Banks report improved NII, lower NPA provisioning in Q1, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


The provision for cumulative non-performing assets (NPA) by banks softened in the June 2021 quarter after a spike in the previous quarter when they resumed accounting for slippages after RBI’s schemes to defer the recognition of actual NPAs ended in December. For a sample of 28 banks, the loan loss or NPA provision fell by 6.8% year-on-year and 43.8% sequentially to Rs 36,805.4 crore in the June quarter.

The aggregate provision by the public sector (PSU) banks fell by 27% year-on-year due to a sharp double digit drop reported by State Bank of India, Punjab National Bank, Canara Bank, and Bank of Baroda. On the other hand, private sector banks reported 51% jump following a sharp increase reported by HDFC Bank, Kotak Bank, Bandhan Bank and RBL Bank. As a result, their share in the total NPAs increased to 42.5% from 26.1% in the year-ago quarter.

The total sample’s net interest income (NII) increased by 4.8% year-on-year to Rs 1.2 lakh crore. A majority of the banks, 20 to be precise, reported higher net interest from the year-ago level. The share of the private banks in the sample’s net interest expanded to 43.8% from 41.7% a year ago.

The sample’s cumulative COVID provisioning increased to Rs 34,641.5 crore in the June quarter from Rs 29,892.8 crore in the previous quarter. Here, the share of PSU banks increased to 34.7% from 26.7% sequentially.

June ’20 September ’20 December ’20 March ’21 June ’21
Loan loss provision (Rs crore) 39504.8 33896.1 28828.5 65542.2 36805.4
Loan loss provision (YoY % change) -17.0 -11.0 -59.6 19.5 -6.8

Share of PSU banks in quarterly provisioning (%)

June ’20 September ’20 December ’20 March ’21 June ’21
PSU share (%) 73.9 77.5 63.7 66.4 57.5
Non-PSU share (%) 26.1 22.5 36.3 33.6 42.5

Data for a sample of 28 banks. Source: Bank data, ETIG



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

HDFC Bank to hire 500 more to expand MSME coverage, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Country’s largest private sector lender HDFC Bank, which has a focus on the MSME sector, is hiring 500 more relationship managers this fiscal as the bank is expanding its coverage to 575 districts, a senior banker has said. The headcount addition will take the bank’s Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (MSME) vertical strength to 2,500. As of June end, the HDFC Bank’s employee strength stood around 1.23 lakh.

The bank’s MSME vertical covers 545 districts now with dedicated relationship managers and supervisors, which will be expanded to 575 districts or more by the end of this fiscal.

“As we are expanding our MSME footprint to 575 districts from 545 now, we are hiring over 500 more to the 2,000-strong headcount at the MSME vertical this fiscal year. This should take the overall headcount at the vertical to a little over 2,500,” Sumant Rampal, senior executive vice-president for business banking & healthcare finance, told PTI on Monday.

After reclassification and the resultant tagging of wholesaler and retailer loans under the MSME book, the bank closed the MSME book at Rs 2,01,833 crore in March 2021 quarter, marginally up from Rs 2,01,758 crore in December 2020, when it grew by over 30 per cent.

The government recently asked MSMEs to be re/de-classify themselves based on their turnover and get a Udhyam registration certificate.

The bank’s MSME portfolio is spread across sectors like textiles, fabrication, agri-processing, chemicals, consumer goods, hotels & restaurants, auto components, pharma and paper industry, and also include the entire selling chain ranging from wholesalers, retailers, distributors, stockists and supermarkets, Rampal said.

Rampal said the bank has been increasing its focus on the sector since the past two years, and the same only increased since the pandemic when the government opened a slew of measures to help small businesses tide over the crisis with the emergency credit line guarantee scheme (ECLGS) being the biggest booster helping it disburse 30 per cent more loans by December 2020, to Rs 2,01,758 crore.

Rampal said his team has already identified the districts for expansion. Though the bank has regular branches in these identified districts, MSME lending needs special focus based on their unique needs, he said.

He said of the over 5,500 branches, a little over 1,800 of them have more than 25 per cent of their loans coming in MSME accounts and 4,800 of them service this segment of customers.

Geographically speaking, the bank is present in 630 districts of which 545 districts now have special MSME counters.

Giving a break-up of the hiring, he said, of the total 500 planned additions, half will be for the small & medium sub-vertical, which already is a 975-strong team.

Though the RBI last Friday said there was nothing alarming about rise in MSME bad loans, a SIDBI-CIBIL report in late July said, the NPA levels among MSME borrowers surged to 12.6 per cent in the March 2021 quarter, up from 12 per cent in December 2020, while loans to them have jumped to Rs 9.5 lakh crore in FY21 from Rs 6.8 lakh crore in FY20.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

RBL Bank selects AWS to accelerate AI efforts

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


RBL Bank has selected Amazon Web Services (AWS), an Amazon.com company, as its cloud provider.

AWS would help RBL Bank strengthen its AI-powered banking solutions and drive digital transformation at the lender.

“The bank is building on its analytics practice and investing in AI capabilities to implement various use cases across multiple segments, including risk, customer service, human resources, and operations,” RBL Bank said in a statement on Monday.

It will leverage Amazon Textract, a machine learning service that automatically extracts text, handwriting, and data from scanned documents, across the bank’s risk and operations divisions to analyse documents such as financial statements, stock statements, and stock audit reports to predict default risk.

“Using ML allows analysts at RBL Bank to extract data and automate the handling of 2,500 documents per quarter,” the bank said.

Other use cases already being tested within the operations division include using services like Amazon Rekognition and Amazon Textract to automatically extract and match customer signatures and running fuzzy match algorithms to replace manual name match for various processes, it further said.

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Digital transactions grew 80% in last 250 days: Razorpay report

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Digital transactions have grown by 80 per cent during the 250 days between November 30, 2020 to August 6, 2021, based on transactions held on the digital payments platform Razorpay.

The financial solutions company on Monday released the ninth edition of ‘The (Covid) Era of Rising Fintech’ report with insights about digital payments in the last 500 days up till August 6, 2021.

August 6 marked 500 days of the pandemic since the national lockdown was first announced, starting March 25, 2020. The report based on transactions held on Razorpay platform between the first 250 days (March 25, 2020 to November 29, 2020) and the next 250 days (November 30, 2020 to August 6, 2021).

The report provides a detailed view of the evolving FinTech ecosystem, the digital spending patterns of consumers and an analysis of how different sectors and payment modes performed during this time, when businesses and life were hit by Covid, the company said.

Every sector and payment mode had been negatively impacted at the start of the pandemic and online payments declined by 30 per cent in early 2020

Multiple sectors have shown significant signs of recovery.

Businesses, especially from tier-2 and tier-3 cities have been a major boost for digital payments exhibiting a growth of 40 per cent from the first 250 days to the next 250 days.

While the metropolitan cities continued to show growth, businesses & consumers from places such as Jammu, Ahmedabad, Shimla and Coimbatore witnessed a growth of 195 per cent, 87 per cent, 49 per cent and 30 per cent, respectively

Additionally, the demand for payment options like Buy Now Pay Later (BNPL) has also increased, registering a growth of 220 per cent so far.

With increased digital adoption amid the pandemic, small businesses are also expected to increase investment in digital technologies in 2021. Affordable payment options such as Buy Now Pay Later (BNPL) have seen an increased preference which is expected to rise and increase transactions for SMBs, the report said.

The Services industry, that is the likes of home services such as carpentry, plumbing and more, has also increased adoption of digital payments with transactions increasing by 138 per cent.

The digital transactions by Freelancers and Homepreneurs saw a growth of 69 per cent during the last 250 days.

Digital transactions in Social Commerce grew by 65 per cent while Direct-to-Consumer (D2C) businesses witnessed a growth of 87 per cent during the last 250 days as compared to the first 250 days of the national lockdown.

Harshil Mathur, CEO and Co-Founder of Razorpay said, “The last 500 days haven’t been ordinary as almost every person and business has realised the need for digital awareness and presence. Fintech companies like us, banks, investors, government and regulators have worked hard during the last 16+ months to speed up digital innovation and adoption amongst consumers and small businesses.”

“What makes me really happy is the fact that not a single sector showed negative growth in the last 250 days. This was possible because businesses have recognised the crucial importance of using new payment technologies to support and improve their business growth. The way I see it, I expect this revolution of FinTech to extend from payment innovation to business banking innovation in the next two years,” added Mathur.

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Equitas SFB launches fintech accelerator programme ‘Equitech’

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Equitas Small Finance Bank on Monday announced the launch of ‘Equitech’ – a fintech accelerator programme aimed at the start-up ecosystem. The programme, designed to scale-up, will help fintechs to curate their products and define a go-to-market strategy.

In a press release, the Chennai-based lender said, Equitech will help fintechs to reach the next level and take its product to the market in a more targeted manner. The programme was launched on August 7 and the application process for the enrolment has commenced. “Indian fintech ecosystem is experiencing exponential growth from almost all the sub-segments ranging from payments and regtech to robo-advisory and blockchain. This growth is driven by the innovative fintech start-ups that were able to create unique banking trends like BaaS, neo banking, open banking, autonomous finance etc,” Murali Vaidyanathan, Senior President and Country Head – Branch Banking – Liabilities, Products & Wealth, Equitas Small Finance Bank said in the release.

Also read: After hit by pandemic hard, start-ups on growth path: EY

“These innovations have significantly impacted the way Indian banking industry functions and has resulted in India seeing a 60% increase in fintech investments despite the pandemic. We are glad to be able to assist and nurture the future unicorns in upgrading the banking system for the next level,” he added.

Focus on banking technologies

Equitech will focus on banking aspects such as payments, lending, CASA, transaction banking, API banking, governance & regulations as well as technologies such as agri-tech, banking tech, clean energy, government tech and other horizontal segments across key focus areas. The shortlisted firms will be granted direct access to a world class infrastructure through Equitas Small Finance Bank’s tech platform and API sandbox for product development.

Besides, there will be specific cohorts along with mentors and a panel of experts, the start-ups will work closely with these experts to create their products. Equitas will provide the necessary support required from legal and regulatory aspects. The selected fintech may also get to service Equitas SFB either as their first commercial business partner or as a co-brand partner, the bank’s release said.

Eligibility

To enroll, a fintech start-up must be registered / incorporated within the last 6 years as on date of the accelerator programme opening and should have at least two full-time employees, with most important team members having expertise in their field. The start-up must present an innovative product/ idea with significant advantages over current industry offerings and should represent original ideas wholly owned with the freedom to use.

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Sanjiv Chadha, Bank of Baroda, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


The CASA ratio moved up from 39% to nearly 40% over last 12 months. That is one abiding benefit for the bank, not only in terms of margins for this quarter but also going ahead, said Sanjiv Chadha, MD & CEO, Bank of Baroda. Edited excerpts:

Congratulations on a healthy quarter in a tough environment. What has led BoB back to profits with low slippages in the first quarter, as well as lower credit cost on a sequential basis?
There are two major aspects which I think have had CASA improve things. One is on the structural side where we have had very tight discipline both in terms of managing liability franchise and also on the asset side. So, on the liability side, when you have abundant liquidity, it is very impossible that you allow deposit growth to run too far ahead of loan growth which creates pressure on margins. We have tried to be disciplined, make sure that our deposits grow in line with our loan growth.

Because we were choosy there, we have been able to make sure that most of the growth has come from CASA deposits. So, the CASA ratio moved up within a year from 39% to nearly 40% over last 12 months. That is one abiding benefit for the bank, not only in terms of margins for this quarter but also going ahead. Similarly on the asset side, there is a lot of liquidity sloshing around, pressure on margins. We are trying to be disciplined there also.

While both slippages as well as credit cost has been lower sequentially, what is the kind of slippages as well as credit cost that you expect? Where do you see gross net NPAs settle at for the financial year close?
We had guided even before the second wave that we would expect slippages to be below 2% and credit cost to be between 1.5% to 2% and bearing towards the lower end of that scale. We believe that despite the second wave we should be able to deliver on the guidance.

Your overall exposure to NCLT accounts is a little over Rs 48,000 crore and the PCR is 94%. To what extent of this amount do you see resolution? What are the overall recoveries and upgrades you expect for the whole bank and from these NCLT accounts as well?
The NCLT accounts tend to be the very highly provided; upwards of 90%. In terms of you might say anticipating in which quarter would it happen is always very difficult and so we do look forward to the resolutions of NCLT accounts. We are making sure that in terms of our recovery efforts and in terms of our recovery budgeting, we are looking beyond the NCLT accounts also. It is very tough to say what will come in which quarter, but I would believe that there are some accounts which probably will happen within this year and they will contribute significantly to the recoveries.

What is your exposure funded and non-funded to Vodafone Idea, how much you have provided for and what is the provision you expected to make?
Our exposure is relatively small, so it is not something which could significantly impact the improvement in the corporate credit cycle we have knocked off.

Let us talk about return ratios and profits from a two-year perspective. What is the improvement that you can expect on those two fronts and how do you see yourself competing with the modern day players that are coming in and making waves in the space?
The question might have two segments, one in the terms of the improvement in the profitability. I think that is something which is likely to be sustained over the next two years simply because we have built strengths in terms of the business both on the asset and liability side. On the liability side in terms of a CASA ratio, which now pretty much compares with the best in the business. Or on the asset side in terms of retail growth, which again have been better than market. So, we are very positive in terms of the structural story.

As we discussed, the improvement in the corporate credit cycle is likely to sustain over the next two years despite the second wave. We have seen even in this quarter the impact on corporate has been very marginal, therefore we can be fairly confident that the improvement that we have seen should continue going ahead.

The structural improvements in the balance of the bank, the earning power that has accrued to the bank from new businesses, and also the cyclical story should again help us have sustainable improvement and get back to return ratios which are very respectable. Coming back to the second part, in terms of the challenge of fintechs, I think it is an opportunity for banks and it is a great opportunity for us to collaborate with fintechs to create new businesses. Even as we speak, we have a very significant digital initiative which is being rolled out where we are collaborating with a large number of fintechs.

We expect that a large part, particularly on the retail side, should be digitised over the next 12 to 18 months and all of this will happen in collaboration with fintechs who would be our partners. I do not see any competition with fintechs as a zero-sum gain which is at the cost of banks, I think it is a great opportunity for the banks to in fact become much more efficient.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Now, depositors can withdraw up to ₹5 lakh if bank placed under moratorium

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Parliament has given its approval to a Bill to amend the Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporation Act, 1961.

The amendment to the Act will enable depositors to access their deposit up to sum prescribed under deposit insurance, which is ₹5 lakh, in case the bank is placed under moratorium, and that too within 90 days. The Rajya Sabha gave its nod to this Bill last week and on Monday, Lok Sabha cleared it. Now, the Bill will be sent to the President for his assent post which it will become law.

New DICGC Bill will take care of PMC depositors’ woe: FM

Depositors of PMC Bank are likely to be covered under the new mechanism.

As of now, depositors have to wait for liquidation or passage of resolution to get the benefit of deposit insurance. This takes 8-10 years. Now, this will not be the situation. Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman has already said that payment is to be made within 90 days. “First 45 days will be taken by the banks for collecting the information and next 45 days for checking. Then on 91st or 92nd day or around that, payment will be made,” Sitharaman had said while announcing the Cabinet decision on July 28.

PMC Bank receives 1,229 applications for deposit withdrawal

Last year, the Government raised the deposit insurance to ₹5 lakh from ₹1 lakh. Sitharaman said that with this, 98.3 per cent in terms of number of deposit accounts and 50.9 per cent in terms of deposit value will be covered. Globally, these numbers are 80 and 20-30 per cent respectively.

Time-bound access

This Bill is a follow-up to the Budget announcement. Finance Minister had said that amendments to the DICGC Act would aim to streamline the provisions, so that if a bank is temporarily unable to fulfil its obligations, the depositors of such a bank can get easy and time-bound access to their deposits to the extent of the deposit insurance cover.

According to the legislative agenda prepared for the Monsoon session, the purpose of this Bill is to instil confidence in depositors about the safety of their money. The objective is to enable depositors access to their savings through deposit insurance in a time-bound manner in case there is suspension of banking business of the insured bank under various provisions of the Banking Regulation Act, 1949.

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

2 Stocks To Buy From HDFC Securities For Promising Gains Of Up To 29%

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


1. Prince Pipes & Fittings:

HDFC Securities is bullish on the stock of the country’s leading PVC pipe manufacturers and multi polymer processing company, Prince Pipes and has maintained its ‘Buy’ call with an unchanged target price of Rs. 870 per share against its last traded price of Rs. 673, implying an upside of over 29%.

In the Q1 period of FY22, the company registered decline in volume by 56% sequentially, dragging lower its revenue, EBITDA/APAT by 57/72/ 82% QoQ to INR 3.31/0.41/0.18bn respectively, said the brokerage firm.

Promising aspects of Prince Pipes that will drive company’s growth as decoded by HDFC Securities

• Demand improvement since May 2021 on the back of strong plumbing/SWR requirement.

• The company partnered with UltraTech’s UBS platform for widening its retail reach.

• Riding on the Ludrizol deal, the firm ventured into the industrial CPVC pipe segment.

Con call highlights

• Inventory losses unlikely in Q2 as PVC pipes are increasing once again.

• Company succeeded in reducing its pricing delta in comparison to market leaders over the last few years.

• On robust real estate plumbing sales will pick up while demand for pipes has normalized during Q2

• Agri demand will see uptick from November.

“We maintain our BUY rating on Prince Pipes with an unchanged target price of INR 870/sh (18.5x its Jun’23E EBITDA, implying 30x P/E)”, said the brokerage.

Last traded price of Prince Pipes Rs. 673
Target price Rs. 870
Upside potential 29.27%

Financial summary and estimates

YE Mar(INR mn)” “Q1 FY22” “Q1 FY21” “YoY (%)” “Q4 FY21” “QoQ(%)” FY20 FY21 FY22E FY23E FY24E
“Pipes sales (KMT)” 28.52 38.3 -25.5 64.32 -55.7 132.8 138.3 168.7 202.5 232.8
NSR (Rs/Kg) 179 122 46.8 183 179 123 150 154 150 151
EBITDA (Rs/Kg) 22 13 75.3 35 22 17 26 24 26 27
Net Sales 3306 3025 9.3 7614 -56.6 16357 20715 26031 30300 35089
EBITDA 413 316 30.5 1468 -71.9 2288 3616 3556 4652 5482
EBITDAM (%) 12.5 10.5 19.3 14 17.5 13.7 15.4 15.6
APAT 178 113 57.8 972 -81.7 1125 2218 2200 3018 3465
Diluted EPS (Rs) 0.8 0.5 57.8 4.4 -81.7 10.2 20.2 20 27.4 31.5
EV / EBITDA (x) 33.7 20.9 20.8 15.5 12.9
P/E (x) 68.6 34.8 35.1 25.6 22.3
RoE (%) 18.2 23.6 19.4 22.3 21.3

2. BSE:

2. BSE:

For the BSE scrip, HDFC Securities has maintained its previous ‘Buy’ rating but raised target price from Rs. 1075 to Rs. 1385. This is against the last traded price of Rs. 1198.7, meaning a decent return of 15.54 percent.

The brokerage house has continued with its ‘Buy’ call on BSE owing to better than expected EBITDA. Further its market share in the cash segment has come in at 7.2 percent while it is working on to rebuild the derivatives volume, whose current market share is placed at only approximately 6.5%.

“Revenue growth will be led by continued growth in transaction volume, StAR MF and stable listing revenue. INX, which is growing strongly, can be a revenue driver if BSE starts charging (expected in FY23E). We increase the EPS estimate by +10.2/9.6% for FY22/23E, based on volume uptick and better margin. We assign an SoTP-based target price of INR 1,385, by assigning 20x (earlier 15x) to core June-23E PAT (Rs. 546/share), Rs. 466/share for the CDSL stake, and adding net cash of Rs. 372/share”, added the brokerage.

Last traded price of BSE Rs. 1198.7
Target price Rs. 1385
Upside potential 15.54%

Financial Summary

YE March (INR mn)” 1Q FY22 1Q FY21 YoY (%) 4Q FY21 QoQ (%) “FY20” “FY21” “FY22E” “FY23E” “FY24E”
Net Revenues 1570 1032 52.1 1522 3.1 4505 5014 5996 7003 7800
EBITDA 507 -78 NM 461 10 81 725 1364 1979 2385
APAT 628 391 60.7 414 51.8 1410 1750 2514 3019 3437
Diluted EPS (INR) 14 8.7 60.7 9.2 51.8 31.3 38.9 55.9 67.1 76.4
P/E (x) 38.9 31.3 21.8 18.1 15.9
EV / EBITDA (x) 455.2 52.5 27 18 14.2
RoE (%) 5.8 7 9.8 11.5 12.7

Change in estimates

INR Mn “FY22E Old” “FY22E Revised” “Change %” “FY23E Old” “FY23E Revised” “Change %” “FY24E Old” “FY24E Revised” “Change%”
Revenue 5810 5996 3.2 6800 7003 3 7617 7800 2.4
EBITDA 1206 1364 13 1808 1979 9.5 2237 2385 6.6
“EBITDA margin (%)” 20.8 22.7 198bps 26.6 28.3 167bps 29.4 30.6 121bps
APAT 2282 2514 10.2 2754 3019 9.6 3156 3437 8.9
EPS (INR) 50.7 55.9 10.2 61.2 67.1 9.6 70.1 76.4 8.9
Source: Company, HSIE Research

Disclaimer:

Disclaimer:

The stocks or shares to buy listed out in the story are taken from brokerage report of HDFC Securities and is for informational purpose only. You should analyse your risk and other aspects before participating in the equity markets. Further a more cautious approach is needed when markets trade at record highs. Investments mentioned here need not be construed as investment advice, the company and the author shall not be responsible for any decisions taken based on the above report.

GoodReturns.in



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Banks to DoT, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Conversion of debt of the stressed telecom player Vodafone Idea Ltd (VIL) into equity could be an option to emerge out of the crisis, lenders led by State Bank of India (SBI) have suggested to Department of Telecommunications (DoT). DoT had called senior bank officials on Friday to discuss the stress in the telecom sector arising out of the Supreme Court order last month on the adjusted gross revenue (AGR)-related dues payable by telecom majors, including Vodafone Idea and Bharti Airtel, sources said.

The top court has given a time period of 10 years to telecom service providers struggling to pay Rs 93,520 crore of AGR-related dues to clear their outstanding amount to the government.

Bankers also told senior DoT officials that conversion of debt of VIL into equity is an option but not a sustainable one, sources said, adding that since VIL had not defaulted on its debts so far, they cannot take any action yet.

In a bid to keep a company a going concern, banks have used the option of converting debt into equity in many stress cases in the past.

Capital infusion by promoters is the best option in the given scenario, sources said quoting bankers.

The UK-based Vodafone has a 45 per cent stake while Aditya Birla Group owns a 27 per cent stake in the VIL.

Lenders, both public and private, stare at a loss of Rs 1.8 lakh crore in case VIL collapses. A large part of the loans to the lender is in the form of guarantees with public sector banks having a lion’s share of the debt.

Among the private sector lenders, Yes Bank and IDFC First Bank may be impacted the most. As a precursor, some private lenders with a funded exposure have already started making provisions.

For example, IDFC First Bank has marked the account of VIL as stressed and has made provisions of 15 per cent ( Rs 487 crore) against the outstanding exposure of Rs 3,244 crore (funded and non-funded).

“This provision translates to 24 per cent of the funded exposure on this account. The said account is current and has no overdues as of June 30, 2021,” the lender had said in its Q1 FY’22 investor presentation, referring to the account as “one large telecom account”.

According to official data, VIL had an AGR liability of Rs 58,254 crore out of which the company has paid Rs 7,854.37 crore and Rs 50,399.63 crore is outstanding.

The company’s gross debt, excluding lease liabilities, stood at Rs 1,80,310 crore as of March 31, 2021. The amount included deferred spectrum payment obligations of Rs 96,270 crore and debt from banks and financial institutions of Rs 23,080 crore apart from the AGR liability.

In a backdrop of such large liabilities, both the promoter Vodafone (45 per cent stake) and Aditya Birla Group (27 per cent stake) expressed their inability to bring in additional capital.

Writing a letter to Cabinet Secretary Rajiv Gauba in June, Aditya Birla Group Chairman Kumar Mangalam Birla said investors are not willing to invest in the company in the absence of clarity on AGR liability, adequate moratorium on spectrum payments and most importantly floor pricing regime being above the cost of service.

“It is with a sense of duty towards the 27 crore Indians connected by VIL, I am more than willing to hand over my stake in the company to any entity-public sector/government /domestic financial entity or any other that the government may consider worthy of keeping the company as a going concern,” Birla said in the letter.

Birla has quit the post of non-executive chairman post of the floundering telecom giant last week. PTI DP ANZ ANS ANS



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Top 5 Banks Promising Good Returns On Fixed Deposits of Up To 3 Years

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Ujjivan Small Finance Bank

With effect from 05.03.2021 Ujjivan Small Finance Bank is promising the following interest rates on deposits of less than Rs 2 Cr to both regular and senior citizens.

Tenure Regular FD Rates Senior Citizen FD Rates
7 Days to 29 Days 3.05% 3.55%
30 Days to 89 Days 4.05% 4.55%
90 Days to 179 Days 4.80% 5.30%
180 Days to 364 Days 5.20% 5.70%
1 Year to 2 Years 6.50% 7.00%
2 Years and 1 Day to 3 years 6.75% 7.25%
Source: Bank Website

Jana Small Finance Bank

Jana Small Finance Bank

For deposits of less than Rs 2 Cr up to a tenure of 3 years, Jana Small Finance Bank is providing the below-listed interest rates with effect from 07.05.2021.

Tenure Regular FD Rates Senior Citizen FD Rates
7-14 days 2.50% 3.00%
15-60 days 3.00% 3.50%
61-90 days 3.75% 4.25%
91-180 days 4.50% 5.00%
181-364 days 5.50% 6.00%
1 Year[365 Days] 6.25% 6.75%
More than 1 Year – 2 Years 6.50% 7.00%
More than 2 Years-3 Years 6.50% 7.00%
Source: Bank Website

DCB Bank

DCB Bank

For a single deposit of less than Rs 2 Cr up to a maturity period of 3 years, here are the interest rates provided by DCB Bank to both regular and senior citizens.

Period Regular FD Rates Senior Citizen FD Rates
7 days to 14 days 4.55% 5.05%
15 days to 45 days 4.55% 5.05%
46 days to 90 days 4.50% 5.00%
91 days to less than 6 months 5.25% 5.75%
6 months to less than 12 months 5.70% 6.20%
12 months to less than 15 months 5.80% 6.30%
15 months to less than 18 months 6.00% 6.50%
18 months to less than 700 days 6.00% 6.50%
700 days 6.40% 6.90%
More than 700 days to less than 36 months 6.00% 6.50%
36 months 6.50% 7.00%
Source: Bank Website

North East Small Finance Bank

North East Small Finance Bank

With effect from 19 April 2021 North East Small Finance Bank is promising the following interest rates on deposits of less than Rs 2 Cr for up to a tenure of 3 years.

Period Regular FD Rates In % Senior Citizen FD Rates In %
7-14 Days 3.00 3.50
15-29 Days 3.00 3.50
30-45 Days 3.00 3.50
46-90 Days 3.50 4.00
91-180 Days 4.00 4.50
181-365 Days 5.00 5.50
366 days to 729 days 6.75 7.25
730 days to less than 1095 6.75 7.25
777 days 7.00 7.50
1096 days to less than 1825 days 6.50 7.00
Source: Bank Website

Equitas Small Finance Bank

Equitas Small Finance Bank

For a single deposit of less than Rs 2 Cr up to a tenure of 3 years, Equitas Small Finance Bank is offering the following interest rates to both regular and senior citizens.

Period Regular FD Rates Senior Citizen FD Rates
7 – 14 days 3.50% 4.00%
15 – 29 days 3.50% 4.00%
30 – 45 days 3.50% 4.00%
46 – 62 days 4.00% 4.50%
63 – 90 days 4.00% 4.50%
91 – 120 days 4.75% 5.25%
121 – 180 days 4.75% 5.25%
181 – 210 days 5.25% 5.75%
211 – 270 days 5.25% 5.75%
271 – 364 days 5.25% 5.75%
1 year to 18 months 6.35% 6.85%
18 months 1 day to 2 years 6.25% 6.75%
2 years 1 day to 887 days 6.35% 6.85%
888 days 6.50% 7.00%
889 days to 3 years 6.35% 6.85%
Source: Bank Website



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

1 86 87 88 89 90 121