Indian banks brace for bad loans with stronger balance sheets, says new S&P report, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Indian banks’ prior efforts to strengthen their balance sheets will help them mitigate the impact of asset quality as bad loans ticked higher in the April-to-June quarter following a deadlier wave of the COVID-19 pandemic, according to a new report by S&P Global Market Intelligence research.

“Banks have been taking steps to fortify their balance sheets over the last year or so to face the asset quality impact. These have been through enhancing capital base, increasing provisioning cover and having adequate amounts of liquidity,” said Krishnan Sitaraman, senior director at CRISIL, a unit of S&P Global Inc.

The June quarter saw gross NPAs rising, mainly in retail and small and medium-sized enterprise portfolios for banks.

“That is because these segments have been impacted more by the pandemic and the lockdown measures. The pandemic’s second wave has had a much larger health impact and geographical spread as compared to the first,” Sitaraman said.

State Bank of India, the country’s largest lender by assets, reported total nonperforming loans of Rs 1.36 lakh crore for the fiscal first quarter that ended on June 30, up from Rs 1.28 lakh crore in the previous three months and Rs 1.31 lakh crore in the same period of 2020.

ICICI Bank, the second-biggest private-sector lender, said its gross nonperforming assets rose by Rs 7231 crore in the first quarter, mainly from its retail and business portfolio. State-run Bank of Baroda reported fresh slippages of Rs 5129 crore in the first quarter, versus Rs 2740 crores in the prior-year period.

During the fiscal first quarter, Indian banks saw higher-than-expected slippages of more than 200% year over year that largely arose from retail and SMEs, according to an Aug. 16 research note from Jefferies.

Slippages were higher than expected as new COVID-19 restrictions affected collections, Jefferies analysts said, adding that some banks have started to recover in July and normalcy may return in the fiscal second or third quarter.

India’s economy took a severe hit during the second wave of the coronavirus, with the number of daily cases peaking above 400,000 in May. Cases have tailed off in recent weeks as the government stepped up vaccinations.

Still, the high number of COVID-19 cases and deaths are expected to have had a bigger impact on the economy in terms of jobs lost and businesses shut. Also, most forbearance measures announced last year, including a Supreme Court order stopping banks from classifying delinquent loans as nonperforming assets had been lifted after the economy recovered from the initial wave of infections.

Banks are now seeing the full extent of borrower stress with a one-time debt restructuring facility and the Supreme Court’s standstill on NPA recognition no longer available.

“In the absence of regulatory measures such as moratorium, the gross NPA formation due to the recent wave of COVID-19 is being upfronted in the first half of the current fiscal [year] for the system, including us,” said Sandeep Bakhshi, CEO of ICICI Bank, during a July 24 earnings call. Bakhshi expects the bank’s gross NPA additions to be lower in the second quarter and “decline more meaningfully in the second half of fiscal 2022,” based on expectations of economic activity.

Stress tests by the Reserve Bank of India indicated that the bad loans of all banks may rise to 9.80% by March 2022 from 7.50% in the same month of this year under a baseline scenario. However, the bad loans ratio could rise to as high as 11.22% by March 2022 under a “severe stress” scenario for key macroeconomic indicators, the central bank said in its biannual Financial Stability Report released July 1.

“Many banks have set aside higher provisioning buffers and raised capital in the last one year or so. This should help them absorb the rising stress in their retail book,” said Nikita Anand, an analyst at S&P Global Ratings.

“On the other hand, banks with lower provisioning buffers and weaker capitalization could see a sharp impact on their profits and capital levels,” Anand said. “This could be more acute for banks with significant underlying exposure to small business owners or unsecured retail products where loss given default could be higher.”



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Multicap Vs Flexicap: Which is Better?

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Difference between MultiCap & FlexiCap Funds

Parameter

Flexi-cap funds Multi-cap funds Equity exposure Minimum 65% Minimum 75% Small-cap exposure Not fixed Minimum 25% Flexibility Asset allocation can be changed according to market conditions, making it extremely flexible. Fund managers must ensure that their exposure to all capitalization does not go below 25%. Balanced exposure Flexi-cap funds invest primarily in large-cap funds, with limited exposure to small and mid-cap. To some extent, the funds’ exposure to all capitalization is balanced. Suitable Risk-averse investors Aggressive investors

Multicap Funds And Its Benefits

Multicap Funds And Its Benefits

Multicap funds now invest at least 25% of their assets in each of the three market segments: large, mid, and small cap. While fund managers still have 25% flexibility to give the portfolio an edge by increasing exposure to a section they anticipate will do well, they lose the opportunity to cut exposure to a segment that is projected to perform poorly, making the fund riskier.

Benefits of Multicap funds

Multi-cap funds provide the flexibility to invest in equities that are best suited to their investment objectives, regardless of market capitalization. Multi-cap funds offer greater diversification across industrial sectors, especially in fast-growing industries where large-cap firms are absent. Multi-cap fund managers dynamically modify their portfolio mix based on market conditions (risks and opportunities), making them appropriate for investors who do not wish to closely monitor the market or make frequent changes to their mutual fund portfolio.

Flexicap Funds And Its Benefits

Flexicap Funds And Its Benefits

Flexicap equity funds, on the other hand, invest at least 65 percent of their entire assets in equity investments with no predetermined boundaries on how much exposure to large, mid, or small-cap segments of the market they should acquire.

Benefits of Flexicap

In Flexi cap, fund managers are free to invest across the market capitalization spectrum.

A well-diversified equity strategy with a “go-anywhere” attitude. Ability to capitalize on opportunities across the market spectrum – regardless of market capitalization, sector, or style. It aims to take advantage of investment possibilities across the board. Due to a diverse portfolio, the risk and return components are rather well balanced.

Multicap Vs Flexicap: What is the difference?

Multicap Vs Flexicap: What is the difference?

The degree to which multi-cap and Flexi-cap funds are exposed to mid-and small-cap stocks is the key distinction. More importantly, depending on market conditions, this disparity can grow fairly large. Flexi-cap funds can reduce their exposure to mid-and small-cap stocks to zero if the fund manager believes it necessary; however, multi-cap funds’ exposure to mid-and small-cap stocks can never be less than 25% each.

SEBI’s very purpose of creating different mutual fund categories is to provide more clarity to investors and help them make informed investment decisions. Different investors have different risk appetites, investment needs, experience, knowledge, and preferences. Flexicap funds are not better than multicap funds or vice versa. Multicap and flexicap funds are suitable for different types of investors



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Stocks To Buy From The Media And Auto Space For Returns Up To 24%

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Investment

oi-Sunil Fernandes

|

Motilal Oswal Institutional Equities has recommended buying the stocks of Ashok Leyland and Sun TV Network for good pretty decent gains.

Sun TV

Broking firm, Motilal Oswal has placed a buy call on the stock of Sun TV with a target price of Rs 625, which is about 22% higher from the current levels of Rs 505.
According to Motilal Oswal, Sun TV is planning a series of non-fiction content across all channels, along with a revamp of fictional content.

“It gained 4-5% market share and touched 45% viewership in the Prime Time segment. It plans to invest Rs 12 billion in movie production over the next 1.5-2 years. Five big ticket movies (contributing 50%) are to be completed by Oct’21. One big ticket movie starring Rajnikant is lined up for release this Diwali (4th Nov’21),” the broking firm has said after speaking to the management.

Sun Next OTT has 23.3m subscribers largely from B2B telcos. Its target is to have 11 million subscribers (20% of South Indian homes) and will intensify its original content once its existing movie production is complete.

According to Motilal Oswal, Sun TV has a healthy liquidity, with a net cash of over Rs 39 billion at present.

“This offers it room to intensify investments in the linear as well as OTT space. This, along with a higher dividend payout potential (45-85%) and low valuation, offers support. SUN TV trades at a FY22E/FY23E P/E of 11.7 times and 11.1 times. We value it at a FY23E P/E of 13 times to arrive at our target price of Rs 620 per share. We maintain our Buy rating on the stock,” the brokerage has said.

Buy Ashok Leyland stock

The brokerage is also bullish on the shares of auto major, Ashok Leyland and sees returns of around 22% for a target price of Rs 155, from the current price of Rs 125.

“While there are headwinds from higher diesel prices and supply-chain issues, commercial vehicles volumes should bounce back, driven by Infra and an economic recovery. LCVs have seen a strong demand recovery on the back of e-commerce and FMCG activity. The intensity of the third COVID wave is an unknown, but higher diesel prices and financing issues will get addressed through a demand recovery,” the brokerage has said.
Valuations at 24.3x/10.9x FY22E/FY23E EV/EBITDA are at an early recovery cycle, Motilal Oswal has said.

“This does not fully reflect Ashok Leyland’s focus on adding new revenue streams and profit pools. We maintain our Buy rating with a target price of Rs 155 per share (12x FY23E EV/EBITDA),” Motilal Oswal has said.

Stocks To Buy From The Media And Auto Space For Returns Up To 24%

Disclaimer

Investors should certainly not take any trading and investment decision based only on information discussed in this article. We are not a qualified financial advisor and any information herein is not investment advice. It is informational in nature, which is taken from the brokerage report of Motilal Oswal Institutional Equities. Please do consult a professional advisor. Greynium Information Technologies Pvt Ltd, its subsidiaries, associates and authors do not accept culpability for losses and/or damages arising based on information in the article.

Story first published: Thursday, August 19, 2021, 17:14 [IST]



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Reserve Bank of India – Notifications

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


RBI/2021-2022/89
A.P. (DIR Series) Circular No.12

August 19, 2021

All Category – I Authorised Dealer Banks

Madam/Sir

Exim Bank’s Government of India supported Line of Credit (LoC) of
USD 20.51 million to the Government of the Republic of Guinea

Export-Import Bank of India (Exim Bank) has entered into an agreement dated September 29, 2020 with the Government of the Republic of Guinea, for making available to the latter, Government of India supported Line of Credit (LoC) of USD 20,506,000 (USD Twenty Million, Five Hundred Six Thousand only) for the purpose of financing the project for construction and up-gradation of Regional Hospitals in Kankan and Nzerekore, in the Republic of Guinea. Under the arrangement, financing of export of eligible goods and services from India, as defined under the agreement, would be allowed subject to their being eligible for export under the Foreign Trade Policy of the Government of India and whose purchase may be agreed to be financed by the Exim Bank under this agreement. Out of the total credit by Exim Bank under the agreement, goods, works and services of the value of at least 75 per cent of the contract price shall be supplied by the seller from India, and the remaining 25 per cent of goods and services may be procured by the seller for the purpose of the eligible contract from outside India.

2. The Agreement under the LoC is effective from August 11, 2021. Under the LoC, the terminal utilization period is 60 months from the scheduled completion date of the project.

3. Shipments under the LoC shall be declared in Export Declaration Form as per instructions issued by the Reserve Bank from time to time.

4. No agency commission is payable for export under the above LoC. However, if required, the exporter may use his own resources or utilize balances in his Exchange Earners’ Foreign Currency Account for payment of commission in free foreign exchange. Authorised Dealer (AD) Category- I banks may allow such remittance after realization of full eligible value of export subject to compliance with the extant instructions for payment of agency commission.

5. AD Category – I banks may bring the contents of this circular to the notice of their exporter constituents and advise them to obtain complete details of the LoC from the Exim Bank’s office at Centre One, Floor 21, World Trade Centre Complex, Cuffe Parade, Mumbai 400 005 or from their website www.eximbankindia.in

6. The directions contained in this circular have been issued under section 10(4) and 11(1) of the Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA), 1999 (42 of 1999) and are without prejudice to permissions/ approvals, if any, required under any other law.

Yours faithfully

(R. S. Amar)
Chief General Manager

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Reserve Bank of India – Notifications

[ad_1]

Read More/Less




April 14, 2015




Dear All




Welcome to the refurbished site of the Reserve Bank of India.





The two most important features of the site are: One, in addition to the default site, the refurbished site also has all the information bifurcated functionwise; two, a much improved search – well, at least we think so but you be the judge.




With this makeover, we also take a small step into social media. We will now use Twitter (albeit one way) to send out alerts on the announcements we make and YouTube to place in public domain our press conferences, interviews of our top management, events, such as, town halls and of course, some films aimed at consumer literacy.




The site can be accessed through most browsers and devices; it also meets accessibility standards.



Please save the url of the refurbished site in your favourites as we will give up the existing site shortly and register or re-register yourselves for receiving RSS feeds for uninterrupted alerts from the Reserve Bank.



Do feel free to give us your feedback by clicking on the feedback button on the right hand corner of the refurbished site.



Thank you for your continued support.




Department of Communication

Reserve Bank of India


Next

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Reserve Bank of India – Notifications

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


RBI/2021-2022/88
A.P. (DIR Series) Circular No.11

August 19, 2021

All Category – I Authorised Dealer Banks

Madam/Sir

Exim Bank’s Government of India supported Line of Credit (LoC) of
USD 170 million to the Government of the Republic of Guinea

Export-Import Bank of India (Exim Bank) has entered into an agreement dated December 05, 2019 with the Government of the Republic of Guinea, for making available to the latter, Government of India supported Line of Credit (LoC) of USD 170 million (USD One Hundred and Seventy Million only) for financing the project for strengthening the drinking water supply of Grand Conakry-Horizon 2040, in the Republic of Guinea. Under the arrangement, financing of export of eligible goods and services from India, as defined under the agreement, would be allowed subject to their being eligible for export under the Foreign Trade Policy of the Government of India and whose purchase may be agreed to be financed by the Exim Bank under this agreement. Out of the total credit by Exim Bank under the agreement, goods, works and services of the value of at least 75 per cent of the contract price shall be supplied by the seller from India, and the remaining 25 per cent of goods and services may be procured by the seller for the purpose of the eligible contract from outside India.

2. The Agreement under the LoC is effective from August 11, 2021. Under the LoC, the terminal utilization period is 60 months from the scheduled completion date of the project.

3.  Shipments under the LoC shall be declared in Export Declaration Form as per instructions issued by the Reserve Bank from time to time.

4.  No agency commission is payable for export under the above LoC. However, if required, the exporter may use his own resources or utilize balances in his Exchange Earners’ Foreign Currency Account for payment of commission in free foreign exchange. Authorised Dealer (AD) Category- I banks may allow such remittance after realization of full eligible value of export subject to compliance with the extant instructions for payment of agency commission.

5.  AD Category – I banks may bring the contents of this circular to the notice of their exporter constituents and advise them to obtain complete details of the LoC from the Exim Bank’s office at Centre One, Floor 21, World Trade Centre Complex, Cuffe Parade, Mumbai 400 005 or from their website www.eximbankindia.in

6. The directions contained in this circular have been issued under section 10(4) and 11(1) of the Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA), 1999 (42 of 1999) and are without prejudice to permissions/ approvals, if any, required under any other law.

Yours faithfully

(R. S. Amar)
Chief General Manager

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Reserve Bank of India – Notifications

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


RBI/2021-2022/87
A.P. (DIR Series) Circular No.10

August 19, 2021

All Category – I Authorised Dealer Banks

Madam/Sir

Exim Bank’s Government of India supported Line of Credit (LoC) of
USD 20.22 million to the Government of the Republic of Guinea

Export-Import Bank of India (Exim Bank) has entered into an agreement dated December 05, 2019 with the Government of the Republic of Guinea, for making available to the latter, Government of India supported Line of Credit (LoC) of USD 20.22 million (USD Twenty Million, Two Hundred Twenty Thousand only) for the purpose of financing two Solar Projects viz. (i) Solar Project for supply of electricity and drinking water for 7 public universities in Guinea (Cost USD 14.40 million) and (ii) Solar Project for Electrification and Refrigeration in 200 Health Infrastructure in Guinea (cost USD 5.82 million), in the Republic of Guinea. Under the arrangement, financing of export of eligible goods and services from India, as defined under the agreement, would be allowed subject to their being eligible for export under the Foreign Trade Policy of the Government of India and whose purchase may be agreed to be financed by the Exim Bank under this agreement. Out of the total credit by Exim Bank under the agreement, goods, works and services of the value of at least 75 per cent of the contract price shall be supplied by the seller from India, and the remaining 25 per cent of goods and services may be procured by the seller for the purpose of the eligible contract from outside India.

2. The Agreement under the LoC is effective from August 11, 2021. Under the LoC, the terminal utilization period is 60 months from the scheduled completion date of the project.

3. Shipments under the LoC shall be declared in Export Declaration Form as per instructions issued by the Reserve Bank from time to time.

4. No agency commission is payable for export under the above LoC. However, if required, the exporter may use his own resources or utilize balances in his Exchange Earners’ Foreign Currency Account for payment of commission in free foreign exchange. Authorised Dealer (AD) Category- I banks may allow such remittance after realization of full eligible value of export subject to compliance with the extant instructions for payment of agency commission.

5. AD Category – I banks may bring the contents of this circular to the notice of their exporter constituents and advise them to obtain complete details of the LoC from the Exim Bank’s office at Centre One, Floor 21, World Trade Centre Complex, Cuffe Parade, Mumbai 400 005 or from their website www.eximbankindia.in

6. The directions contained in this circular have been issued under section 10(4) and 11(1) of the Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA), 1999 (42 of 1999) and are without prejudice to permissions/ approvals, if any, required under any other law.

Yours faithfully

(R. S. Amar)
Chief General Manager

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Vietnam, India top measure of crypto adoption by individuals

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Global cryptocurrency adoption among individual investors has surged in the past year, according to crypto-analysis firm Chainalysis.

Using factors like peer-to-peer exchange trading volume and value received, Chainalysis said global crypto adoption rose some 881 per cent in the past 12 months.

The firm sees institutional markets as crucial but aimed to highlight the countries with the greatest crypto adoption by retail investors. It focused on use cases related to transactions and individual saving, rather than trading and speculation. Top-ranked countries are Vietnam, India, Pakistan and Ukraine.

“In emerging markets, many turn to cryptocurrency to preserve their savings in the face of currency devaluation, send and receive remittances, and carry out business transactions,” Chainalysis said in the report. It added that “adoption in North America, Western Europe, and Eastern Asia over the last year has been powered largely by institutional investment.”

Also read: What central bank digital currency is and isn’t

Interest in cryptocurrencies has surged since the onset of the pandemic, in part because of substantial gains by digital tokens like Bitcoin and Ether. The Bloomberg Galaxy Crypto Index has climbed about 380 per cent in the past year.

The Chainalysis Global Crypto Adoption Index ranked 154 countries by three main metrics. China and the US both dropped in the rankings, primarily because peer-to-peer trading volume declined. Last year, China ranked fourth and the US sixth. This year, the US is eighth and China 13th.

Chainalysis took out one factor it had used previously: number of deposits by country weighted by number of internet users. The firm found that it skewed the rankings toward countries with comparatively more decentralised finance, or DeFi, users. Instead, it’s creating a DeFi Adoption Index that it said will be available in coming weeks.

Also read:CoinDCX has became India’s first cryptocurrency unicorn

“Growing transaction volume for centralised services and the explosive growth of DeFi are driving cryptocurrency usage in the developed world and in countries that already had substantial adoption, while P2P platforms are driving new adoption in emerging markets,” Chainalysis said, adding a key question is whether new approaches will disrupt those trends.

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

BharatPe raises ₹200 crore in debt

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


BharatPe raised ₹200 crore in debt from IIFL Wealth and Asset Management and Northern Arc Capital and plans to raise $250 million in debt by the end of the current fiscal.

“BharatPe has raised ₹100 crore each as debt from IIFL Wealth and Asset Management and Northern Arc Capital,” it said in a statement on Thursday, adding that with this seventh round of debt fund-raise, it has raised a total of over ₹500 crore in debt at competitive rates in 2021.

Earlier this year, BharatPe had raised over ₹300 crore from top venture debt funds including Alteria Capital, InnoVen Capital and Trifecta Capital, banks such as ICICI Bank and Axis Bank and Northern Arc Capital.

Suhail Sameer, Chief Executive Officer, BharatPe said the company has set a target to raise $700 million in debt over the next two years to facilitate credit growth and will explore partnerships with domestic and international investors, ranging from banks, NBFCs, credit funds, large pension funds and impact investors and development financial institutions. “With the festive season coming up soon, we are committed to scale our lending vertical aggressively and have set a target of 10x growth in lending by FY23,” he said.

Loan book target

Nishit Sharma, Chief Revenue Officer, BharatPe said it intends to build a loan book of $1 billion by March 2023.

“As we expand our offering across new cities, we will also be adding secured lending products such as gold loans and two-wheeler loans to our existing set of offerings for merchants,” he further said.

BharatPe has already disbursed over $300 million in unsecured loans to over two lakh merchant partners and has an outstanding loan book of over $100 million. Recently, it forayed into the unicorn club with its Series E fund raise of $370 million at a valuation of $2.85 billion.

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

New locker rules to compensate for loss

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


The Reserve Bank of India has asked banks to compensate customers an amount equivalent to 100 times the prevailing annual rent of the safe deposit locker in case of incidents such as fire, theft, burglary, dacoity, robbery, building collapse or fraud committed by bank employees.

At present, banks do not have any liability towards lockers. In February, the Supreme Court held that banks cannot wash their hands off, and gave the RBI six months to put in place guidelines for locker management.

On Wednesday, the RBI guidelines said it is the responsibility of banks to take all steps for the safety and security of the premises in which the safe deposit vaults are housed.

It asked banks to clarify in their locker agreement that since they do not have a record of the content of the locker, they would not be under any liability to insure the contents against any risk.

Further, banks shall under no circumstances offer, directly or indirectly, any product to its locker-hirers for insurance of the content.

Locker rent

To deal with potential situations where the hirer neither operates the locker nor pays the rent, the RBI said banks can obtain a Term Deposit (TD), at the time of allotment, which would cover three years’ rent and the charges for breaking open the locker in case of such eventuality.

Banks, however, should not insist on such TDs from the existing locker holders or those who have satisfactory operative accounts.

Banks shall renew their locker agreements with existing locker customers by January 1, 2023.

Locker keys and alerts

The central bank asked banks to ensure that the identification code of the bank/branch is embossed on all locker keys to enable law enforcement agencies identify ownership.

Banks are to send an email and an SMS alert to the registered email ID and mobile number of the customer before the end of the day to confirm the date and time of the locker operation and the redress mechanism available in case of unauthorised locker access.

If the locker remains inoperative for seven years and the hirer cannot be located, even if rent is being paid regularly, the bank shall be at liberty to transfer the contentto the customer’s nominees/legal heir or dispose of the articles in a transparent manner.

 

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

1 47 48 49 50 51 121