Reserve Bank of India – Speeches

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Good morning.

1. Fintech, or technology that provides digital financial services is transforming the provision and delivery of financial services. At its most basic level digital technology enables speed – speed in processing information and speed in communication. Processing speed has reduced cost and time for transactions while communication speed has enhanced connectivity of systems expanding the reach of transactions. Taken together, digital technology is changing the way financial services are organised and financial products are delivered.

2. Digital innovation has, for example, enabled fast payments systems like UPI and IMPS. Instantaneous communication and the ability to process large databases has enabled use of Aadhar for transaction authentication which in turn has made it possible to effect large scale Government transfers instantaneously and directly into the bank accounts of beneficiaries. eKYC has contributed to safety of on-line payments. P2P Lending or Crowdfunding platforms are gaining popularity in substituting for bank credit. Technology such as AI/ML has been used in such diverse areas as investment advice, fraud detection, HelpDesks etc. High Frequency Trading has changed the way financial markets function.

3. Notwithstanding these benefits, it is important to appreciate the limitations of technology. To understand this, let us break down the essence of financial intermediation – between savers in an economy (basically households) and borrowers. The core part of this financial intermediation is done by banks – through accepting deposits, extending credit and enabling payments. Since virtually all money (other than currency) is held as bank deposits, banks are at the centre of the payments system. This basic intermediation structure is overlaid by other institutions. Financial markets enable direct transfer of funds from savers to borrowers, bypassing banks to that extent. Entities like insurance companies, pension funds and asset management companies assume varied degrees of importance in financial markets as alternatives to intermediation by banks. In all these cases, funds eventually are held in a bank account.

4. Now that we understand how banks intermediate funds, we can identify the defining character of intermediation – banks bridge gaps in space and time between savers and borrowers. The spatial gap occurs when a saver and a borrower do not know each other, or are in different locations. The temporal gap occurs when the needs of the borrower and the lender arise at different points in time – borrower needs money after a month but the saver has money now. This later gap is bridged by banks through provision of liquidity services – a bank would take a deposit from the saver now and lend to the borrower after one month. Banks are uniquely placed to provide this service because they can create money and credit and thereby act as liquidity providers to the economy.

5. Similarly, in the field of payments, the area in finance where fintech is the most impactful, banks are uniquely placed since all digital payments transactions are transfer of money from one bank account to another. All other payment service providers facilitate transfer of money from one bank account to another, and in that sense play a supporting role.

6. Now it is easier to see why financial technology, while it can improve the efficiency of intermediation, cannot replace the core nature of financial intermediation. It can bridge the spatial gap but not the temporal gap, in our terminology. For instance, one would still need a bank to warehouse the liquidity risk as no other entity can create credit and money. Put another way, any fintech entity that provides such liquidity services is effectively functioning as a bank and therefore should be subjected to the same legal/regulatory/supervisory regime that a bank is subjected to. This is one reason why in almost all countries, entities other than banks are not allowed to directly deal in deposit or deposit-like money.

7. This understanding of the limitations of technology prepares us better to manage the change that fintech is causing in banking and finance. It would also enable an effective approach to regulating fintech and the fast-mutating financial system.

8. The benefits of technology in improving efficiency and reach of the financial system, as well as the concomitant benefits for economic growth and financial inclusion call for a systematic non-disruptive adoption and encouragement of such technology in the financial system. Because FinTech can improve the efficiency of intermediation by driving down costs, sachetising of products and services, improving customer service and expanding the reach of financial services, it poses a challenge to the incumbents and forces them to adapt or change the way financial intermediation takes place. The ideal approach is for FinTech companies to be considered as enablers and partners by banks or other financial institutions. Competition for banks comes not from FinTech firms but from other banks which leverage FinTech better.

Regulation of Fintech

9. As fintech is transforming the financial landscape, the nature of regulation has to adjust. The sheer diversity in the functions performed by fintech firms, necessitates a widening of the regulatory perimeter. The approach to regulation also needs to adapt to the type of entity being regulated. While similar activities should attract uniform regulation in most cases, such activity based regulation might be less effective than entity-based regulation when one is dealing with financial activities by bigtech firms. Cybersecurity risks are likely to overshadow financial risks for all. Systemic risks, operational risks and risks affecting competition are of prime importance when dealing with large financial market infrastructure entities or bigtech. Countries need to overcome the legislative and regulatory deficits in dealing with concerns surrounding privacy, safety and monetisation of data. Regulations pertaining to data issues needs to adapt to a world where boundaries between financial and non-financial firms is getting increasingly blurred or geographical boundaries are no longer a constraint. (BIS Papers No 117 33)

10. It is virtually impossible for legislation to keep in step with the fast mutating fintech landscape. Until legislation catches up, regulation has to adapt to ensure that the financial system absorbs digital innovation in a non-disruptive manner. Regulation is sometimes defined as the process of slowing down change to give time for a system to adapt and evolve. The job of the regulator is not easy when a given financial service, performed by well-regulated financial firms, changes to include non-financial firms in a constantly reconfiguring financial value chain. Similarly, there are frictions for a non-financial firm to get used to financial regulation. The social benefits of a new technology or its impact on customer needs to be well understood by all stakeholders – regulators, existing financial firms as well as innovating fintech entities. Slowing down the process of change, which attracts the criticism of stifling innovation – is often the best way to ensure customer protection.

11. As digitisation is promoted by public policy, the industry is often characterized by the rise of dominating entities, whether bigtech or infrastructural entities. This raises competition and concentration risks. There is no clear answer to how such issues are to be resolved – limits on market share, for example, might open up the market to new players but it could also stifle incentives to innovators. Regulators also need to improvise to address single-point-of-failure risks arising from market concentration, as much as they need to be alert to new points of failure arising from shifting value chains.

The Indian Experience

12. The approach to regulation taken by the Reserve Bank has been to create the environment where digital innovation can thrive. This involved, to begin with, taking the initiative to set up the basic infrastructural entities which provided the rails on which innovative products can run – IDRBT and NPCI, to name two. Regulation sought actively to facilitate wider participation to include non-banks (e.g. mobile wallets issued by non-banks) and increase interoperability among different payment systems. Popular participation is created through making transactions simple and convenient, keeping costs low and minimising risks to customer (2FA or AFA, positive confirmation, user-friendly switch-on-switch-off facility on card-not-present or on-line transactions etc). Data storage requirements aim to promote data safety and privacy. Customer data protection from cybercrime is being ensured through minimizing vulnerable access points in the system through encouraging tokenisation.

13. As the digital payments landscape is maturing, RBI’s regulatory attention is shifting to the next level of reforms. Upscaling of supporting infrastructure like RTGS and NEFT to be available round-the-clock not only improves choices for customers and businesses alike, they enhance the availability to non-banks and reduce settlement risk of satellite payments systems.

14. A customer protection framework with limited liability for customers, online dispute resolution, digital ombudsman scheme, etc., are unique developmental initiatives. We have also benchmarked our payment systems with global best practices. These efforts have led to India reporting one of the lowest digital payment fraud rates across the globe.

15. To foster innovation, the Reserve Bank has come out with enabling framework for Regulatory Sandbox with the objective of fostering orderly and responsible innovation in financial services, promoting efficiency and bringing benefit to consumers. A Reserve Bank Innovation Hub (RBIH) has been set up to promote innovation across the financial sector by creating an enabling ecosystem where academics, technology, finance and regulators are brought together.

16. Rapid technological transformation of the financial sector has led to some peculiar challenges. One can witness a degree of friction in compliance, not characteristic of a typically well-regulated financial system. Regulatory initiatives, especially those intended for customer convenience or safety, often face opposition. Resistance to change is couched under the excuse of customer convenience. There was a strong push-back when the Reserve Bank introduced 2FA, about a decade back, although everyone cites it today as a unique success story in India’s payment evolution. Nonetheless, one can see a persistent tendency to oppose customer friendly reforms – e.g., the introduction of tokenisation to limit storage points of card credentials for customer safety, or to ensure 2FA for recurring transactions. We would only be able to reach a thriving and mature payments system if, over time, all stakeholders attach due importance to long-term improvements over short-term gains and internalise mature practices like informed consent and transparency of data usage.

17. Notwithstanding these niggles, we have come a long way in promoting digital innovations. The JAM trinity has achieved levels of financial inclusion unimaginable for a country the size of India. Small businesses and vendors have started adapting to digital payments. Yet digital penetration is limited largely to urban and metro areas. We need technological solutions to increase penetration to the vast sections of the population which is unbanked and lacks a smartphone. Promising options have been identified through the sandbox mechanism and efforts are on to mainstream those technologies.

18. While digital payments have become instantaneous within the country, the environment for cross-border payments has pretty much stagnated for decades. The factors cited are usually the following – need for exchange rates, time-zone differences, varying regulatory and legal requirements across different jurisdictions etc. Fintech can surely solve these frictions – platform-based solutions can make real time price discovery possible even for retail sized transactions. CBDCs, if both countries have it, can make time zone differences disappear by replacing bank settlements with currency delivery which can take place even if the payment systems are closed.

19. Another area where fintech holds promise is to prevent digital frauds, which has become apparent as the pace of digital penetration has outstripped development of awareness. Digital Frauds1: Incidents of digital frauds risen during the pandemic. Data from American consumer credit reporting agency TransUnion has found that fraudsters are ramping up their efforts in the financial services industry. When comparing the last four months of 2020 (Sep 1 – Dec 31) and the first four months of 2021 (Jan 1 – May 1), the company found that the share of suspected digital fraud attempts originating from India against financial services businesses had increased by 89 per cent. Globally, financial services fraud attempts increased 149 per cent. Clearly, both regulators and other stakeholders have to play their respective roles effectively to ensure that innovation in the fintech space continues to support India’s economic growth.

20. To sum up, the fintech landscape can be described in Dickensian terms – we are in the best of times, with the promise of technological innovation in finance and hope of substantial efficiency gains, better customer experience and greater social welfare. But we also need to deal with threats of online frauds, compromise of customer credentials and data privacy and safety for the spring of hope not to turn into the winter of despair.


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Reserve Bank of India – Tenders

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Reserve Bank of India invites competitive e-tenders/ e-bids for providing Design, Supply, Installation, Testing and Commissioning of a passenger lift (Capacity – 6 Persons), G+3, Machine room less Electrical Lift in Annex Building of the Bank at Thiruvananthapuram from eligible bidders as per the specified pre-qualification criteria. The estimated cost of the work is Rs.13.50 lakh. All the Pre-Qualification papers shall be uploaded on MSTC site.

2. The tenderers shall pay as Earnest Money a sum of ₹27,000.00/- (Rupees Twenty seven thousand only) through NEFT or by a demand draft or Bank Guarantee in a form (Annexure-3) valid for 6 months, acceptable to the Bank in favor of Reserve Bank of India drawn on a scheduled bank along with Part I of the tender or by 1.00 PM of October 21, 2021. The Earnest Money Deposit of the successful tenderer shall be released without any interest on issue of virtual completion certificate and submission of Performance Bank Guarantee. The Earnest Money Deposit of unsuccessful tenderer shall be released to them without any interest after award of work.

3. Online tenders will be allowed to be viewed/ downloaded by all firms after 17:00 Hrs of September 28, 2021. The firms which do not comply with the following pre-qualification criteria and/ or do not submit EMD will not be considered for opening of their tender Part-II.

i. The intending bidder must have minimum 5 years of experience in carrying out similar nature of works viz. “Design, Supply, Installation, Testing and Commissioning of Passenger Lifts at residential Quarters/ office buildings/ commercial premises.

ii. The intending bidder must have executed successfully “Design, supply, Installation, Testing and commissioning of Passenger lifts at residential Quarters/ office buildings/commercial premises, during last five years ending on or before August 31, 2021 as under:

(a) Three works each costing not less than the amount equal to 40% of the estimated cost

OR

(b) Two works each costing not less than the amount equal to 50% of the estimated cost

OR

(c) One work costing not less than the amount equal to 80% of the estimated cost.

iii. Minimum yearly turnover of 100% of the estimated cost during last 3 financial years, ending March 31, 2021, supported by audited financial statements.

iv. The bidder should have at least one ongoing contract of DSITC of Passenger lifts as on the last date of submission of tender.

v. Should have proper service setup in Thiruvananthapuram

4. The contractors shall submit the scanned copies of the following information/documents in e-tendering portal.

(a) Composition of the firm Full particulars (whether contractor is an individual or a partnership firm or a company etc.,) of the composition of the firm of contractors in details should be submitted along with name(s) and address(es), of the partner’s copy of the Articles of Association/ Power of Attorney/ another relevant document.
(b) Work experience & Completion of similar works of specified value during the specified period Copies of the detailed work orders for the qualifying works (2. (ii) and 2.(iv) above) indicating date of award, value of awarded work, time given for completing the work, etc. and the corresponding completion certificates indicating actual date of completion and actual value of executed similar works should be enclosed in proof of the work experience. The details along with documentary evidence of previous experience, if any, of carrying out works for the Reserve Bank of India at any Centre, should also be given.
(c) Turnover Copies of Audited financial statements for last three financial years i.e. 2018-19, 2019-20 and 2020-21 along with a certificate of Chartered Accountant indicating the turnover for these financial years.
(d) Credit worthiness of the contractor and their turnover during the specified period Copies of the Income Tax Clearance Certificates/ Income Tax Assessment Orders along with the latest final accounts of the business of the contractor duly certified by a Chartered Accountant should be enclosed in proof of their creditworthiness and turnover for last three years.
(e) Name(s) and address(es) of the Bankers and their present contact executives Written Information about the names and addresses of their bankers along with full details, like names, postal addresses, e-mail IDs, telephone (landline and mobile) nos., fax nos., etc. of the contact executives (i.e. the persons who can be contacted at the office of their bankers by the Bank, in case it is so needed) should be furnished.
(f) Details of bank accounts Full particulars of their bank accounts, like account no. type, when opened etc., should be given.
(g) Name(s) and address(es) of the Clients and their present contact executives Written information about the names and addresses of their clients along with full details, like names, postal addresses, e-mail IDs, telephone (landline and mobile) nos., fax nos. etc., of the contact executives (i.e. the persons who can be contacted at the office of their clients by the Bank in case it is so needed) should be furnished.
(h) Details of completed works (Annex 6) The client-wise names of work(s), year(s) of execution of work (s), awarded and actual cost (s) of executed work (s), completion time stipulated in the contract (s) and actual time taken to complete the work (s), Name(s) and full contact-details of the officers/authorities/departments under whom the work(s) was/were executed should be furnished.
(i) Details of office setup Address and contact details of the office set up in Thiruvananthapuram.
(j) Details of registration and copies of registration certificate/ documents for PAN
GST
Micro and Small Enterprises (MSE) GOI, if applicable,
Office of Labour Commissioner, if applicable.

5. In the event of intending bidder’s failure to satisfy the Bank on pre-qualification, the Bank reserves the right to not allow him to participate in the tendering process.

6. A pre-bid meeting (off-line mode) of the intending bidders will be held at 11:00 hrs. on October 05, 2021 at Estate Department, Main Office Building, Reserve Bank of India, Thiruvananthapuram. The duly filled in tender documents shall be uploaded on MSTC site by 14:00 Hrs. of October 21, 2021.

7. (a) Tender forms can be downloaded for viewing from the website www.mstcecommerce.com From 17:00 Hrs of September 28, 2021 onwards.

(b) EMD of ₹27,000.00/- (Rupees Twenty Seven thousand only) through NEFT or in the form of Demand Draft or an irrevocable Bank Guarantee issued by a scheduled Bank in the Bank’s standard proforma which is available in the tender form (Annex – 3).

(c) Tenderers shall submit all the information and the documents as mentioned in Para 3 above.

After examination, if any of the bidder is found not to possess the required eligibility, their tenders will not be accepted by the Bank for further processing.

8. Part I of the tenders will be opened at 15:00 Hrs. of October 21, 2021. Part-II (Price bid) shall be opened of the eligible bidders on a subsequent date which will be intimated to the eligible bidders in advance.

9. The applicants/ tenderers have to upload

a. Client’s certificate as per format at Annex- 7 from their clients for whom they have carried out “eligible works” in terms of the eligibility (Pre-qualification) criteria explained in this notice.

b. Banker’s certificate as per format at Annex – 8 from their banker/bankers.

The client’s certificate shall be accepted only when the same is signed by an official of the rank of Executive engineer/Superintendent Engineer or equivalent in respect of a Government/Semi Government organization or a PSU and only when they are supported by adequate proof of payment received by the contractor for the work done by him. The client’s certificate issued by the private organizations shall also accompany Tax Deducted at Source (TDS) certificates. Applications/tenders uploaded without the above certificates may be rejected. The Bank shall have the right to independently verify these certificates.

The Bank shall evaluate the said reports before processing the tenders and opening of price bid of the tenders. If any bidder is not found to possess the required eligibility for participating in the tendering process at any point of time and/or his performance reports received from his clients and/or his bankers are found unsatisfactory, the Bank reserves the right to reject his offer even after opening of Part-I of the tender. The Bank is not bound to assign any reason for doing so.

10. Any amendments / corrigendum to the tender, if any, issued in future will only be notified on the RBI Website and MSTC Website as given above.

11. The Bank is not bound to accept the lowest tender and reserves the right to accept either in full or in part any tender. The Bank also reserves the right to reject all the tenders without assigning any reason there for.

The Schedule of e-Tender is as follows:

a. e-Tender Name Supply, Installation, Testing and Commissioning of a Passenger Lift (Capacity – 6 Persons) at Amenities Block at Reserve bank of India, Thiruvananthapuram.
b. e-Tender no RBI/Thiruvananthapuram/Estate/132/21-22/ET/178
c. Estimated Cost Rs 13.50 lakh
d. Mode of Tender e-Procurement System
Online Part I – Techno-Commercial Bid and Part II – Price Bid through (www.mstcecommerce.com/eprochome/rbi)
e. Date of NIT available to parties to download 17.00 Hrs onwards on September 28, 2021
f. Pre-Bid meeting 11.00 Hrs on October 05, 2021
g. Earnest Money Deposit Details for NEFT for EMD Payment of ₹27,000.00/-
Beneficiary Name: ESTATE(space)LIFT(space)Your Firm’s Name
Beneficiary Ac No: 8614038
IFSC: RBIS0THPA01
Remarks: ESTATE LIFT

OR

₹27,000.00/- (Rupees Twenty Seven Thousand Only) in the form of DD / BG (as per Annexure 3) in favour of Reserve Bank of India, Thiruvananthapuram, to be deposited in original at Estate Department, RBI, Thiruvananthapuram before 13.00 Hrs on October 21, 2021

h. Date of Starting of e-Tender for submission of on line Techno-Commercial Bid and price Bid at www.mstcecommerce.com/eprochome/rbi 17.00 Hrs on October 06, 2021
i. Last date of submission of EMD 13.00 Hrs on October 21, 2021
j. Date of closing of online e-tender for submission of Techno-Commercial Bid & Price Bid 14.00 Hrs on October 21, 2021
k. Date & time of Opening of Part I of e-Tender 15.00 Hrs on October 21, 2021
l. Date & Time of opening of Part- II (Financial Bid) Opening of Financial Bid shall be intimated separately
m. Transaction Fee To be paid through MSTC Payment Gateway/ NEFT/ RTGS in favour of MSTC Limited or as advised by M/s MSTC Ltd.

Regional Director for Kerala and Lakshadweep

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3 Best Aggressive Hybrid Funds To Consider In 2021 With 1 Year Returns Over 70%

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BOI AXA Mid & Small Cap Equity & Debt Fund

This aggressive hybrid mutual fund scheme was launched by the fund house BOI AXA Mutual Fund in the year 2016 and hence has been in existence for the last 5 years. According to Value Research, the recent 1-year returns of the BOI AXA Mid & Small Cap Equity & Debt Fund Direct-Growth are 70.79 percent, and the fund has generated 18.19 percent average annual returns since its inception.

The fund now has an equity allocation of 86.70 percent and a debt exposure of 8.2 percent. The fund’s expense ratio is 1.9 percent, which is higher than the expense ratios of most other funds in the same category. The fund has major equity allocation across Chemicals, Technology, Healthcare, Financial, Automobile sectors.

The fund’s top-performing holdings are ICICI Securities Primary Dealership Ltd., Computer Age Management Services Ltd., Persistent Systems Ltd., APL Apollo Tubes Ltd., Astral Poly Technik Ltd.. In terms of rating, the fund has got a 1 or 5-star rating by CRISIL, 3 star by Value Research and 4 star by Morningstar.

As of 27th September 2021, the Net Asset Value (NAV) of the fund is Rs 23.81 and has an Asset Under Management (AUM) of Rs 345.29 Cr. The fund charges an exit load of 1% if purchased units of more than 10% are redeemed within 12 months of the investment date. With a minimum amount of Rs 1,000 one can start SIP in this fund.

Kotak Equity Hybrid Fund Direct-Growth

Kotak Equity Hybrid Fund Direct-Growth

This fund has been in existence for the last 6 years having been launched in the year 2014 by the fund house Kotak Mahindra Mutual Fund. According to Value Research, Kotak Equity Hybrid Fund Direct-Growth returns over the previous year are 54.77 percent, and it has generated 14.52 percent average annual returns since its commencement.

The fund now has a 73.80 percent allocation towards equity and a 15.00 percent exposure towards debt. The fund’s expense ratio is 0.79 percent, which is lower than the expense ratio of most other funds in the same category. The fund has a large equity exposure across Financial, Technology, Construction, Energy, Healthcare sectors.

As of now, the top 5 holdings of the fund are ICICI Bank Ltd., Infosys Ltd., HDFC Bank Ltd., GOI, State Bank of India. The fund has been rated 1 or 5 star by CRISIL, 4 star by Value Research and again a 4 star rating by Morningstar which simply indicates how well the fund has performed since its launch.

The fund’s Net Asset Value (NAV) is Rs 43.68 as of September 27, 2021, and its Asset Under Management (AUM) is Rs 1,986.17 Cr. Kotak Equity Hybrid Fund Direct-Growth fund charges an exit load of 1% and investors can start SIP in this fund with Rs 1,000 per month.

PGIM India Hybrid Equity Fund-Growth

PGIM India Hybrid Equity Fund-Growth

This aggressive hybrid scheme was launched by the fund house PGIM India Mutual Fund in the year 2004 and thus is in existence for the last 17 years. According to Value Research, PGIM India Hybrid Equity Fund-Growth returns over the previous year have been 46.73 percent, with an average annual return of 13.86 percent since its debut.

The fund currently has a 76.00 percent equity allocation and a 13.10 percent debt exposure. The fund has a 2.42 percent expense ratio, which is more than most other Aggressive Hybrid products. The fund invests heavily in the financial, chemical, energy, engineering, and construction sectors. PGIM Jennison Global Equity Opportunities Fund, Reliance Industries Ltd., HDFC Bank Ltd., GOI, and Kotak Mahindra Bank Ltd. are the fund’s top five holdings.

The fund has been ranked 1 star by CRISIL, 2 star by Value Research and again a 2 star from Morningstar which investors should and should keep in mind before investing. The fund charges an exit load of 0.5% if units in excess of 10% are redeemed within 90 days of the purchased date.

As of 27th September 2021, the fund has a NAV of Rs 16.36 and an AUM of Rs 138.98 Cr. According to Value Research, one can make a minimum SIP investment of Rs 1,000 in this fund.

Top Rated Aggressive Hybrid Funds In 2021

Top Rated Aggressive Hybrid Funds In 2021

Based on the ranking of 1 or 5 star given by CRISIL, here are the 3 Aggressive Hybrid Funds that you can consider to start SIP in 2021.

Funds 1 mth returns 6 mth returns 1 yr returns 3 yr returns 5 yr returns
BOI AXA Mid & Small Cap Equity & Debt Fund 5.21% 35.36% 70.79% 22.61% 17.49%
Kotak Equity Hybrid Fund Direct-Growth 4.30% 18.02% 54.77% 20.42% 14.76%
PGIM India Hybrid Equity Fund-Growth 5.03% 21.93% 46.73% 14.36% 10.69%
Source: Groww

Disclaimer

Disclaimer

The views and investment tips expressed by authors or employees of Greynium Information Technologies, should not be construed as investment advice to buy or sell stocks, gold, currency, or other commodities. Investors should certainly not take any trading and investment decision based only on information discussed on GoodReturns.in We are not a qualified financial advisor and any information herein is not investment advice. It is informational in nature. All readers and investors should note that neither Greynium nor the author of the articles, would be responsible for any decision taken based on these articles. 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 GoodReturns.in



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Reserve Bank of India – Press Releases

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In terms of GOI Notification F.No. 4(19)-W&M/2014 dated March 04, 2016 (SGB 2016 II- Issue date March 29, 2016) and Notification F.No. 4(7)-W&M/2016 dated August 29, 2016 (SGB 2016-17, Series II- Issue date September 30, 2016) of Sovereign Gold Bond (SGB) Scheme, premature redemption of Gold Bond may be permitted after fifth year from the date of issue of such Gold Bond on the date on which interest is payable. Therefore, the forthcoming due dates of premature redemption of the above tranches shall be September 29 and 30, 2021 respectively. Further, the redemption price of SGB shall be based on the simple average closing gold price of 999 purity [published by the India Bullion and Jewellers Association Ltd (IBJA)] of the week (Monday-Friday) preceding the date of redemption.

2. Accordingly, the redemption price for the premature redemption due on September 29 and 30, 2021 shall be ₹4652/- (Rupees Four thousand six hundred fifty-two only) per unit of SGB based on the simple average of closing gold price for the week September 20-24, 2021.

Ajit Prasad
Director   

Press Release: 2021-2022/945

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NPCI, YES Bank launch RuPay On-the-Go

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The National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI) has partnered with YES Bank to launch a contactless payments solutions — RuPay On-the-Go.

This was launched on Tuesday in association with fintech infrastructure partner, Neokred, and manufacturing partner- Seshaasai at the Global Fintech Festival 2021.

“RuPay On-the-Go will allow customers to make small and large value transactions from the accessories they wear every day. This innovative wearable payment solution would redefine the contactless payments space by eliminating the need to carry a physical card and enabling instantaneous payments with a simple ‘Tap, pay, go’ mechanism,” said a statement.

RuPay On-the-Go is an interoperable, open-loop solution that customers can use at RuPay contactless-enabled PoS at retail outlets and pay up to Rs 5,000 without the need to input the PIN. For payments above Rs 5,000, customers need to tap, followed by their PIN.

For online transactions, the BHIM YES Pay app provides a virtual RuPay card to customers that can be used for digital and e-commerce transactions, the statement further said.

“The wearable tech space is an integral part of driving contactless payments, and we are working toward building a secure and inclusive payments ecosystem with our partners,” said Praveena Rai, COO, NPCI.

Consumers without an existing YES Bank account can also avail of these wearables.

Anita Pai, COO, YES Bank said, “The RuPay On-the-Go smart accessories, such as keychains with tap-and-pay functionality, will enable customers to make digital payments securely, more easily and in style.”

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Reserve Bank of India – Tenders

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Reserve Bank of India, Jaipur invites e-Tender for Supply, Installation, Testing, Commissioning of Chilled Water cassette type and hi-wall type air conditioning units and associated piping at basement area of office Building at RBI, Jaipur. The tendering would be done through the e-Tendering portal of MSTC Ltd (http://mstcecommerce.com/eprochome/rbi). All the eligible firms /contractors must register themselves with MSTC Ltd through the above-mentioned website to participate in the tendering process. The Schedule of e-Tender is as follows:

a. e-Tender Name Supply, Installation, Testing, Commissioning of Chilled Water cassette type and hi-wall type air conditioning units and associated piping at basement area of office Building at RBI, Jaipur
b. e-Tender no RBI/Jaipur/Estate/129/21-22/ET/175
c. Mode of Tender e-Procurement System
(Online Part I – Techno-Commercial Bid and Part II – Price Bid through www.mstcecommerce.com/eprochome/rbi)
d. Date of NIT available to parties to download September 28, 2021 after 05.00 PM
e. Earnest Money Deposit Rs 12,200 (Rs. Twelve thousand  two hundred only) through NEFT – details as below along with the Part I / Technical – Commercial Bid. IFSC Code – RBIS0JPPA01 A/c number – 8692299
(Fifth digit in IFSC code is zero)
f. Last date of submission of EMD October 29, 2021 up to 14.00 Hrs
EMD must be reflected in our account before the last date and time (October 29, 2021 up to 14.00 Hrs) of submission of tender.
MSE firms are exempted for submitting of EMD subject to submission of relevant certificate.
g. Date of Starting of e-Tender for submission of on line Techno-Commercial Bid and price Bid at www.mstcecommerce.com/eprochome/rbi September 28, 2021 after 05.00 PM
h. Date of closing of online e-tender for submission of Techno-Commercial Bid & Price Bid October 29, 2021 up to 14.00 Hrs
i. Date & time of opening of Part-I
(i.e. Techno-Commercial Bid)

Date & Time of opening of Part-II
(i.e. Price Bid)

October 29, 2021 at 15.00 Hrs.

Date and time of opening of price bid will be informed separately to all the eligible bidders later.

j. Transaction Fee To be paid through MSTC Payment Gateway/NEFT/RTGS in favour of MSTC Limited or as advised by M/s MSTC Ltd.
k. Helpline 033 40645207, 033 40609118, 033 40645316, 033 22901004, 033 22895064 and 0141-2742208.
l. E-mail for query helpdesk@mstcindia.co.in

Please note that there is no tender fees to download the tender document from Portal.

Applicants intending to apply will have to satisfy the Bank by furnishing documentary evidence in support of their possessing required eligibility and in the event of their failure to do so, the Bank reserves the right to reject their candidature.

Any amendments / corrigendum to the tender, if any, issued in future will only be notified on the RBI Website and MSTC Website as given above and will not be published in the newspaper.

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Far-right cryptocurrency follows ideology across borders, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The Daily Stormer website advocates for the purity of the white race, posts hate-filled, conspiratorial screeds against Blacks, Jews and women and has helped inspire at least three racially motivated murders. It has also made its founder, Andrew Anglin, a millionaire.

Anglin has tapped a worldwide network of supporters to take in at least 112 Bitcoin since January 2017 – worth $4.8 million at today’s exchange rate – according to data shared with The Associated Press. He’s likely raised even more.

Anglin is just one very public example of how radical right provocateurs are raising significant amounts of money from around the world through cryptocurrencies. Banned by traditional financial institutions, they have taken refuge in digital currencies, which they are using in ever more secretive ways to avoid the oversight of banks, regulators and courts, finds an AP analysis of legal documents, Telegram channels and blockchain data from Chainalysis, a cryptocurrency analytics firm.

Anglin owes more than $18 million in legal judgments in the United States to people whom he and his followers harassed and threatened. And while online, he remains visible – most days, dozens of stories on the Daily Stormer homepage carry his name – in the real world, Anglin’s a ghost.

His victims have tried – and failed – to find him, searching at one Ohio address after another. Voting records place him in Russia in 2016 and his passport shows he was in Cambodia in 2017. After that, the public trail goes cold. He has no obvious bank accounts or real estate holdings in the U.S. For now, his Bitcoin fortune remains out of reach.



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Indonesia to regulate cryptocurrencies and not prohibit it like China, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The Indonesian minister for trade, Muhammad Luthfi confirmed to the local media Berita Satu about tightening cryptocurrencies regulations rather than prohibiting it like China. He said that Indonesia will focus on making cryptomarket less susceptible to illegal activities, Bitcoin.com reported

The statement from the Indonesian minister comes in the wake of stupendous growth registered by local exchanges in the first half of the year owing to the flourishing cryptocurrency market for 1 and a half years.

  • The report shows a 40 percent hike in transactions from 13 crypto exchanges in the first 5 months of 2021.
  • These crypto exchanges are regulated by the Futures Exchange Supervisory board.
  • The transaction volume reached $4.5 billion in 2020.
  • Crypto trading users also increased to 6.5 million in May 2021 from 4 million in 2020. This is more than the investors in Indonesia stock exchange (IDX) at just 5.37 million in May, according to Jakarta post.

China’s continued campaign against crypto trading and the final ban on 24th September affected Indonesian crypto prices too Currently Bitcoin, Ethereum and Dogecoin are legalized assets and commodities in Indonesia which can be traded by the citizens but can’t be used as a means of payment.

Major Indonesian exchange Luno Indonesia‘s manager expressed confidence in future growth of the customer base from the current 70,000 users.



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HC rejects bail pleas of Rana Kapoor’s wife, daughters, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The Bombay High Court Tuesday rejected bail pleas filed by jailed banker Rana Kapoor’s wife Bindu Kapoor and their daughters Roshini and Radha Kapoor Khanna in a case of alleged fraud caused to Yes Bank Ltd (YBL).

Kapoor is the cofounder of YBL who was arrested in the said matter in March, 2020.

Justice Bharati Dangre, after hearing all the parties had posted the matter today for the pronouncement of the order. The court gave an oral in the said matter.

The Kapoors, in three identical but separate bail pleas, challenged a special Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) court order that rejected their bail applications and remanded them to judicial custody.

The trio since then have been lodged at Byculla district jail in Mumbai.

As per the CBI, Rana Kapoor and his family members had allegedly received kickbacks of around Rs 600 crore for an investment of Rs 3,700 crore made by Yes Bank in DHFL’s debentures.

Counsels appearing for Bindu Kapoor and her two daughters argued that they have so far extended fullest cooperation to CBI and was not arrested during the investigation.

“On August 20, 2021, the trial court took cognizance of various non-bailable offences and summoned applicants to appear before it as an accused. The applicants immediately submitted to its jurisdiction by appearing personally on September 4, 2021, and moved a bail application in terms of Section 439 of CrPC,” argued counsel for the Bindu Kapoor.

However, special counsel Hiten Venegaonkar, appearing for the investigation agencies countered this argument and said that the CBI court had already considered all these submissions before rejecting the plea.

Senior Advocate Amit Desai appeared for Roshini Kapoor in the case, while Mahesh Jethmalani, senior advocate argued for Bindu Kapoor and Radha Kapoor Khanna in the case.

“The interest of the investigation agencies stand protected as the Enforcement Directorate (ED) has attached properties and bank accounts of the applicant to the tune of Rs 600 crore under various provisional attachment orders,” argued the petition filed by Radha Kapoor Khanna.

“Special Judge failed to consider that the applicant has been granted bail in the PMLA case arising out of the current FIR in the same facts and circumstances,” Khanna’s petition said.

The special court, while rejecting their bail petitions, had observed that the trio are involved in the wrongful loss of public money to the tune of Rs 4,000 crore, which belongs to the public at large, including bank depositors and shareholders.



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