Union Bank of India cuts home loan to all time low of 6.40% 

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The competition to attract new home loan customers during the ongoing festive season just got tougher as Union Bank of India (UBI) on Tuesday announced that it will offer home loans starting from 6.40 per cent against 6.80 per cent earlier. 

The public sector bank, in a statement, said with this reduced rate of interest, its home loan rate is the most competitive in the industry. 

The reduced rate, which will be effective from October 27, 2021, will be applicable to customers applying for new loans or those who wish to transfer their existing loans including balance transfers. 

Currently, competitive home loan rates are being quoted by Kotak Mahindra Bank and Bank of Baroda (6.50 per cent), Punjab National Bank (6.60 per cent) State Bank of India and ICICI Bank (6.70 per cent),  among others. Most of the Banks are quoting these special rates for the festival season. 

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Scary money tasks to tackle now, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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There are some things no one wants to think about until they have to, like caregiving for your parents as they age and figuring out what happens to your finances when you die. But planning for these events now can spare you and your loved ones a lot of hassle later on.

The first step is to simply talk about the inevitable.

“Think about the people you care about. Would your life be better if you never brought this subject up? Or would everyone’s lives improve if you did?” says Lauryn Williams, a certified financial planner and owner of Worth Winning, a Dallas-based financial planning firm.

“Getting the conversation going is a gamechanger for being able to tackle these topics,” she says.

OK, your death and your parents getting older don’t make for light dinner-table conversation. But there are ways to ease into each of these uncomfortable topics.

HOW TO HAVE THE CAREGIVING CONVERSATION

Millennials are currently the “sandwich generation,” says Frank Pare, a CFP and president and managing partner at PF Wealth Management Group in Oakland, California. That means they’re responsible for bringing up their kids while also thinking about how to care for aging parents.

The pandemic might have forced you to have frank discussions with your parents about their health care situation. You can use that momentum to approach conversations about the type of care they would prefer later in life, whether it’s moving in with you, going to assisted living or having in-home care.

Williams suggests making a list of open-ended questions to get the ball rolling, such as “What would you want to happen if you suddenly got ill?” or “How do you see me being a part of your retirement?”

Talk about what resources your parents plan to use to pay for care, Pare says. Do they have a life insurance policy? Are they on Social Security? Do they have a pension? Will they need to look into long-term care insurance? This type of insurance covers chronic conditions, disabilities or disorders. If your parents don’t have it or can’t afford to buy it, you can purchase it for them, he says.

Having the conversation allows you to prepare now if you need to start setting money aside for caregiving.

ESTATE PLANNING IS FOR EVERYONE

Contrary to what you might think, estate planning is not just for the wealthy. It’s also not limited to married couples or those with children.

Handing down your assets and handing over your financial responsibilities often involves making a will, creating an advance health care directive for if you’re incapacitated and even having a separate digital will for your online life that includes login credentials and instructions on what to do with your social media accounts or assets like cryptocurrency.

A simple first step you can take now is to log into all your financial accounts and designate a beneficiary for each one. Then you can turn to the bigger questions.

“The work starts with you sitting down and asking – what would you want to see happen if you were no longer around?” Pare says.

Yes, it can be overwhelming to think about something bad happening to you. But creating a detailed estate plan spares your loved ones from having to sort out your financial affairs while also grieving your loss. It can also minimize the potential likelihood of probate, which is the long legal process for distributing your property after you die.

You can use an estate plan to make your wishes and priorities clear, such as appointing a guardian for your children, deciding what happens to your beloved pet, or donating your money to a cause you care deeply about. (Asking your parents for their advice can also trigger a conversation about their estate plan and caregiving needs.)

Williams suggests asking yourself these questions to make the process feel less abstract:

● What would happen if I were in the hospital for a while?

● What if I were incapacitated and had to undergo surgery: Who would I want to make the decision for me?

● Who would pay the bills or walk the dog while I could not?

If you start writing down your answers, you’ve already taken the first step toward making an estate plan. You’ll need to hire a lawyer when you’re ready to officially move forward.

__________________________________

This column was provided to The Associated Press by the personal finance site NerdWallet. Amrita Jayakumar is a writer at NerdWallet. Email: ajayakumar@nerdwallet.com. Twitter: @ajbombay.

RELATED LINK:

NerdWallet: Estate planning checklist https://bit.ly/nerdwallet-estate-plan



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Despite high EMI moratoriums, loan recasts by banks stay low, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The pandemic has hit individual borrowers more than industries and businesses, going by the recast of loans announced under the government’s one-time restructuring scheme.

The eight banks that have declared second-quarter results have announced reast of Rs 27,708 crore worth of loans under the One-Time Restructurig 2.0, of which 80% recasts are personal loans and the rest 20% availed for business and by MSMEs.

The highest loan recasts were at HDFC Bank at Rs 17,395 crore, followed by another private lender ICICI Bank at Rs 4,156 crore.

The recasts by MSMEs was smaller, possibly due to other forms of emergency credit available to them.

What Icra says

Of the total restructured loan book of Rs 2 lakh crore for the banks as on June 30, 2021, the restructuring under the first coronavirus wave is estimated at 51 per cent of the total restructuring of Rs 1 lakh crore, while restructuring under the second wave is estimated at 31 per cent of the total restructuring or Rs 0.6 lakh crore, it said.

Considering that 30-40 per cent of the loan book was under moratorium during Q1 FY2020 across most banks, the loan restructuring at two per cent of advances after the second wave is a positive surprise and much lower than its earlier estimates, rating agency Icra said.

Resolution Framework 2.0

Despite high EMI moratoriums, loan recasts by banks stay low

In May this year, the Reserve Bank announced a slew of measures including loan restructuring for individual and small businesses hit hard second Covid wave.

This recast was for those who had not availed restructuring under any of the earlier frameworks, including the Resolution Framework 1.0 of RBI dated August 6, 2020, and who are classified as standard as on March 31, 2021, shall be eligible for the Resolution Framework 2.0.



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RBI imposes Rs 90 lakh penalty on Vasai Vikas Sahakari Bank, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The RBI on Tuesday said it has imposed a Rs 90 lakh penalty on Vasai Vikas Sahakari Bank, Maharashtra, for non-compliance with certain directions, including on classification of loans as NPAs, and other directions. In a statement, the Reserve Bank said the bank had not complied with its directions on ensuring end-use of funds in borrowal accounts and classification of loans/ advances as non-performing assets, specific direction of RBI for ensuring that the bank’s balance sheet and profit and loss account are signed by at least three of its directors.

This was revealed following the statutory inspection of the bank with reference to the bank’s financial position as of March 31, 2019, the Inspection Report pertaining thereto and examination of all related correspondence, the central bank said.

The penalty was imposed after considering the bank’s replies to a show-cause notice and oral submissions made during the personal hearing, the RBI said.

In another statement, the RBI said it has imposed a monetary penalty of Rs 7 lakh on The Citizens Urban Co-operative Bank, Jalandhar, Punjab for “non-adherence with/violation” of certain directions related to non-identification of NPAs, wrong classification of assets and inadequate provisions made due to the wrong classification of assets.

In both cases, the RBI said, penalities were based on the deficiency in regulatory compliance and not intended to pronounce upon the validity of any transaction or agreement entered into by them with their customers.



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Ashwani Kumar assumes charge as executive director of Indian Bank, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Ashwani Kumar has taken charge as Executive Director of Indian Bank, after serving as the chief general manager of Punjab National Bank in Mumbai.

Kumar, who is a Chartered Accountant, Post Graduate in Commerce and a Certified Member of Indian Institute of Bankers has over two decades of experience.

Kumar rose through ranks serving various offices of four Public Sector Banks viz. Bank of Baroda, Corporation Bank, Oriental Bank of Commerce and Punjab National Bank.



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Yes Bank launches new category of accounts for entire family, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Yes Bank has launched a new category of value-added family savings accounts that comes with healthcare benefits and dedicated relationship managers for multiple accounts across family members.

The Yes Family proposition includes features curated to make everything from shopping & dining together and availing loans more convenient and rewarding. In addition, these accounts have a waiver of fees on ATM withdrawals and digital transactions and reward points on banking transactions that can be transferred within the family, and cashback and lifestyle offer.

Yes Family accounts include three programmes — Yes Prosperity, Yes Premia and Yes First programmes for different customer segments. “Through this proposition, we envisage increasing our monthly retail customer acquisition by 15% till December 2021,” said Prashant Kumar, MD & CEO, Yes Bank. Discounted locker rentals, competitive interest rates on fixed deposits, recurring deposits, home loans and auto loans are among other benefits built into the proposition.

The Yes Prosperity Family account is available to customers who maintain a combined average monthly balance (AMB) of Rs 50,000, Yes Premia Family for customers with an AMB of Rs 2 lakh or a net relationship value (NRV) of Rs 10 lakh at a family level while Yes First Family is available to customers maintaining AMB of Rs 8 lakh or an NRV of Rs 30 lakh at a family level.



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Union Bank home loans at lowest ever 6.4% rate, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Union Bank of India on Tuesday announced a reduction in its home loan interest rates, which will now start from 6.4% – the lowest rate in the industry. The reduced rate will be effective from October 27. The new rates will apply to customers applying for fresh loans or those who wish to transfer their existing loans including balance transfers. This is the lowest home loan rate offered by a mainstream bank ever.

“We are offering 6.4% for the best category of customers with credit scores of over 800. The low-cost deposits are providing us a cushion enabling us to cut rates even further,” said Rajkiran Rai, MD & CEO, Union Bank of India. He added that the bank was working with thin margins as defaults among top-rated customers is unlikely and also the RBI assigns a lower risk-weightage to home loans, which enables banks to lend more with less capital.

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Axis Bank’s Q2 standalone net up 86%

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Private sector lender Axis Bank reported an all time high quarterly net profit of ₹3,133.32 crore in the second quarter of the fiscal as provisions declined.

This was 86.21 per cent higher than ₹1,682.67 crore in the second quarter of last fiscal.

For the quarter-ended September 30, 2021, the bank’s net interest income grew eight per cent year-on-year to ₹7,900 crore from ₹7,326 crore in the same period last fiscal.

Net interest margin stood at 3.39 per cent compared to 3.58 per cent a year ago.

In a media call on Tuesday, the bank said it expects NIM to improve as growth improves and the bank deploys liabilities more effectively.

Other income grew by 6.4 per cent in the July to September 2021 quarter to ₹3,798.38 crore from ₹3,569.35 crore in the same period last fiscal. Fee income grew 17 per cent year-on-year to ₹3,231 crore in the quarter under review.

Provisions fell by 60 per cent to ₹1,735.09 crore in the second quarter of the fiscal from ₹4,342.82 crore a year ago.

“The bank has not utilised Covid provisions during the quarter. The bank holds cumulative provisions (standard + additional other than NPA) of ₹12,951 crore at the end of the second quarter of 2021-22,” Axis Bank said in a statement on Tuesday.

Gross NPA falls

As on September 30, 2021, the bank’s reported gross NPA stood at ₹24,148,61 crore or 3.53 per cent of gross advances. This was at 3.85 per cent as on June 30, 2021 and 4.18 per cent as on September 30, 2021.

Net NPAs, however, increased to ₹7,199,97 crore or 1.08 per cent at the end of the second quarter from 0.98 per cent a year ago. However, on a sequential basis, it fell from 1.2 per cent as on June 30, 2021.

“On the business front, we are seeing solid progress. We continue our focus on SMEs and mid-corporate segments, and on the retail side we see better disbursements and growth driven by secured products,” said Amitabh Chaudhry, Managing Director and CEO, Axis Bank, adding that consumer and business confidence is likely to trend up in the second half of the fiscal.

The bank’s deposits grew 18 per cent year-on-year to ₹7,36,286 crore while advances grew 10 per cent year-on-year to ₹6,21,719 crore as on September 30, 2021.

Axis Bank said its restructuring amounted to 0.64 per cent of customer assets and was amongst the lowest in the larger peer banks.

It implemented resolution plans in 8,162 accounts with an exposure of ₹2,124.2 crore under the RBI’s Resolution Framework 1.0. Of this, ₹45.77 crore slipped into NPA during the first half of the year and ₹26.51 crore was written off.

Under the Resolution Framework 2.0, the bank has an exposure of ₹2,518.56 crore to accounts where resolution plans have been implemented. This has led to an increase in provisions by ₹680.89 crore.

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Reserve Bank of India – Press Releases

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The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has, by an order dated October 26, 2021 imposed a monetary penalty of ₹90.00 lakh (Rupees ninety lakh only) on Vasai Vikas Sahakari Bank Ltd., Vasai, Maharashtra (the bank) for non-compliance with the directions issued by RBI on “Management of Advances – UCBs”, “Income Recognition, Asset Classification, Provisioning and Other Related Matters – UCBs”, with the specific directions issued to the bank vide RBI’s letter dated November 22, 2018 and with the provisions of section 31 read with section 56 of the Banking Regulation Act, 1949 (the Act). This penalty has been imposed in exercise of powers vested in RBI conferred under section 47 A (1) (c) read with sections 46 (4) (i) and 56 of the Act, taking into account failure of the bank to adhere to the aforesaid directions issued by RBI and provisions of section 31 read with section 56 of the Banking Regulation Act, 1949.

This action is based on deficiency in regulatory compliance and is not intended to pronounce upon the validity of any transaction or agreement entered into by the bank with its customers.

Background

The statutory inspection of the bank conducted by RBI with reference to the bank’s financial position as on March 31, 2019, the Inspection Report pertaining thereto and examination of all related correspondence revealed, inter alia, that the bank had not complied with the RBI directions on ensuring end use of funds in borrowal accounts and classification of loans/ advances as non-performing assets, specific direction of RBI for ensuring that the bank’s balance sheet and profit & loss account are signed by at least three of it’s directors in accordance with section 29 read with section 56 of the Act (despite having noted to ensure such compliance) and the provisions of section 31 read with section 56 of the Act. In furtherance to the same, a notice was issued to the bank advising it to show cause as to why penalty should not be imposed for contravention of the RBI directions and the provisions of the Act.

After considering the bank’s replies to the notice and oral submissions made during the personal hearing, RBI came to the conclusion that the charge of non-compliance with the aforesaid RBI directions and provisions of the Act was substantiated and warranted imposition of monetary penalty, to the extent of non-compliance with such directions and provisions of the Act.

(Yogesh Dayal)     
Chief General Manager

Press Release: 2021-2022/1100

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Central Bank of India reports 55% y-o-y rise in second quarter net profit

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Central Bank of India (CBoI) reported a 55 per cent year-on-year (yoy) rise in its second quarter net profit at ₹250 crore against ₹161 crore in the year ago period, buoyed by lower loan loss provisions, write-back in provisions for standard assets, among others.

The public sector bank’s net interest income (difference between interest earned and interest expended) was up about 6 per cent y-o-y to ₹2,495 crore (₹2,354 crore in the year ago period).

Total non-interest income, comprising fee-based income, treasury income and other receipts edged up 1.55 per cent y-o-y to ₹720 crore (₹709 crore).

Loan loss provisions declined 56 per cent y-o-y to ₹311 crore (₹707 crore). The bank received a write-back of ₹394 crore from provisions it made towards standard assets (against ₹33 crore provision it had made under this head). Income tax provision was also lower at ₹103 crore (₹193 crore).

Slippages

Fresh slippages were higher at ₹2,104 crore (₹1,281 crore in the first quarter). Reduction in non-performing assets (NPAs), including via upgradation, recovery (including sale to asset reconstruction company), regular write-off, stood at ₹2,781 crore (₹2,790 crore).

Gross NPAs improved to 15.52 per cent of gross advances as on September-end 2021 against 15.92 per cent as on June-end 2021. Net NPAs also improved to 4.51 per cent of net advances as against 5.09 per cent.

The bank seems to be closer to being brought out of the Reserve Bank of India’s prompt corrective action (PCA) framework as it is no longer in breach of any of the four risk thresholds (capital, asset quality, profitability and leverage), going by the numbers in the analyst presentation.

Total advances declined about 1 per cent y-o-y to ₹1,75,594 crore. The lender said it had done a technical write-off (two) of advances of ₹4,810 crore during quarter-ended March 2021. If this was not done, then figure of advances as on September-end 2021 would have been ₹1,80,404 crore, with y-o-y growth of 1.75 per cent.

Total deposits increased by 4 per cent y-o-y to ₹3,36,500 crore. The share of low-cost CASA deposits increased to 49.79 per cent of total deposits from 47.72 per cent in the year ago period.

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