Regulatory bite gets sharper for banks and non-banks

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


The regulatory bite is getting sharper for regulated entities (REs), including banks and non-banks, with business restrictions being imposed by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) on those not complying with its regulations, going by its recent actions. Recalcitrant REs will have to banish the thought of getting off lightly by just paying monetary penalties.

Business restriction can prove to be a more potent tool to make a non-compliant RE fall in line with regulations vis-a-vis monetary penalty as it will hurt the RE more.

RBI Governor Shaktikanta Das, in an interaction with BusinessLine, emphasised that supervision of regulated entities has been tightened.

“And for the first time, we are not confining ourselves to monetary penalty (for regulatory violations). We are also imposing business restrictions. Some ₹1 crore monetary penalty here, ₹2 crore there, how does it matter? So, we are entering into business restrictions. We are answerable to the public,” he said.

Also see: Monetary penalty imposed on five payment system operators

Imposition on UCBs

Das likened the business restrictions on banks and non-banks to All Inclusive Directions (AID) imposed by the RBI on some of the urban co-operative banks (UCBs). AID is imposed on UCBs to arrest further deterioration in their financial health and protect depositors’ interest.

“In the case of co-operative banks, once we impose AID, business restrictions are put – they will not accept fresh deposits and cannot grant or renew any loans and advances.

“All those business restrictions, which were earlier confined only to co-operative banks, we are now using it for other entities also. So, this really helps in the enforcement action,” explained Das.

Business restrictions

Last December, RBI directed HDFC Bank to temporarily halt sourcing of new credit card customers as well as launches of digital business generating activities planned under its proposed programme Digital 2.0. However, in a major relief for the private sector bank, the central bank partially lifted the ban, allowing it to issue new credit cards.

RBI barred Mastercard from acquiring new customers (debit, credit or prepaid) from July 22 for not complying with data localisation requirements.

According to RBI’s latest annual report, during the July 2020-March 2021 period, it took enforcement action against 54 REs and imposed an aggregate penalty of ₹19.41 crore for non-compliance with provisions/contravention of certain directions issued by it from time to time through various circulars.

Since April 1, 2015, 52 UCBs (up to December 11, 2020) have been placed under AID by RBI, per the Report on Trend and Progress of Banking in India 2019-20.

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

CBDT extends due dates for electronic filing of various forms

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


With technical glitches in the new Income Tax portal remaining unresolved, the Central Board of Direct Taxes (CBDT) has extended the due date for the filing of certain electronic forms including one relating to Equalization Levy statement, and the form for declaration received from senior citizen account holder among others. These forms are to be filed electronically.

Extensions on forms

According to the board, the Equalization Levy Statement in Form No.1 for the FY21 can now be filed on or before December 30. Earlier, this date was extended to August 31 from June 30.

Banks will have till November 30 to upload declarations received from recipients in Form No.15G/15H during the quarter ended June 30. Earlier the date was extended to August 31.

Normally these declarations are submitted by a senior citizen who does not have PAN to get income tax benefits. Similarly declarations submitted during July-September quarter can now be uploaded on or before December 31.

The application for registration or approval under Section 10(23C), 12A or 80G of the Act in Form No.10AB will now have to be filed on or before March 31 of the next year. These sections help in getting exemption on contributions made to educational institution or charitable institution.

Also see: IT and IT

The Quarterly statement in Form No.15CC to be furnished by authorized dealer in respect of remittances made for the quarter ending on June 30 may be furnished on or before November 30. Intimation to be made by Sovereign Wealth Fund in respect of investments made by it in India in Form II SWF for the quarter ending on June 30 may be made on or before 30th November. The same will be applicable for overseas pension fund.

Intimation by a constituent entity, resident in India, of an international group, the parent entity of which is not resident in India for the purpose of compliance of tax law can now be made on or before December 31. The same date is applicable for a report by a parent entity or an alternate reporting entity or any other constituent entity, resident in India, and for intimation on behalf of an international group.

Vivad Se Viswas

CBDT also announced giving more time for payment of the amount (without any additional amount) under Vivad se Viswas scheme.

According to the board, considering the difficulties faced in issuing and amending Form No.3, a prerequisite for making payment by the declarant under Vivad se Vishwas Act, it has been decided to extend the last date of payment of the amount (without any additional amount) to September 30. Earlier the date was extended to August 31.

It is however clarified that there is no proposal to change the last date for payment of the amount (with additional amount) under the act, which remains as October 31.

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

RBI issues Master Directions on Prepaid Payment Instruments

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


The Reserve Bank of India on Friday issued Master Directions on Prepaid Payment Instruments (PPIs) with fresh classification of the instruments.

“Keeping in view the recent updates to PPI guidelines, it has been decided to issue the Master Directions afresh,” the RBI said.

No entity can set up and operate payment systems for PPIs without prior approval or authorisation of the RBI, it stated.

The master directions classify PPIs in two categories – small PPIs and full KYC PPIs. They were earlier classified as closed systems, semi-closed systems and open system PPIs.

“Small PPIs: Issued by banks and non-banks after obtaining minimum details of the PPI holder. They shall be used only for purchase of goods and services. Funds transfer or cash withdrawal from such PPIs shall not be permitted,” the RBI said.

PPI Classification

Small PPIs can have cash upto ₹10,000 loaded per month, not exceeding ₹1.2 lakh in a year.

Full-KYC PPIs will be issued by banks and non-banks after completing Know Your Customer (KYC) of the PPI holder.

“These PPIs shall be used for the purchase of goods and services, funds transfer or cash withdrawal,” it further said, adding that the amount outstanding shall not exceed ₹2 lakh at any point of time.

The RBI has also said that PPI issuer shall have a board-approved policy for PPI interoperability.

Where PPIs are issued in the form of wallets, interoperability across PPIs should be enabled through UPI. Where PPIs are issued in the form of cards (physical or virtual), the cards should be affiliated to the authorised card networks, it said.

PPI for mass transit systems should remain exempted from interoperability, while Gift PPI issuers (both banks and non-banks) have the option to offer interoperability.

“Interoperability shall be mandatory on the acceptance side as well. QR codes in all modes shall be interoperable by March 31, 2022,” it further said.

The RBI has also said the PPI issuer shall put in place a formal, publicly disclosed customer grievance redressal framework, including designating a nodal officer to handle customer complaints or grievances, the escalation matrix and turn-around-times for complaint resolution.

In the case of PPIs issued by banks and non-banks, customers shall have recourse to the Banking Ombudsman Scheme and Ombudsman Scheme for Digital Transactions respectively for grievance redressal.

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

indiagold to raise $12 mn round from PayU, Alpha Wave Incubation fund

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


indiagold, a gold-focused alternative credit platform, is planning to raise $12 million funding from PayU and Alpha Wave Incubation (AWI) fund. Other investors such as Better Tomorrow Ventures, 3one4 Capital, RainmatterCapital, and Leo Capital will also be participating in this round.

Launched in 2020 by Deepak Abbot and Nitin Misra, indiagold offers gold-backed loans, gold savings, and gold locker services to over a million consumers in India. Both the founders have worked as Senior Vice President of Paytm in the past.

The company aims to build a doorstep gold loan business backed by a robust technology stack, AI-based gold assessment capabilities, and superior customer-centricity – offering faster gold release and a transparent repayment policy. indiagold has made its Gold Locker service more secure, transparent, and convenient.

Nitin Misra and Deepak Abbot, co-founders of indiagold said, “India offers a large $650 billion addressable gold loan market which is highly fragmented and currently dominated by the informal segment. Even the formal segment hasn’t adopted digital practices at scale. indiagold’s suite of financial products bridges this critical need gap by digitally transforming lending against gold. With the support of our existing and new investors, we are moving aggressively towards our larger vision of establishing gold holdings as an alternate credit score, and creating a gold back credit platform for lenders to provide instant credit against gold.”

Vijay Agicha, Global Head of Strategy & Growth, PayU said, “Empowering disruptive fintech entrepreneurs through early-stage investments is a key element of PayU’s growth strategy. By supporting businesses that complement our existing portfolio, we aim to achieve our vision of developing a fintech ecosystem that will meet the financial services needs of millions of Indians. We believe that indiagold has the unique opportunity to expand the addressable market on the back of its product offerings and scale the business up significantly.”

Navroz D. Udwadia, Co-founder of Falcon Edge Capital said, “Gold, found in almost every household in India, is the key to provide affordable credit to every Indian. indiagold’s doorstep gold loan and gold locker products offers good customer experience and enables it to offer credit at more affordable rates.”

The gold financing business in India is predominantly offline, dominated by the informal segment, which accounts for approximately 70 per cent of gold loans in India. These loans address the liquidity needs of Indians without access to unsecured credit which is availed by less than 10 per cent of the total working population. The Covid-19 pandemic has accelerated the demand for short-term, low-cost, safe, and easily accessible formal credit options like digital gold loans.

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Indo-Nepal Remittance: RBI enhances per transaction ceiling 4-fold to ₹2 lakh

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


The Reserve Bank of India has made enhancements to the Indo-Nepal Remittance Facility Scheme, whereby the ceiling per transaction has been increased four-fold to ₹2 lakh and the cap of 12 remittances in a year per remitter has been removed.

The aforementioned enhancements, which come into effect from October 1, have been announced to boost trade payments between the two countries, as also to facilitate person-to-person remittances electronically to Nepal, RBI said in a circular to all Banks participating in the National Electronic Funds Transfer facility.

Under the scheme, the beneficiary receives funds in Nepalese Rupees through credit to her / his bank account maintained with the subsidiary of State Bank of India in Nepal, — Nepal SBI Bank Limited (NSBL) or through an agency arrangement.

The central bank said as hitherto, banks shall accept remittances by way of cash from walk-in customers or non-customers. The ceiling of ₹50,000 per remittance with a maximum of 12 remittances in a year shall, however, continue to apply for such remittances.

The central bank asked banks to put in place suitable velocity checks and other risk mitigation procedures.

Thje RBI emphasised that “the enhancements are also expected to facilitate payments relating to retirement, pension, etc., to our ex-servicemen who have settled / relocated in Nepal.”

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

IDFC First Bank aims retail loan book growth of 25 per cent on long-term basis, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Private sector IDFC First Bank is aiming its retail loan book to grow by 25 per cent on a long-term basis and expects the mortgage lending to account for 40 per cent of its loan book going forward. Bank’s profits before provisioning are low currently because of the DFI (development financial institution) background with higher cost of legacy liabilities, and due to the set-up cost of a new bank, V Vaidyanathan, Managing Director and CEO, IDFC First Bank, said in bank’s Annual Report 2020-21.

“This is getting fixed at a quick pace because of our strong profitability on an incremental basis…the underlying quality of the bank we are building is not entirely visible at this stage to you,” he said in his message to the bank shareholders.

Contending that it was not right to compare IDFC First Bank with the already established 20-30 years old banks or with entities who were profitable when they converted to banks, he said “the power of incremental profitability is lost in the noise”.

IDFC First Bank reported a net profit of Rs 452 crore in 2020-21. There was a net loss of Rs 2,864 crore in FY20.

The erstwhile IDFC Bank had merged non-banking finance company Capital First with itself in December 2018, post which Vaidyanathan took over as the managing director and CEO of IDFC First Bank.

He said IDFC First Bank has strong incremental profitability of retail lending as well as corporate lending business.

In retail, the incremental borrowing cost is less than 5 per cent, the lending rate is over 14 per cent, thus the incremental spreads on retail is over 9 per cent.

“We have specialisation in these segments and our credit costs (provisioning) are expected to be about 2 per cent based on the combination of products we finance. Thus our incremental ROE (return on equity) in the retail lending business is estimated at 18-20 per cent,” Vaidyanathan added.

There is strong incremental profitability of corporate lending business with estimated incremental business ROE at 14-15 per cent. However, he said that this is not visible on the bank’s books because of the higher cost of Rs 1,000 crore from legacy liabilities and set up costs in retail business as it is a new bank.

It is carrying Rs 27,936 crore of fixed rated liabilities at 8.66 per cent, as it converted from a DFI to a bank.

“When our bank will replace this let’s say 5 per cent, we would save about Rs 1,000 crore per year on an annuity basis compared to today. This is a legacy issue on the liability side and will go away with time,” he noted.

On set up cost since merger, IDFC First Bank has invested in 390 branches, 565 ATMs, added over 12,000 employees, boosted technology and scaled up many new businesses like credit cards, wealth management, gold loans, prime home loans among others.

These investments are giving us a negative drag today but this will become profitable with scale, Vaidyanathan said.

“The negative drag because of high cost liabilities will go away as the bank will repay these liabilities on maturity. And the negative drag because of investments will go away with scale,” IDFC First Bank said.

Thus the highly profitable retail and wholesale businesses will shine the results. “Our lending business is immensely profitable. We expect to grow the retail book by nearly 25 per cent on a compounded basis for a long period of time.”

“This is already playing out over the last two-and-a-half years, as the NIM (net interest margin) has already expanded from 1.84 per cent pre-merger to 5.09 per cent in Q4 FY 21 and further to 5.51 per cent in Q1FY22. We expect profitability to increase as we expand the loan book,” Vaidyanathan added.

The lender is also expanding customer segments to cover prime home loans and has lowered interest rates.

“We can sustainably pursue prime home loans, the safest category of loans. We expect mortgage backed loans to form 40 per cent of our loan book in due course,” said the official.

He said the bank is also targeting a 2-1-2 formula to keep its gross non-performing assets (NPAs or bad loans) at 2 per cent, net NPAs at 1 per cent and provisions at 2 per cent on a steady basis. In FY21, its gross NPAs were over 4.15 per cent and net NPAs stood at 1.86 per cent.

Speaking about bank’s exposure to cash-strapped telecom player Vodafone Idea, the MD told the shareholders that he expects the government to support the industry, as out of the total dues of the telecom player, as high as Rs 1.5 lakh crore are owed to the government only.

“…hence they will be keen to solve this issue. In any case, we have a lot of growth capital by our side. We will peruse the matter through law of the land.”

He said a “one-off incident does not dent the long-term story”.

Bank’s exposure to Vodafone Idea stood at Rs 3,244 crore as of June 30, 2021. Among others, the bank said it plans to raise up to Rs 5,000 crore debt capital and will seek shareholders’ approval in the annual general meeting (AGM) next month.

After assessing its fund requirements, the board of directors of the bank in July 2021 have proposed to obtain consent of the members of the bank for borrowing funds from time to time, in Indian or foreign currency by issue of debt securities on private placement basis, up to an amount not exceeding Rs 5,000 crore, it said.

Bank’s 7th AGM is on September 15, 2021.

The bank will also seek their consent to re-appoint Vaidyanathan as the MD&CEO for a period of three years from December 19, 2021.

He was appointed to head the bank for a period of three years from December 19, 2018.

His term would conclude on December 18, 2021 and the board of the bank had approved his appointment for another three years in June 2021, subject to approval of shareholders and RBI.

“Accordingly, the bank has filed an application with the RBI for re-appointment of V Vaidyanathan as the MD & CEO of the Bank. The approval of RBI is awaited.”

The approval of the members is now sought for his reappointment for a period of three consecutive years commencing from December 19, 2021 up to December 18, 2024 (both days inclusive), it added.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Suryoday Small Finance Bank Revises Fixed Deposit Interest Rates: Check New Rates Here

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Investment

oi-Vipul Das

|

Suryoday Small Finance Bank revised interest rates on its domestic term deposits which are in force from 9th August 2021. This small finance bank allows deposit tenure ranging from 7 days to 10 years and an individual is required to deposit a minimum amount of Rs 1,000 and thereafter in multiples of Rs 1. With both regular fixed deposits and senior citizen deposits Suryoday Small Finance Bank also offers traditional or cumulative/re-investment options on deposits. Here are the latest fixed deposit interest rates of Suryoday Small Finance Bank which you need to know if you are going to open a fixed deposit account with the bank.

Suryoday Small Finance Bank Revises Interest On FD: Check New Rates Here

Suryoday Small Finance Bank Regular FD Rates

For a deposit amount of less than Rs 2 Cr, Suryoday Small Finance Bank offers interest rates ranging from 3.25% to 6.75% to the regular citizens. The bank offers the highest interest rates on deposits maturing in 3 years to less than 5 years. After the most recent revision, following are the interest rates on fixed deposits of Suryoday Small Finance Bank for the general public.

Period Interest Rate (p.a.) Annualised Yield %
7 days to 14 days 3.25% 3.25%
15 days to 45 days 3.25% 3.25%
46 days to 90 days 4.25% 4.25%
91 days to 6 months 4.75% 4.75%
Above 6 months to 9 months 5.25% 5.35%
Above 9 months to less than 1 Year 5.75% 5.88%
1 Year to 1 Year 6 Months 6.50% 6.66%
Above 1 Year 6 Months to 2 Years 6.50% 6.66%
Above 2 Years to less than 3 Years 6.25% 6.40%
3 Year 6.75% 6.92%
Above 3 Years to less than 5 Years 6.75% 6.92%
5 Years 6.25% 6.40%
Above 5 years to 10 years 6.00% 6.14%
Source: Bank Website

Suryoday Small Finance Bank FD Rates For Senior Citizens

Resident Indian senior citizens who are 60 years and above are eligible to get additional rates on their deposits if compared to the general public. The bank offers a higher interest rate of 7.30% on deposits maturing in 3 years to senior citizens. For a deposit amount of less than Rs 2 Cr, senior citizens will get the following interest rates on their deposits.

Period Interest Rate (p.a.) Annualised Yield %
7 days to 14 days 3.25% 3.25%
15 days to 45 days 3.25% 3.25%
46 days to 90 days 4.25% 4.25%
91 days to 6 months 4.75% 4.75%
Above 6 months to 9 months 5.25% 5.35%
Above 9 months to less than 1 Year 5.75% 5.88%
1 Year to 1 Year 6 Months 6.75% 6.92%
Above 1 Year 6 Months to 2 Years 6.50% 6.66%
Above 2 Years to less than 3 Years 6.50% 6.66%
3 Year 7.30% 7.50%
Above 3 Years to less than 5 Years 6.75% 6.92%
5 Years 6.50% 6.66%
Above 5 years to 10 years 6.00% 6.14%
Source: Bank Website

Story first published: Sunday, August 29, 2021, 16:55 [IST]



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Vivad Se Vishwas Act: CBDT Extends Date Under Section 3

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Taxes

oi-Sneha Kulkarni

|

The Central Board of Direct Taxes ( CBDT ) has extended the date under section 3 of the Vivad se Vishwas Act. The amount payable by the declarant is provided in the table under section 3 of the Direct Tax Vivad se Vishwas Act 2020.

The last date for payment of the amount (without any additional amount) has been announced as 31st August 2021, according to the most recent notification dated 25th June 2021.

Vivad Se Vishwas Act: CBDT Extends Date Under Section 3

Furthermore, the deadline for payment of the amount (plus any additional amounts) due under the Vivad se Vishwas Act has been set for October 31, 2021.

Given the problems encountered in producing and modifying Form No. 3, which is required for declarant payment under the Vivad se Vishwas Act, it has been agreed to extend the deadline for payment of the amount (without any additional amount) to September 30, 2021. The necessary notification will be sent as soon as possible.

It is clarified, however, that there is no proposal to amend the last date for payment of the sum (with additional amount) under the Vivad se Vishwas Act, which remains October 31, 2021.

The proposal was introduced in the Lok Sabha on February 5, 2020, and was almost immediately recalled for changes to accommodate diverse representations from key stakeholders. Following that, the Cabinet approved a revised scheme, which was then passed by the Lok Sabha on March 4, 2020. A circular released by the Central Board of Direct Taxes addressed many areas of the modified plan that required clarification (CBDT).

Story first published: Sunday, August 29, 2021, 15:26 [IST]



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Goldman Sachs, J P Morgan Chase among 10 merchant bankers to manage LIC IPO, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


The government has shortlisted 10 merchant bankers, including Goldman Sachs Group Inc., J P Morgan Chase & Co, and ICICI Securities, to manage the mega initial public offering (IPO) of the country’s largest life insurer LIC. As many as 16 domestic and international firms had made presentations before the Department of Investment and Public Asset Management (DIPAM) on August 26 to act as book running lead managers (BRLMs) for the IPO — touted to be the biggest share sale in the country’s history.

“Goldman Sachs Group Inc, JPMorgan Chase & Co, ICICI Securities Ltd, Kotak Mahindra Capital Co, JM Financial Ltd, Citigroup Inc and Nomura Holdings Inc are among the 10 BRLMs that have been shortlisted,” an official said.

With the merchant bankers in place, once the embedded valuation of LIC is arrived at, the government will go ahead and file draft IPO papers with market regulator Sebi.

Actuarial firm Milliman Advisors LLP India is working out the embedded value of LIC, while Deloitte and SBI Caps have been appointed as pre-IPO transaction advisors.

The government aims to come out with the IPO and subsequent listing of Life Insurance Corporation (LIC) on the bourses in the January-March quarter of 2022.

The government is also mulling allowing foreign investors to pick up stakes in the country’s largest insurer LIC. As per Sebi rules, foreign portfolio investors (FPI) are permitted to buy shares in a public offer.

However, since the LIC Act has no provision for foreign investments, there is a need to align the proposed LIC IPO with Sebi norms regarding foreign investor participation.

The DIPAM on July 15 had invited applications for appointment of up to 10 merchant bankers for LIC IPO. The last date for bidding was August 5.

The Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs last month cleared the initial public offering proposal of Life Insurance Corp of India.

The ministerial panel known as the Alternative Mechanism on strategic disinvestment will now decide on the quantum of stake to be divested by the government.

“The potential size of the IPO is expected to be far larger than any precedent in Indian markets,” the department had said.

The listing of LIC will be crucial for the government in meeting its disinvestment target of Rs 1.75 lakh crore for 2021-22 (April-March).

So far this fiscal, Rs 8,368 crore has been mopped up through minority stake sales in PSU and sale of SUUTI stake in Axis Bank.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Overlooked IPO markets suddenly booming as China deals slow, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


China’s crackdown on technology companies is prompting global investors to look for new opportunities across Asia, contributing to a record jump in initial public offerings from India to South Korea that shows few signs of slowing.
Tech companies from those two countries and Southeast Asia have raised $8 billion from first-time share sales this year, already blowing past the previous annual peak. The tally is poised to get bigger with planned listings by companies including Indian fintech giant Paytm and Indonesian internet conglomerate GoTo, both of which may break local fundraising records.

Long overshadowed by their Chinese peers, this new crop of startups is coming of age just as Beijing’s clampdown puts a damper on listing and growth prospects in what had long been the region’s hottest IPO market.

The result, some bankers say, may be the start of a new era for tech listings in Asia. Investors are already boosting exposure to markets outside China, with some buying into IPOs from countries like India and Indonesia for the first time. Prospective issuers that historically benchmarked themselves against Chinese companies are now highlighting similarities to other global peers in hopes of attaining higher valuations.

“These are strong companies and stories in their own right, but the overwhelming demand has been enhanced by rotation away from China tech,” said Udhay Furtado, co-head of Asia equity capital markets at Citigroup Inc.

China’s regulatory onslaught, now in its 10th month since the shock implosion of Ant Group Co.’s IPO, has slashed valuations for the nation’s listed tech companies by nearly 40%. It has also forced many startups to pause their IPO plans after regulators announced a stricter vetting process for overseas offerings.

China and Hong Kong accounted for about 60% of Asian tech IPOs since the end of June, down from 83% in the second quarter, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. About three quarters of Chinese companies that listed overseas this year are now trading below their IPO prices.

Meanwhile, deals in smaller markets are attracting outsized demand as investors bet on increasingly internet-savvy populations, growing consumer spending and a new class of tech entrepreneurs.

PT Bukalapak.com, an Indonesian e-commerce firm, raised $1.5 billion around the end of July in the country’s largest ever IPO, far outstripping an early goal of between $300 million and $500 million.

Zomato Ltd., an Indian online food-delivery and restaurant platform, received bids worth 1.5 trillion rupees ($20.2 billion) from large funds for its anchor tranche, making it one of the most popular Indian offerings among institutional investors. The company raised $1.3 billion in July.

KakaoBank Corp., South Korea’s first internet-only lender to go public, sold $2.2 billion of new shares last month and soared more than 70% in its trading debut.

The hurdle for allocating capital to tech companies in China “is now much higher than it was even a month ago,” said Vikas Pershad, a portfolio manager at M&G Investments (Singapore) Pte. “The net exposure to China tech is lower and the net exposure to technology-driven business models outside of China is higher.”

One banker who asked not to be named discussing client information said some Hong Kong-based investors who previously focused on Chinese deals are now participating in tech IPOs elsewhere in the region. U.S. hedge funds are also looking at India more closely, another banker said. Morgan Stanley research analysts recently advised clients to re-balance their internet holdings away from China and into India and Southeast Asia.

“Are investors more interested? Definitely,” said William Smiley, co-head of Asia ex-Japan equity capital markets at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. “Global capital competes among itself and investment opportunities are judged on both an absolute and relative basis.”

Whether the enthusiasm will last is an open question. Bukalapak.com briefly dipped below its offering price this month, though the stock has since rebounded. Zomato and KakaoBank are trading 64% and 115% above their IPO prices, respectively.

A growing pipeline of deals will put investor demand to the test. Paytm — formally called One97 Communications Ltd. — has filed for a 166 billion-rupee IPO that is set to be India’s largest ever. Policybazaar, an online insurance marketplace, is looking to raise as much as 60.18 billion rupees.

GoTo, formed by the merger of Indonesian ride-hailing giant Gojek and e-commerce provider PT Tokopedia, is planning a domestic IPO this year before seeking a U.S. listing. It’s currently raising funds at a valuation of between $25 billion and $30 billion, meaning it could become Indonesia’s biggest-ever debut.

“There are increasingly diverse sources of capital investing in leading Asia-based growth businesses,” said Gregor Feige, co-head of ECM Asia ex-Japan at JPMorgan Chase & Co. “Sovereign wealth funds are more active across the board. They’re leaning in and the global long-only community is also increasingly comfortable with local listings across Asia.”

The flood of tech IPOs in Southeast Asia and India is poised to reshape markets where benchmark indexes have historically focused on “old-economy” sectors like energy and finance.

Favorable demographics and domestic consumption growth in Southeast Asia “have not translated fully into stock market performance of late, as some of the fastest growing businesses were not listed,” said Pauline Ng, a portfolio manager at JPMorgan Asset Management. The growing representation of “new-economy” companies means these markets “can no longer be ignored,” she said.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

1 404 405 406 407 408 16,278