.1159 of 2019 (HDFC plea),” a bench comprising justices S Abdul Nazeer and Krishna Murari said, and fixed the plea for hearing on July 19.

Banks are aggrieved by the notices issued by the RBI to them under Section 11(1) of the Right to Information (RTI) Act asking them to part with information pertaining to their inspection reports and risk assessment.

The RTI Act empowers the RBI’s central public information officer (CPIO) to seek information from banks for information seekers.

Earlier on April 28, the top court, on legal grounds, had refused to recall its famous 2015 judgment in the Jayantilal N Mistry case, which had held that the RBI will have to provide information about banks and financial institutions (FIs) regulated by it under the transparency law.

Several FIs and banks, including Canara Bank, Bank of Baroda, UCO Bank and Kotak Mahindra Bank had filed applications in the top court seeking a recall of the 2015 judgment in the Jayantilal N Mistry case, saying the verdict had far-reaching consequences and moreover, they were directly and substantially affected by it.

The banks had contended that the pleas for a recall of the judgment, instead of a review, is “maintainable” as there was a violation of the principles of natural justice in view of the fact that they were neither parties to the matter nor heard.

“A close scrutiny of the applications for a recall makes it clear that in substance, the applicants are seeking a review of the judgment in Jayantilal N Mistry. Therefore, we are of the considered opinion that these applications are not maintainable,” the apex court had held.

While dismissing the pleas, the bench, however, had made it clear that it was not dealing with any of the submissions made by the banks on the correctness of the 2015 judgment.

Now, the apex court is seized of several pleas of banks like HDFC and Punjab National Bank against the RBI’s direction to disclose information under RTI.



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EDs in Public Sector Banks: Banks Board Bureau recommends 10 candidates in 2021-22

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New Delhi, Jul 3

The Banks Board Bureau (BBB) has recommended ten candidates to the panel that will be used for filling vacancies of Executive Directors in various Public Sector Banks (PSBs) in the year 2021-22.

These names have been shortlisted after the BBB, which is the head hunter for the government for filling top level posts in PSBs, insurance companies and other financial institutions, interfaced with 40 candidates (chief general managers and general managers) from various PSBs on July 2 and 3 for the position of Executive Directors, sources close to the development said.

The ten names that have been recommended (in the order of merit) for the Panel are Rajneesh Karnatak; Joydeep Dutta Roy; Nidhu Saxena, Kalyan Kumar; Ashwani Kumar; Ramjass Yadav, Asheesh Pandey, Ashok Chandra; A V Rama Rao and Shiv Bajrang Singh.

This panel will be operated in the financial year 2021–22, subject to availability of vacancies in the panel year 2021–22, sources said.

It maybe recalled that this time round the criteria for interviews had been tightened. Only those officers who had completed at least two years as General Managers or/and Chief General Manager and have three years of residual service as on April 1,2020 were considered.

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Why small savings schemes are a big attraction

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Investors in small savings schemes heaved a sigh of relief after the government recently left the interest rates on these schemes unchanged in its latest quarterly review,

Interest rates on these schemes, which include post office (PO) time deposits, the senior citizen savings scheme (SCSS) and the national savings certificate (NSC), were last cut sharply five quarters ago. The rate cut for the April-June 2021 quarter was swiftly withdrawn after its announcement.

Over the past quarter, many banks have slashed their fixed deposit rates by 0.10 to 0.50 percentage points or more. This makes the ultra-safe small savings schemes backed by government guarantee, all the more attractive.

Despite the rates on these schemes getting linked to g-sec yields since 2016, the government has many a time refrained from cutting them in tandem with the fall in g-sec yields. The small savings schemes are overdue for a rate cut based purely on the quarterly reset formula. Investors can therefore, consider locking into the current rates.

You can choose from fixed rate schemes such as the PO term deposits, NSC and SCSS where the rate prevalent at the time of your investment remains applicable for the entire tenure irrespective of any future rate revisions.

PO deposits, NSC

Those looking for safe options in the one-to-three-year tenure range, can go for PO time deposits. The one-year, two-year and three-year PO deposits each offer 5.5 per cent per annum. This is better than the 4.9 – 5.5 per cent p.a. offered by public sector banks on their similar tenure deposits.

The five-year PO time deposit offers 6.7 per cent p.a., significantly higher than the 4.9 – 5.55 per cent offered by public sector banks on similar deposits. Additionally, your investment in the five-year PO time deposit is eligible for deduction under section 80C of the Income Tax Act (up to ₹1.5 lakh). Interest on all the PO time deposits is paid annually but calculated quarterly.

If you have a five-year investment horizon and do not require regular pay-outs, the NSC is your best bet. It offers 6.8 per cent p.a. compounded annually. This is better than the five-year deposit rates of public sector banks. You can invest as little as ₹1,000 and there is no upper limit.

Senior citizen scheme

For individuals above 60 years of age, the SCSS is another 5-year safe investment product. You have the option of extending the maturity by another three years. The interest for the extended period will be the one applicable to the scheme on the date of maturity.

The scheme currently pays 7.4 per cent p.a., payable quarterly. This is far higher than what both private and public sector banks offer on their same-tenure deposits. Most banks offer senior citizens an additional 0.50 percentage point over their usual 5-year FD rates of 4.9 – 6.75 per cent. You can however, invest only up to ₹15 lakh in the SCSS. Investments in NSC and SCSS are eligible for deduction under section 80C of the IT Act.

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Time to rebalance your portfolio?

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Anil: So Gyan, what are your plans for the weekend?

Gyan: Nothing much, watch a movie and also I need to a look at my investment portfolio. It has been some time and I may need to rebalance it.

Anil: Rebalance your portfolio? I simply buy and never look back. You should also not look back, Warren Buffett says so.

Gyan: Portfolio rebalancing does not mean looking back. It is about matching your portfolio to individual needs and priorities after market movements change the original allocations. Considering how equities have run up in the last one year, it makes me happy and little bit nervous as well. I never asked to be 80/20 guy , 80 in equity and 20 in debt. I am a graduate of “Equity Classes – 2008” and I prefer 60/40 style.

Anil: Never thought of it this way. So you are always monitoring and rebalancing? Sounds intensive.

Gyan: My father used a simple and strict method. He rebalanced in the 1st week of every six months.

This way he did not incur regular brokerages and allowed for growing asset classes to rise for six months and reinvested them in asset classes which did not grow. I prefer to do it when any of the asset class gets bigger in the overall portfolio. Right now my equity exposure is 69 per cent and I want to trim it back to 60 per cent and invest the excess 9 per cent across gold, MFs, debt securities and fixed deposits.

Anil: Okay, sounds reasonable. So assets are allowed to grow and then trimmed back to reinvest the proceeds in other asset classes, either periodically or based on thresholds.

So, this applies to individual stocks also right?

Gyan: Sure does, looking at my demat account, IT and Pharma stocks have grown sharply.

I have to read more and rebalance within equity as well as I am not willing to go beyond 15 per cent for any sector.

Anil: Are you willing to sell securities which are yielding good returns?

Gyan: Yes, that’s why individual risk profile is important. I believe in mean reversion, one asset class cannot constantly grow while others are left behind.

So I sell what is high and buy what is low, Warren must have said something along these lines as well right.

Anil: I see, a sort of rule based profit booking while sticking to one’s portfolio mix.

You have given me much thought for the weekend. I need to analyse my portfolio now. Thanks for the work.

Gyan: Anytime Anil.

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Partnership Company Taxation: CBDT Issues Latest Rules In India

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Taxes

oi-Sneha Kulkarni

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In accordance with Section 9B and Subsection (4) of Section 45 of the Income-tax Act of 1961, the Central Board of Direct Taxes (CBDT) established instructions for taxing partnership firms on their reconstitution.

After the Finance Act of 2021 added a new section 9B to the Income Tax Act and replaced another provision – 4 of section 45 – the recommendations aim to provide clarity on the techniques to be used when calculating tax liabilities.

Partnership Company Taxation: CBDT Issues Latest Rules In India

Section 9B taxed the firm’s income on the transfer of capital assets and stock in trade, whereas Section 45(4) now taxes income in the hands of the firm, which is actually the income in the hands of the partner.

The CBDT observed that the amount taxed under section 45(4) of the Act must be attributed to the specified entity’s remaining capital assets, so that when such capital is transferred in the future, the amount attributed to such capital assets is subtracted from the value of the consideration, and the specified entity does not have to pay tax on the amount again.

It should also be noted that this attribution is only made in the Act for the purposes of section 48 of the Act.

The adjustments will take effect in the evaluation year 2021-22. These parts cover the deemed transfer of a capital asset or stock in trade to a firm’s leaving partner and the receipt of a capital asset or funds by a firm’s partner. Any profits and gains flowing from such a presumed transfer are considered as partnership income under the Finance Act.

In a circular, the CBDT stated that the instructions were issued under provisions intended to make implementation easier. The recommendations explain how to attribute an entity’s income on its reconstitution and provide examples of scenarios where a partner leaves a firm and the organisation settles the capital balance.

The Act does not, however, state that the amount charged under section 45(4) of the Act can also be ascribed to capital assets that are part of a block of assets and are covered by these two sections.

Story first published: Sunday, July 4, 2021, 11:59 [IST]



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4 Overnight Mutual Funds With Best Rating To Invest In India 2021 From Value Research Fund House

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DSP Overnight Fund

The DSP Overnight Fund is a two-year-and-five-month-old fund with an average yearly return of 4.34 percent since its inception. It has a AUM of 919.52 crores, and the most recent NAV declared is 1111.064 as of July 3, 2021. Through investments largely in overnight securities with a one-business-day maturity, the program strives to provide returns commensurate with minimal risk while also providing a high level of liquidity.

DSP Overnight Fund Direct – Growth scheme returned 3.11 percent in the last year and 11.09 percent since its inception. The Expense Ratio of the direct plan of DSP Overnight Fund is 0.1%. .The fund has 5-STAR rating from Value Research online.

Mirae Asset Overnight Funds

Mirae Asset Overnight Funds

These funds have a low chance of losing money, but they do not guarantee returns or capital protection. The Mirae Asset Overnight Fund is a one-year-and-eight-month-old fund with an average yearly return of 3.62 percent since its start. The NAV of Mirae Asset Overnight Fund for Jul 02, 2021 is 1,062.96. The Expense Ratio of Mirae Asset Overnight Fund’s direct plan is 0.1 percent. Mirae Asset Overnight Fund has an AUM of 311 crores. The fund has 5-STAR rating from Value Research online.

PGIM India Overnight

PGIM India Overnight

PGIM India Overnight Fund Direct – Growth is a PGIM India Mutual Fund Debt mutual fund scheme. This scheme was launched on August 27, 2019 and is currently managed by Kunal Jain and Kumaresh Ramakrishnan, the fund managers. It has a market capitalization of 155.11 crores, and the most recent NAV declared is 1070.755 as of July 3, 2021 at 4:20 pm.

PGIM India Overnight Fund Direct – Growth fund returned 3.16 percent in the last year and 7.04 percent since its inception. The minimum SIP amount for this scheme is Rs 1,000. TThe Expense Ratio of the PGIM India Overnight Fund’s direct plan is 0.1 percent.

Edelweiss Overnight Fund

Edelweiss Overnight Fund

Edelweiss Overnight Fund Direct – Growth is an Edelweiss Mutual Fund Debt mutual fund program. This scheme was created on July 23, 2019 and is currently managed by Rahul Dedhia and Gautam Kaul, the fund managers. It has a AUM of 408.72 crores, and the most recent NAV declared is 1076.259 as of July 3, 2021. Edelweiss Overnight Fund Direct – Growth program returned 3.14 percent in the last year and 7.60 percent since its inception. The minimum SIP amount for this scheme is Rs 500. The Expense Ratio of the direct plan of Edelweiss Overnight Fund is 0.1%. .

Taxation on Overnight Funds

Taxation on Overnight Funds

Overnight funds are taxed in the same way that debt funds are. Short-term capital gains tax applies to overnight fund units held for less than three years. Investors will be taxed in accordance with their income bracket. Long-term capital gains (LTCG) tax is imposed at a rate of 20% on units of overnight funds held for more than three years. The benefit of indexation is delivered to investors. Dividends paid from overnight funds are taxed according to the investor’s tax bracket.

Major Advantages

The fund is a good investment option for people who want to put their surplus money to work and generate a larger reward with less risk.

This fund is an open-ended liquid fund with a low risk profile. Its unique feature makes it an excellent investment for people with a low risk appetite.

Changes in the RBI’s interest rates, as well as changes in a borrower’s credit ratings, have little to no impact on such funds.

How Do Overnight Funds Work?

How Do Overnight Funds Work?

Fund managers buy overnight bonds in the overnight market at the start of each business day. These mutual funds, in turn, sell overnight funds to investors. These bonds or securities will mature or be redeemed the following business day. Furthermore, as a reinvestment, the funds would acquire more overnight bonds from redemption inflows, and so on. It’s important to note that the reinvestment is done at the new rate that applies the next day.

4 Overnight Mutual Funds To Invest In India 2021

4 Overnight Mutual Funds To Invest In India 2021

Fund Name Rating 1 year Return Expense ratio
DSP Overnight 5 STAR 3.11 0.10
Mirae Asset 5 STAR 3.18 0.11
Edelweiss Overnight 5 STAR 3.14 0.16
PGIM India Overnight 5 STAR 3.16 0.07

Disclaimer

Disclaimer

GoodReturns.in We are not a licenced financial advisor, and the information provided here does not constitute investment advice. Its purpose is to provide information. Readers and investors should be aware that neither Greynium nor the authors of the articles can be held liable for any decisions made as a result of reading them. Please seek the advice of a professional expert. Greynium Information Technologies Pvt Ltd, its subsidiaries, associates, and authors are not liable for any losses or damages resulting from the use of information on GoodReturns.in.



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Top Diversified Mutual Funds That Can Be Invested Into By Any Investor In 2021

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Investment

oi-Roshni Agarwal

|

Diversified mutual funds as the name suggest enables an investor to diversify his or her financial portfolio and can be invested by all retail investor class with a slight risk appetite as the basket of assets makes the fund a less riskier category. This we are making a comparison strictly to other equity funds which are thematic or sectorial in nature and cannot be opted in by every investor category being high on risk.

Top Diversified Mutual Funds That Can Be Invested Into By Any Investor In 2021

Top Diversified Mutual Funds That Can Be Invested Into By Any Investor In 2021

What is a diversified mutual fund?

These mutual fund invests across sector, market capitalization, geographies and even across asset classes and thus developments in one area help prevent a major impact on the entire fund.

1. Parag Parikh Flexi Cap Fund-Growth:

This flexi cap fund from PPFAS Mutual fund category has an asset size of Rs.10,276 crore. NAV is 43.31 as of July 2, 2021. The benchmark of the fund is Nifty 500 TRI and the fund over the 1-year period has given a return of 57.94 percent. SIP as well as the lump sum investment can be started at minimum Rs. 1000.
Value Research online has accorded a 5-star rating to the fund. Top holdings of the fund are Bajaj Holdings, ITC, Microsoft Corporation, Facebook, Persistent Systems.

2. Mahindra Manulife Multicap Badhat Yojana-Regular Plan-Growth:

This is a 4-star Crisil rated multi cap fund. Asset under management of the fund is Rs. 532 crore. NAV of the fund as on July 2 is 18.069. Top holdings of the fund comprise ICICI Bank, SBI, Infosys, RIL, Sun Pharma, Atul, Dalmia Bharat and Birla Soft among others.

Benchmark for the fund is S&P BSE 500 TRI. Expense ratio of the fund is 0.77 percent. SIP in the fund can be started for Rs. 500. With a monthly SIP of Rs. 10,000, the investment is now valued at Rs. 5.91 lakh, providing an annualized yield of 35.07%.
Top holdings of the fund include ICICI Bank, Infosys, SBI, RIL, Sun Pharma, Larsen and Toubro, Atul Ltd.

3. SBI Large and Midcap fund:

Erstwhile, SBI Magnum Multiplier fund is a large and mid cap fund from the house of SBI Mutual fund. The AUM of the fund is equivalent to Rs. 4083 crore. Risk-o-meter defines the fund to be moderately high on risk.

NAV of the fund as on July 2 is 333.89. SIP in the scheme can be started for as low as Rs. 500.

Value Research Rating has given the fund a 3-star rating.

Top holdings of the fund include HDFC Bank, Page Industries, ICICI Bank, SBI, Relaxo Footwear etc.

In 3 years time, the SIP of Rs. 10000 per month is now valued at Rs. 5.41 lakh, providing gains of Rs.1.81 lakh, i.e.an annualized yield of 28.43%.

Note mutual funds investment are subject to risk. Investors need to do their own research to select the suitable investment considering their risk profile, investment goal and investment horiozon. The story is here only for informational purpose. Greynium Information and its employees shall not be liable for any loss incurred for any investment decision taken considering the above listicle.

GoodReturns.in



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7 Best Recurring Deposits With Interest Rates Up To 8%

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North East Small Finance Bank Recurring Deposit

Recurring deposits are available from North East Small Finance Bank, with periods ranging from three months to ten years. For the general public, interest rates on RD vary from 4.25 per cent to 7.50 per cent, while rates for the elderly range from 4.75 per cent to 8.00 per cent. These rates are in effect from 1st September 2020.

Tenure Regular FD Rates Senior Citizen FD Rates
3 Months 4.25 4.75
6 Months 4.5 5
9 Months 5.5 6
1 Year 5.5 6
2 Year 7.5 8
3 Year 7 7.5
4 Year 7 7.5
5 Years 6.5 7
More than 5 years up to 10 years 6.5 7
Source: North East Small Finance Bank

Utkarsh Small Finance Bank Recurring Deposit

Utkarsh Small Finance Bank Recurring Deposit

Utkarsh Small Finance Bank provides recurring deposits with a tenure ranging from 6 months to 10 years. Currently, this bank is providing the highest interest rates among the small finance banks. For the general public interest rates on RD ranges from 6.50% to 7.00%, whereas for senior citizens the interest rates range from 7.00% t0 7.50%. These rates are in force from July 1, 2021.

Tenure Regular FD Rates Senior Citizen FD Rates
Up to 6 months 6.50% 7.00%
9 months 6.50% 7.00%
12 months 6.75% 7.25%
15 months 6.75% 7.25%
18 months 6.75% 7.25%
21 months 6.75% 7.25%
Above 21 Months to less than 24 Months 6.75% 7.25%
24 Months to 36 months 7.00% 7.50%
Above 3 Years up to 5 Years 6.75% 7.25%
Above 5 years up to 10 years 6.75% 7.25%
Source: Utkarsh Small Finance Bank

Jana Small Finance Bank Recurring Deposit

Jana Small Finance Bank Recurring Deposit

Jana Small Finance Bank offers recurring deposits with terms ranging from one month to one hundred and twenty months. Interest rates on RD range from 4.00 per cent to 6.75 per cent for the general public, whereas rates for elderly persons range from 4.50 per cent to 7.25 per cent. These rates are in effect from June 10, 2021.

Tenure Regular FD Rates Senior Citizen FD Rates
> 1 Month – 6 Months 4.00% 4.50%
> 6 Months – 12 Months 5.50% 6.00%
> 12 Months – 36 Months 6.50% 7.00%
> 36 Months – 60 Months 6.75% 7.25%
> 60 Months – 120 Months 6.00% 6.50%
Source: Jana Small Finance Bank

Fincare Small Finance Bank Recurring Deposit

Fincare Small Finance Bank Recurring Deposit

Fincare Small Finance Bank provides recurring deposits with periods ranging from seven days to eighty-four months. The interest rate on RD varies from 3.00 per cent and 6.50 per cent. With effect from 17 May 2021, these rates are in force.

Tenure Interest Rates In %
7 days to 45 days 3.00%
46 days to 90 days 3.25%
91 days to 180 days 3.50%
181 days to 364 days 5.00%
12 months to 15 months 5.60%
15 months 1 day to 18 months 5.60%
18 months 1 day to 21 months 6.00%
21 months 1 day to 24 months 6.00%
24 months 1 day to 30 months 6.25%
30 months 1 day to 36 months 6.25%
36 months 1 day to 42 months 6.50%
42 months to 48 months 6.25%
48 months 1 day to 59 months 6.25%
59 months 1 day to 66 months 6.00%
66 months 1 day to 84 months 5.50%
Source: Fincare Small Finance Bank

Suryoday Small Finance Bank Recurring Deposit

Suryoday Small Finance Bank Recurring Deposit

Suryoday Small Finance Bank offers recurring deposits that last anywhere from six months to ten years. For both the general public and elderly individuals, the interest rate on RD ranges between 4.75 per cent and 6.75 per cent. These rates are in force from June 21, 2021.

Tenure Regular FD Rates Senior Citizen FD Rates
6 months 4.75% 4.75%
9 months 5.25% 5.25%
12 months 6.50% 6.75%
15 months 6.50% 6.75%
18 months 6.50% 6.75%
21 months 6.50% 6.50%
24 months 6.50% 6.50%
27 months 6.25% 6.50%
30 months 6.25% 6.50%
33 months 6.25% 6.50%
36 months 6.25% 6.50%
Above 3 Years to less than 5 Years 6.75% 6.75%
5 Years 6.25% 6.50%
Above 5 Years to 10 Years 6.00% 6.00%
Source: Suryoday Small Finance Bank

Equitas Small Finance Bank Recurring Deposit

Equitas Small Finance Bank Recurring Deposit

Equitas Small Finance Bank provides recurring deposits with periods ranging from 12 to 120 months. For the general public, interest rates on RD vary from 6.35 per cent to 6.50 per cent, while rates for senior citizens range from 6.85 per cent to 7 per cent. These rates are in force from June 1, 2021.

Tenure Regular FD Rates Senior Citizen FD Rates
12 Months 6.35% 6.85%
15 Months 6.35% 6.85%
18 Months 6.35% 6.85%
21 Months 6.25% 6.75%
24 Months 6.25% 6.75%
30 Months 6.35% 6.85%
36 Months 6.35% 6.85%
48 Months 6.25% 6.75%
60 Months 6.25% 6.75%
90 Months 6.50% 7.00%
120 Months 6.50% 7.00%
Source: Equitas Small Finance Bank

Ujjivan Small Finance Bank Recurring Deposit

Ujjivan Small Finance Bank Recurring Deposit

Ujjivan Finance Bank offers recurring deposits with terms ranging from six to one hundred and twenty months. Interest rates on RD range from 5.20 per cent to 6.75 per cent for the general public, and from 5.7 per cent to 7.25 per cent for elderly persons. These rates are in force from 5 March 2021.

Tenure Regular FD Rates Senior Citizen FD Rates
6 months to 9 months 5.20% 5.70%
12months to 24 months 6.50% 7.00%
27 months to 36 months 6.75% 7.25%
39 months to 60 months 6.75% 7.25%
63 months to 120 months 5.80% 6.30%
Source: Ujjivan Small Finance Bank



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Tax Query: Will mutual funds issue Form 16A for TDS on dividend?

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I have invested around ₹4 lakh in some mutual funds, all regular plans with dividend options. They have deducted tax on the dividend amounts paid during this financial year 2020-2021. My question is whether the funds will issue Form 16A and whether the details of taxes deducted and remitted to the Government will be reflected in Form 26A of the Tax Department. Can I claim refund of the tax so deducted on filing my return of income?

J R RavindranathYes, the mutual fund company is required to issue Form 16A in respect of tax withheld on dividends. Further, the taxes deducted will be reflected in your Form 26AS. While you can offset the taxes deducted at source against your tax liability, you are required to offer the gross dividend income earned during the FY to tax under the head “Income from other sources”. Effective April 1, 2020, the dividend income is taxable in the hands of investors at the applicable slab rates. Further, tax would be deducted at 10 per cent as laid down in Section 194K of the Income-tax Act, 1961. The said rate of 10 per cent has been reduced to 7.5 per cent for all the dividend payments made from May 14, 2020 till March 31, 2021 due to Covid-19. Should your tax liability be lower than the TDS, refund can be claimed while filing your India tax return for the FY 2020-21.

The writer is Partner, Deloitte India

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