Reserve Bank of India – Press Releases

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In the underwriting auctions conducted on September 03, 2021 for Additional Competitive Underwriting (ACU) of the undernoted Government securities, the Reserve Bank of India has set the cut-off rates for underwriting commission payable to Primary Dealers as given below:

(₹ crore)
Nomenclature of the Security Notified Amount Minimum Underwriting Commitment (MUC) Amount Additional Competitive Underwriting Amount Accepted Total Amount underwritten ACU Commission Cut-off rate
(paise per ₹ 100)
4.26% GS 2023 3,000 1,512 1,488 3,000 0.24
6.10% GS 2031 14,000 7,014 6,986 14,000 0.64
6.76% GS 2061 9,000 4,515 4,485 9,000 0.88
Auction for the sale of securities will be held on September 03, 2021.

Ajit Prasad
Director   

Press Release: 2021-2022/802

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Karvy CEO, CFO arrested as bank fraud probe widens, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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HYDERABAD: Close on the heels of Karvy Stock Broking Ltd (KSBL) chairman and managing director C Parthasarathy’s arrest, Hyderabad police on Thursday took KSBL chief executive officer (CEO) Rajiv Ranjan Singh and chief financial officer (CFO) G Krishna Hari into custody.

Parthasarathy was arrested on August 19 on charges of raising bank loans by pledging the shares of KSBL’s clients. Police immediately began questioning several associates before the eventual arrests were made on Thursday.

Hyderabad joint commissioner of police (detective department) Avinash Mohanty said the CFO diverted the loan amount allegedly into nine other companies.

Rajiv, who is in-charge of trading and broking in KSBL, used the money parked in nine different companies for trading.

“Krishna Hari diverted funds to nine shell companies as per the oral instructions of Parthasarathy for showing huge turnover and market share of KSBL in stock market. This caused huge loss of Rs 300 crore, which was shown as book debts,” Hyderabad police said in an official release.

“Parthasarathy, by suppressing the facts, pledged the securities belonging to KSBL clients without their consent and by misusing power of attorney. The securities were transferred into the demat account of Karvy and pledged before the complainant bank for margin and short-term requirement in the business of KSBL from March 2013,” it said.

Officials said from KSBL, the two diverted money into the nine companies, whose trading accounts were again allegedly opened by these companies in the parent company (KSBL).

“Since it was KSBL which was in possession of trading accounts of these nine companies as its clients, the accused used to operate it,” the statement added.

C Parthasarathy’s bail plea rejected:

The bail petition moved by KSBL chairman and MD C Parthasarathy on Thursday was rejected by the Nampally criminal court.Immediately after the arrested, he had moved a petition seeking bail.



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Macquarie Capital, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Private lender HDFC Bank is expected to more than double its technology spends as it improves digital capabilities in line with global peers. The bank could also see rise in cost to income ratio by 3-4% as it looks to compete with tech companies.

“Currently technology spends as a % of opex is around 8-9%, this in our view, will double to 18-20% if management is going to significantly increase investments and is in line with some global peers,” said Suresh Ganapathy, associate director, Macquarie Capital. “Cost/Income ratio may go up from current 36% to 39-40%.”

Ganpathi added that the focus is to decouple monolithic legacy backend systems; improve digital capabilities and UI/UX (user interface), partner with Fintechs and enhance customer offerings.

Analysts are viewing the bank’s renewed focus on technology as a positive step in maintaining and possible improving their market leadership across payments, cards and various lines of businesses. Hiring also will be accordingly tailored to get more tech people giving them a conducive open working environment.

As per Macquarie’s sensitivity analysis, increase in tech expenditure and eventually cost-income ratio can impact its FY22-24E (estimated) earnings estimate by nearly 8%.

HDFC Bank recently partnered with India’s largest fintech company PayTM for payments, lending and point of sale solutions and are likely to get into more such partnerships with many Fintechs in future.

“The bank continues to be a leader in giving EMI-based products at the point of purchase outlets,” Ganapathy said. “When it comes to credit, the bank will be calling the shots and apart from their own strict underwriting criteria, the bank will also use additional surrogate data provided by the Fintechs.”



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Reserve Bank of India – Press Releases

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(Amount in ₹ crore, Rate in Per cent)

  Volume
(One Leg)
Weighted
Average Rate
Range
A. Overnight Segment (I+II+III+IV) 420,839.20 3.07 1.95-5.30
     I. Call Money 7,113.30 3.16 1.95-3.40
     II. Triparty Repo 319,120.00 3.06 2.90-3.08
     III. Market Repo 94,600.90 3.11 2.00-3.25
     IV. Repo in Corporate Bond 5.00 5.30 5.30-5.30
B. Term Segment      
     I. Notice Money** 314.85 3.29 2.40-3.40
     II. Term Money@@ 629.50 3.10-3.53
     III. Triparty Repo 95.00 3.05 3.05-3.05
     IV. Market Repo 100.00 2.90 2.90-2.90
     V. Repo in Corporate Bond 780.00 3.52 3.45-5.35
  Auction Date Tenor (Days) Maturity Date Amount Current Rate /
Cut off Rate
C. Liquidity Adjustment Facility (LAF) & Marginal Standing Facility (MSF)
I. Today’s Operations
1. Fixed Rate          
     (i) Repo          
    (ii) Reverse Repo Thu, 02/09/2021 1 Fri, 03/09/2021 714,231.00 3.35
    (iii) Special Reverse Repo~          
    (iv) Special Reverse Repoψ          
2. Variable Rate&          
  (I) Main Operation          
     (a) Reverse Repo          
  (II) Fine Tuning Operations          
     (a) Repo          
     (b) Reverse Repo          
3. MSF Thu, 02/09/2021 1 Fri, 03/09/2021 19.00 4.25
4. Special Long-Term Repo Operations (SLTRO) for Small Finance Banks (SFBs)£          
5. Net liquidity injected from today’s operations
[injection (+)/absorption (-)]*
      -714,212.00  
II. Outstanding Operations
1. Fixed Rate          
     (i) Repo          
    (ii) Reverse Repo          
    (iii) Special Reverse Repo~ Fri, 27/08/2021 13 Thu, 09/09/2021 6,574.00 3.75
    (iv) Special Reverse Repoψ Fri, 27/08/2021 13 Thu, 09/09/2021 611.00 3.75
2. Variable Rate&          
  (I) Main Operation          
     (a) Reverse Repo Fri, 27/08/2021 13 Thu, 09/09/2021 300,027.00 3.42
  (II) Fine Tuning Operations          
     (a) Repo          
     (b) Reverse Repo          
3. MSF          
4. Long-Term Repo Operations# Mon, 17/02/2020 1095 Thu, 16/02/2023 499.00 5.15
  Mon, 02/03/2020 1094 Wed, 01/03/2023 253.00 5.15
  Mon, 09/03/2020 1093 Tue, 07/03/2023 484.00 5.15
  Wed, 18/03/2020 1094 Fri, 17/03/2023 294.00 5.15
5. Targeted Long Term Repo Operations^ Fri, 27/03/2020 1092 Fri, 24/03/2023 12,236.00 4.40
  Fri, 03/04/2020 1095 Mon, 03/04/2023 16,925.00 4.40
  Thu, 09/04/2020 1093 Fri, 07/04/2023 18,042.00 4.40
  Fri, 17/04/2020 1091 Thu, 13/04/2023 20,399.00 4.40
6. Targeted Long Term Repo Operations 2.0^ Thu, 23/04/2020 1093 Fri, 21/04/2023 7,950.00 4.40
7. On Tap Targeted Long Term Repo Operations Mon, 22/03/2021 1095 Thu, 21/03/2024 5,000.00 4.00
  Mon, 14/06/2021 1096 Fri, 14/06/2024 320.00 4.00
  Mon, 30/08/2021 1095 Thu, 29/08/2024 50.00 4.00
8. Special Long-Term Repo Operations (SLTRO) for Small Finance Banks (SFBs)£ Mon, 17/05/2021 1095 Thu, 16/05/2024 400.00 4.00
  Tue, 15/06/2021 1095 Fri, 14/06/2024 490.00 4.00
  Thu, 15/07/2021 1093 Fri, 12/07/2024 750.00 4.00
  Tue, 17/08/2021 1095 Fri, 16/08/2024 250.00 4.00
D. Standing Liquidity Facility (SLF) Availed from RBI$       28,295.80  
E. Net liquidity injected from outstanding operations [injection (+)/absorption (-)]*     -194,574.20  
F. Net liquidity injected (outstanding including today’s operations) [injection (+)/absorption (-)]*     -908,786.20  
G. Cash Reserves Position of Scheduled Commercial Banks
     (i) Cash balances with RBI as on 02/09/2021 615,399.45  
     (ii) Average daily cash reserve requirement for the fortnight ending 10/09/2021 628,268.00  
H. Government of India Surplus Cash Balance Reckoned for Auction as on¥ 02/09/2021 0.00  
I. Net durable liquidity [surplus (+)/deficit (-)] as on 13/08/2021 1,132,933.00  
@ Based on Reserve Bank of India (RBI) / Clearing Corporation of India Limited (CCIL).
– Not Applicable / No Transaction.
** Relates to uncollateralized transactions of 2 to 14 days tenor.
@@ Relates to uncollateralized transactions of 15 days to one year tenor.
$ Includes refinance facilities extended by RBI.
& As per the Press Release No. 2019-2020/1900 dated February 06, 2020.
* Net liquidity is calculated as Repo+MSF+SLF-Reverse Repo.
# As per the Press Release No. 2020-2021/287 dated September 04, 2020.
^ As per the Press Release No. 2020-2021/605 dated November 06, 2020.
As per the Press Release No. 2020-2021/520 dated October 21, 2020, Press Release No. 2020-2021/763 dated December 11, 2020, Press Release No. 2020-2021/1057 dated February 05, 2021 and Press Release No. 2021-2022/695 dated August 13, 2021.
¥ As per the Press Release No. 2014-2015/1971 dated March 19, 2015.
£ As per the Press Release No. 2021-2022/181 dated May 07, 2021.
~ As per the Press Release No. 2021-2022/177 dated May 07, 2021.
ψ As per the Press Release No. 2021-2022/323 dated June 04, 2021.
Ajit Prasad
Director   
Press Release: 2021-2022/801

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Mukesh Ambani’s $50 phone can unleash a credit revolution across the globe, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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A smartphone widely believed to be priced below $50, likely the world’s cheapest, will start selling a week from now. If Mukesh Ambani’s JioPhone Next, an Android device custom-built for India by Alphabet Inc.’s Google, is a hit in the price-conscious market, it will solve one problem for banks while posing another.

With the country’s remaining 300 million feature-phone users going online, there will be a surge of customer data that can stand in for collateral. The question is, how will banks get their hands on it?

An answer has come from iSPIRT, a small band of policy influencers quietly setting up technology standards for India’s digital markets, inducing firms to enter new, open-network markets from online payments to healthcare.

The Bangalore-based group is championing a fresh set of players — account aggregators — to unlock a much sought-after prize: Bringing into the folds of formal credit the 80% of adults in developing countries (40% in rich nations) who don’t borrow money from traditional institutions.

But these people and their micro enterprises are increasingly online thanks to innovations like JioPhone Next. They’re paying rents, rates and utility bills and receiving payments on their smartphones, scattering their footprints all over the internet. Account aggregators will gather those digital crumbs for people to share their own data in a machine-readable format for a bank loan application.

Introducing a layer of consent managers is important. Emerging-market borrowers can have many types of accounts-based relationships. Yet they can be useless to banks if they can’t present a composite picture of their financial lives to access formal loans that get monitored by credit bureaus. More than three-fifths of India’s adult population is either invisible to credit scorers or not considered worth the trouble by standard lending institutions.

In an advanced economy like the U.S., services such as Experian Boost and LenddoScore help narrow the subprime borrowers’ visibility gap by getting them to voluntarily submit their utility or video-streaming bills to demonstrate creditworthiness. But in an emerging market with low financial literacy, banks would rather leave the bottom of the pyramid to lenders who know the borrower in real life or have some social leverage on her — such as micro-finance firms that lend to groups of women.

Conversely, tech platforms, intimately aware of their customers’ online behavior, can match them with loans, collecting fees while leaving risks with the banks. Jack Ma’s Ant Group Co. cornered nearly a fifth of China’s short-term consumer debt before Beijing broke up the game.

Not every country can afford to bring out the heavy artillery against its private sector: Politics wouldn’t allow it. Aggregators can be a much softer tool for keeping the lending market fair, giving banks a reasonable economic chance to compete with data-rich tech giants.

Take JioPhone Next. It will spew out data about a large segment of sparsely banked population. Jio, Ambani’s 4G telecom network, will capture some of it as subscribers of its cheap data plans buy groceries from JioMart, an online partnership with neighborhood stores across India. Google will also get valuable data about users’ location and search queries. Facebook Inc. will exploit its own knowledge, as the social media giant adds to its half-a-billion-strong Indian customer base for WhatsApp and a growing craze for Instagram Reels, a video-sharing platform. Unsurprisingly then, Google wants to influence India’s deposit market, and Facebook is nibbling into the small business loans pie.

When it comes to real-time data, banks can never match the platforms’ clout. But account aggregators’ snapshots can help them catch a break.

Just enough additional data that will tell them if a customer is more creditworthy than suggested by a low (or no) credit score can make a big difference to profit, especially as banks won’t have to pay hefty fees to the likes of Jio, Google or Facebook for their proprietary assessments. By owning and explicitly sharing their data, customers will avoid getting trapped in the tech industry’s biased algorithms. Tiny enterprises will be able to show their cash flows to lenders by pooling everything from tax payments to customer receipts. Once telecom firms come on board, an affordable “buy-now-pay-later” plan on a refrigerator purchase will become possible for a low-income family that pays its phone bills regularly .

Aggregation, being a utility, will be like tap water to platforms’ Evian, and be priced accordingly. Who will own the pipes? Walmart Inc.’s PhonePe, which runs India’s most popular digital wallet, has received an in-principle approval to be an aggregator from the central bank. Eight banks, which between them account for 48% of all accounts in the country, have agreed to use the framework, which went live Thursday.

It’s a good start. Banks desperately need some help to stay in the money game. Or they’ll just go crying to regulators and ask them for special protections against Big Tech. That would hurt experimentation and delay the credit revolution that $50 phones can unleash.



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Gold firms on sluggish dollar ahead of US jobs data, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Gold prices eked out small gains on Friday, buoyed by a weaker dollar, with investors awaiting the US jobs data to gauge the Federal Reserve’s plans to start tapering asset purchases.

FUNDAMENTALS
Spot gold rose 0.1% to $1,811.79 per ounce by 0115 GMT, but was headed for its first weekly decline in four.

US gold futures gained 0.2% to $1,814.80.

The dollar index fell to a one-month low, bolstering gold’s appeal to those holding other currencies.

The number of Americans filing new claims for jobless benefits fell last week, while layoffs dropped to their lowest level in more than 24 years in August, suggesting the labor market was charging ahead even as new COVID-19 infections surge.

The Labor Department will release the non-farm payrolls report for August at 1230 GMT.

Solid jobs recovery is an import criteria for the US central bank to start paring pandemic-era stimulus measures.

Gold is considered a hedge against inflation which could result from massive economic stimulus measures.

SPDR Gold Trust, the world’s largest gold-backed exchange-traded fund, said its holdings fell 0.2% to 998.52 tonnes on Thursday, lowest level since April 2020.

Russia’s international gold and foreign currency reserves rose to a record $615.6 billion after receiving a tranche from the International Monetary Fund, the central bank said.

Silver rose 0.2% to $23.92 per ounce, while platinum inched 0.1% higher to $1,000.04. Palladium climbed 0.3% to $2,408.18.



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SGX Nifty up 5 points; here’s what changed for market while you were sleeping, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Domestic stocks are likely to open on a muted note on Friday, ahead of a crucial US jobs data scheduled for later in the day. Asian stocks were trading mixed while US stocks closed marginally higher overnight. The dollar was trading near a one-month low level. Here’s breaking down the pre-market actions:

STATE OF THE MARKETS

SGX Nifty signals a flat start
Nifty futures on the Singapore Exchange traded 3.5 points, or 0.02 per cent, higher at 17,256, signaling that Dalal Street was headed for a muted start on Friday.

  • Tech View: Nifty50 on Thursday formed a bullish candle on the daily chart and made a higher high-low formation for the fourth successive day, suggesting more gains ahead for the index.
  • India VIX: The fear gauge gained marginally to 14.24 level on Thursday over its close at 14.18 on Wednesday.

Asian stocks mixed in early trade
Asian markets opened mixed on Friday as investors took heart from US rallies with investors looking ahead to US job data due later in the day. MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan was down by 0.21 per cent.

  • Japan’s Nikkei gained 0.33%
  • Korea’s Kospi jumped 0.47%
  • Australia’s ASX 200 added 0.50%
  • China’s Shanghai dropped 0.22%
  • Hong Kong’s Hang Seng tanked 0.91%

US stocks ended higher
The S&P500 index and Nasdaq Composite squeaked to record highs as Wall Street’s main indices all ended Thursday in positive territory, with higher commodity prices helping energy names recover ground and the latest jobs data leaving investors unfazed from existing positions.

  • Dow Jones gained 0.37% to 35,443.82
  • S&P 500 jumped 0.28% to 4,536.95
  • Nasdaq added 0.14% to 15,331.18

Dollar nears one-month low level
The dollar sank to its lowest in almost a month against major rivals on Friday, ahead of a crucial U.S. jobs report that could spur the Federal Reserve to an earlier tapering of stimulus.

  • Dollar index slipped to 92.193
  • Euro edged up to $1.1878
  • Pound gained to $1.3844
  • Yen held at 109.915 per dollar
  • Yuan at to 6.4587 against the greenback

FPIs buy shares worth Rs 349 cr
Net-net, foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) turned buyers of domestic stocks to the tune of Rs 348.52 crore, data available with NSE suggested. DIIs were buyers to the tune of Rs 381.7 crore, data suggests.

MONEY MARKETS
Rupee: The domestic currency settled with a marginal gain of 2 paise at 73.06 (provisional) against the US dollar on Thursday despite a sustained rally in domestic equities.

10-year bond: India’s 10-year bond yield declined 0.45 per cent to 6.17 after trading in 6.17 – 6.21 range.

Call rates: The overnight call money rate weighted average stood at 3.19 per cent on Wednesday, according to RBI data. It moved in a range of 1.95-3.40 per cent.

DATA/EVENTS TO WATCH

  • IN Markit Composite PMI AUG (10:30 am)
  • IN Markit Services PMI AUG (10:30 am)
  • IN Foreign Exchange Reserves 27/AUG (5 pm)
  • US Non Farm Payrolls AUG (6 pm)
  • US Unemployment Rate AUG (6 pm)
  • US Average Weekly Hours AUG (6 pm)
  • US Average Hourly Earnings YoY AUG (6 pm)
  • US Markit Services PMI Final AUG (7:15 pm)
  • US Markit Composite PMI Final AUG (7:15 pm)
  • EA Retail Sales MoM JUL (2:30 pm)
  • EA Retail Sales YoY JUL (2:30 pm)
  • EA Markit Services PMI Final AUG (1:30 pm)
  • EA Markit Composite PMI Final AUG (1:30 pm)

MACROS

FMCG, electronic sales down
Sales of groceries, essentials, smartphones and electronics in August fell sharply, especially in the second half of the month after pent-up demand fizzled out post the Independence weekend sale season.

Rupee regains 72 level on bond issues, inflows
Similar to the equities market, the gain in the rupee has been sharp and sudden with an appreciation of 1.5% in five trading sessions. Dealers said that the domestic currency was buoyed by positive sentiment in the equities market.

Crypto will be a commodity
The government is planning to define cryptocurrencies in the new draft bill that also proposes to compartmentalise virtual currencies on the basis of their use cases, ET reported. Cryptocurrencies will be treated as an asset/commodity for all purposes, including taxation and as per user case — payments, investment or utility.

No immediate trigger for gold
An astounding bull run in local equity markets amid the Covid-19 pandemic has taken the shine off gold — historically, one of the most in-demand assets during a crisis. Portfolio managers say there is no immediate trigger for a spike in gold prices and the yellow metal should ideally be not more than 10% in one’s investment portfolio as the economy is showing signs of recovery.

ICRA revises steel sector outlook
Indian steel industry’s consolidated borrowings are at their lowest levels since March 2012, said ICRA. The rating company has also revised the steel sector’s outlook to ‘positive’ from stable on account of better-than-expected performance of India’s top steelmakers in the first quarter ending June.



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Banks approach RBI to raise limit for raising AT1 offshore, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Mumbai: Indian banks are said to have requested the Reserve Bank of India that the limit on the overseas sale of bonds under the Additional Tier 1 category be raised to facilitate diversification of capital-raising resources, with the domestic market turning dry and inaccessible.

While State Bank of India was the first to sell such bonds this financial year in the local market, others such as Axis Bank and HDFC Bank have chosen overseas markets.

Banks are now permitted to raise up to 49 per cent of the eligible AT1 capital in foreign currency. However, a debate over what is eligible capital brewing.

The RBI did not reply to ET’s queries.

“While some wrote directly to the RBI seeking an increase in limit, others have represented through industry body,” said a senior executive involved in the matter told ET.

“The definition of eligible AT1 capital still needs some clarity and can be a conservative estimate,” the executive said.

According to the central bank’s regulation based on the latest international capital standard, the AT1 capital can be admitted maximum at 1.5 per cent of risk-weighted assets.

Banks have also sought clarity on this from the RBI, executives said.

AT1 or perpetual papers as they are known popularly are quasi-debt instruments, which bear a higher risk of capital losses and are rated at least three notches lower than an issuer’s corporate rating grade.

While SBI offered 7.72 per cent on the domestic turf Wednesday, Axis Bank paid 4.10 per cent in the international market.

Axis Bank’s credit is billed weaker than government-owned SBI. Had Axis Bank raised perpetual bonds in the local market, it would have been priced in the range of 8.25-8.70 per cent, according to local dealers.

If Axis Bank covers the currency risk for the whole overseas sale, the cost would be 9.5 per cent going by existing currency forwards rates, they said. However, it also depends on the usage of capital.

“If Axis Bank funds any assets overseas, there is no need for currency hedging for the same quantum, which in turn will help save costs,” said a senior executive involved in AT1 sales.

The local market has dried up completely after the Securities and Exchange Board of India tightened valuation rules for AT1 where mutual funds used to subscribe to a large share.

SBI had received 157 bidders from private banks, pension funds, corporate treasuries, bond houses and wealth managers for its offer.

Three top bond arrangers ET spoke with said Axis Bank would not have garnered interest like SBI. At the most, it would have received bids for Rs 500-750 crore compared with $600 million (or about Rs 4,400 crore) it raised on the offshore market.

Yield-hungry global investors look for three factors when it comes to AT1 from an emerging market: the financial matrix of the issuing bank and the bad loan position, the capability of exercising the call option and the ability to pay interest.

The principal and any accrued interest would be written down, partially or in full, if an issuing bank’s CET1 (common equity) ratio slips to 6.125 per cent later this year. The issuer cannot pay a coupon if it incurs losses in a financial year.

Such a scene does not augur well for any state-owned banks other than SBI as they are not in the pink of their health, dealers said.



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Vinay Sharma, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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We like the large private sector banks and some of the large PSUs as well. We like the larger banks over the mid-sized and smaller peers as these banks have great access to capital. They provide good provisioning for the anticipated Covid stress and the balance sheets are also quite healthy, says Vinay Sharma, Equity Fund Manager, Nippon India Mutual Fund.

Do you think that from now we are looking at a sweet spot for banking where the worst is behind us and maybe good times will be here?
The banking sector has gone through ups and downs over the last six-seven months and it has been a relative underperformer in the market as well and the reason was the second Covid wave. The asset quality stress that was anticipated after that and results being not so great compared to some of the other sectors. Also, banking is one of the sectors which, even after the base effect, is showing single digit growth in terms of credit instruments whereas most other sectors are expected to show very healthy growth once the base effects plays out. So I guess that is the reason for banking underperformance over the past few months.

Looking ahead, if the Covid third wave does not happen, then surely banking looks to be on a sound footing on a fundamental basis. The latest data is showing some signs of uptick in credit growth. We were just talking about the corporate capex cycle picking up and even if the capex cycle does not pick up, we have seen corporates deleveraging India for four to five years and their balance sheets are as good as what they used to be before the financial crisis.

We feel corporate credit might pick up sooner than what the Street is expecting. Retail credit is growing steadily and another good sign is the real estate cycle picking up in India. Housing is such an important part of the household balance sheet. So if the real estate cycle picks up, then it bodes well for the banking sector as well. So overall, unless a severe third wave happens, we believe things will turn positive for the sector. The economy is looking good and valuations are in our favour since the sector has underperformed quite a lot over the past five-six months compared to the broader market.

We are making a case of corporate credit growth coming in. How would you play that? Across banks, what is the best place to capture that credit offtake and also would you now look at the banks that have more corporate books or retail books?
The distinction between corporate and retail credit has now disappeared between the large four or five banks except maybe one or two because what has happened is, in the last few years, most erstwhile corporate banks have also grown their retail books as there was no growth in corporate banking anyway.

Therefore today, balance sheets are largely between 60-40, 50-50 between retail and corporate in that order. So to play the fundamentals in banking, what we really like is the large private sector banks and some of the large PSUs as well. We like the larger banks over the mid-sized and smaller peers as these banks have great access to capital. They have been able to raise capital as and when they want from markets. They have provided good provisioning for the anticipated Covid stress and therefore balance sheets are also quite healthy.

Also, given the kind of technology changes that are happening in this sector and the kind of investments that are required in technology, we believe that these banks are the best place to partner with new fintechs and invest in technology and keep up with time. Therefore, large private sector banks and some large PSU banks are what we would recommend among banks.

The market is rerating banks for becoming fintechs and fintechs for becoming banks. Bajaj Finance is getting rerated because it is moving into a platform. Where is the middle path? Who do you think will be the eventual winner in this called platform/fintech adoptability?
I cannot talk about individual companies but as I have already said, it is the large banks with good operating profitability or the large finance companies where operating profitability is fairly high, that are well placed to capture this phenomenon of becoming a platform or investing in technology. What you need is access to talent, access to capital and a large customer base. The large entities in India have all these prerequisites; their customer base is fairly high, they can access great talent in terms of technology personnel as they are attractive places to work in. And they also have the data. So if there is any chance of some of these large banks or some of these entities to have a great plain technology, it has to be the larger banks and some of the larger NBFCs as well.

While we have seen fintech taking away some market value from banks in developed economies, in India, the scenario might be a little bit different because in India the banks have access to easy capital and therefore they can pick and choose partners and at some point also buy out some of these fintech firms if they think they are becoming a threat to their market share.

Also, these banks have a huge customer base and as long as they can analyse their customer base, cross sell and do data analytics, they are in a great position to partner or fight with some of these fintechs.

A couple of years ago, the buzzword was microfinance, then it was small banks or small microfinance companies which have become small finance banks. But that is the end of the financial space which is facing a crunch. Bandhan is struggling, Ujjivan is struggling, AU is struggling. What will happen to the SFB space?
There is no doubt a great opportunity in the bottom of the pyramid space and in some of the customer base that they are trying to address which is the urban poor, rural poor or small MSMEs and the stuff. So opportunity wise, I do not think there is any doubt of that in India. What has hampered them over the last few years is that macroeconomic shocks have happened at regular intervals. We had GST, demonetisation and then Covid. They haven’t really got a launching platform of steady three, four years which a new business requires to catapult itself.

That is one reason why these banks have not really done so well compared to some of the other entities. But we do believe that selectively, some of these have good managements, the right kind of talent, the technology partnerships and therefore some of them can create value given the opportunity size that exists in India.

Before turning into small finance banks, these banks were mostly microfinance entities which were actually dealing with a customer base for a long period of time. They have the know-how of how to deal with these customers. It is just that macro has not favoured them for the last four, five years and that has hampered them.

But one has to be selective and look at the right management pool, the right customer base. Pure microfinance business does suffer from its own ups and downs because when the cycle or things are going tough for them, these entities suffer a lot. Therefore we like SFBs more than pure microfinance entities because SFBs give a diverse profile compared to pure microfinance entities.

You run a firm or fund which in a sense is for financials. Given that five, six years ago the option to buy into financials was limited, you could only buy the three, four, five private banks and some small banks but now the space is expanding. There are AMCs, insurance companies. Do you see the flows which came into the traditional banking funds will get challenged because the mandate is to run a financial fund and the options to bet on the financial space are plenty?
I would say that is a good thing. We are getting more diversification in sectoral funds and sectoral funds are generally considered to be more volatile. So diversification reduces volatility. Also, as I said earlier, across the world some of the new business models like fintechs or platforms have created huge wealth for their investors and we anticipate the same to happen in India over the next two or five years as some of these businesses come into public markets.

Therefore from a flow point of view or from an investment point of view, we believe this is a great thing that has happened as investors are getting more options now within financial space as well as a technology angle. I would not call it a negative, I would call it a really good thing.



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