ICICI Bank ex-executives face EOW Probe, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The Economic Offences Wing (EOW) of the Mumbai Police has begun a probe into charges of alleged wrongdoing by ICICI Bank officials in a case filed by a hotelier.

The case pertains to a complaint filed by a hotelier in July this year against five former senior bank officials and an asset reconstruction company (ARC) for allegedly duping him of ₹120 crore. The original complaint at the BKC police station in Mumbai has been transferred to the EOW now.

The development comes soon after the recent controversial arrest of former SBI chairman Pratip Chaudhuri – which arose out of a complaint filed by a Jaisalmer-based hotelier over the sale of his hotel to an ARC by SBI in 2014.

One of the bank officials, who is employed by another institution now, was recently summoned by the EOW to provide details of transactions – from the sanction of loans to the sale to an asset reconstruction company after the borrower defaulted on payments.

“The senior executive was called in to explain certain banking procedures pertaining to sanctioning of loans, functioning of the credit committee and the process of roping in an ARC. The said executive joined the probe on Tuesday,” a senior official with the Mumbai police told ET.

While the EOW maintains that the executive isn’t being treated as an accused and was summoned only to explain the banking procedures, the FIR registered by the complainant Vishal Sharma with the BKC police station alleges fraud.

ICICI bank did not respond to ET’s queries.

Sharma, director of Hotel Horizon Pvt Ltd in Mumbai, has alleged that in 2011 the bank sanctioned a ‘senior term loan’ of ₹326 crore and a ‘subordinate term loan’ of ₹25 crore to build a luxury hotel. He claims that even before the agreement was inked or the loan sanctioned, the bank officials recognised in their books to ‘show profit’.

While Sharma made a request of ₹65 crore to be disbursed as the first instalment, the bankers who were part of the management committee submitted what the FIR filed by him describes as a “false proposal note” before the credit committee for immediate disbursement of ₹25 crore. “Of this, the bank deducted ₹15.5 crore from the loan amount towards processing fees and Sharma received ₹9.5 crore,” the FIR states.

In June 2016, the complainant alleged that he was coaxed by the bank officials to pay ₹47.37 crore. “In the event this amount isn’t paid then the processing fee amount and interest won’t be returned,” the FIR accessed by ET reads.

Subsequently, in September 2016, the loan was sold to an ARC. “The accused bank officials doctored minutes of the credit meetings, issued false statements and subsequently sold the loan to an ARC without my knowledge. While my liability was of ₹9.5 crore, the ARC in connivance with the bank officials staked a claim of ₹120 crore from my mortgaged assets which is worth over ₹1,200 crore,” Sharma told ET.



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Buy This Mid Cap Stock With A Target Price of Rs. 4,220: HDFC Securities

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Q2 financial performance of Fine Organic Industries Ltd.

According to the brokerage, the company’s “Revenue grew 23/62% QoQ/YoY to INR 4.4bn, on the back of strong domestic demand, continued traction in exports driving volumes, and higher realisations. The contribution of exports to the total revenue was 60% in H1FY22. Gross margin came in at 33.3% (+104/- 431bps QoQ/YoY) in Q2, improving sequentially as customers are now accepting price hikes on account of higher raw material costs and higher freight costs.”

The brokerage has clarified that the company’s “EBITDA came in at INR 0.7bn, +41/+43% QoQ/YoY, with EBITDA margin improving sequentially to 16.7% (+212/-223bps QoQ/YoY), owing to lesser opex. APAT was INR 0.5bn (+39/+60% QoQ/YoY).”

Buy Fine Organic Industries Ltd. with a target price of INR 4,220

Buy Fine Organic Industries Ltd. with a target price of INR 4,220

HDFC Securities in its research report has said that “Our BUY recommendation on Fine Organic Industries (FOIL) with a target price of INR 4,220 is premised on constant focus on R&D, diversified product portfolio, capacity-led expansion growth opportunity, and leadership in oleo-chemical based additives in the domestic and global markets with a loyal customer base.”

“We expect FOIL’s PAT to grow at a 41% CAGR over FY22-24E, led by a 36% CAGR in EBITDA. In the absence of any major Capex in the coming years, the RoCE would expand from 20% in FY22E to 29% in FY24E. Q2 EBITDA/APAT was 26/37% above our estimates, owing to a 22% rise in revenue, lower-than-expected raw material costs, lower-than expected depreciation and higher-than-expected other income. Q2 financial performance: Revenue grew 23/62% QoQ/YoY” the brokerage has further claimed.

Disclaimer

Disclaimer

The above stock was picked from the brokerage report of HDFC Securities Ltd. Investing in equities poses a risk of financial losses. Investors must therefore exercise due caution. Greynium Information Technologies, the author, and the brokerage house are not liable for any losses caused as a result of decisions based on the article.



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GST could see major overhaul; reducing tax slabs, pruning exempt list on table, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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India could be eyeing a significant revamp of the goods and services tax (GST) structure as the regime completes five years in July next year when compensation to states is set to come to an end. Tax slab restructuring and reducing exemptions could be considered in the most comprehensive makeover of the single tax that was rolled out on July 1, 2017.

The new regime may have just three major tax rates covering most of the items against four now – 5%, 12%, 18% and 28%. The recast will seek to simplify the regime as well as lift revenue.

A group of ministers (GoM) headed by the Karnataka chief minister is likely to meet soon to finalise its recommendations that could be taken up at the next GST Council meeting.

“At the last GST Council meeting a presentation was given on various revenue scenarios… It is for states now to see how they wish to tackle the situation post July,” said a senior government official detailing the major items on the agenda.

The Centre compensates states for loss of revenue on account of the implementation of GST for five years–that ends next year. States have been worried about a significant drop in their revenues once this compensation ends.

Union finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman had recently indicated that the effective tax rate under GST had slipped from the original revenue neutral rate of 15.5% to 11.6% “knowingly or unknowingly” due to multiple rate cuts since GST rollout in July 2017.

Policymakers Back Review of Slabs
Policymakers in states and the Centre have backed a review of the slabs to address the revenue issue.

Options on the table include pruning the list of items, both goods and services, currently exempt from the tax. One option is to merge the 5% and 12% levies to create one rate, and creating a three-slab regime of the merged rate, 18% and 28%.

“Discussions have been centred around how this rationalisation needs to be achieved,” an official said, adding that all options including reworking the slabs are being examined.

With GST revenue collections rising in recent months, it is felt that a revamp can be considered.

The GoM will meet on Saturday to discuss details with its final recommendations to be taken up by the GST Council.

Apart from the four key slabs, 0.25% and 3% applies to jewellery and precious metals, respectively, besides a top-up compensation cess levied on select items such as automobiles. Many common use items have been exempted from GST, making it a complicated regime prone to classification disputes and leakages. GST is not levied on nearly 150 goods and over 80 services.

The 15th Finance Commission, headed by NK Singh, in its report had also made a case for GST structure rationalisation.

Tax experts say that with GST collections showing an encouraging trend in the past several months, this may be the right time to simplify the rate structure.

“There is a need for rate rationalisation in GST and the multiple exemptions need to go and rates need to converge to a two or three-rate structure,” said EY partner Bipin Sapra.

By pruning the exemption list, the GST base can be widened, which will not only increase revenue but also keep the overall rates at a reasonable level, Sapra said.

Rather than focusing on increasing the effective tax rate, the emphasis should be on further expanding the tax base by keeping levies moderate, said Pratik Jain of PwC. “Further, from a tax policy perspective, it’s important to remove barriers like restrictions on claiming input credits and applying GST based on price points, size of packing, capacity and so on,” he said.



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Farm laws repeal may leave gap in finance panel reform plan, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The revoking of the three farm laws is likely to leave a serious policy gap as they were central to the reform path envisaged by the 15th Finance Commission for India‘s agriculture sector, if its own reports are an indicator.

The farm laws find strong advocacy in both the interim and final reports of the panel, prising open the question of how much their revocation will impact the reform and performance incentive framework envisaged and recommended for agriculture by the commission. It has recommended that ₹45,000 crore be set aside to grant performance incentives to states for ushering in agricultural reforms. Chairman of the 15th Finance Commission, NK Singh, however, maintained that this should not be seen as a “setback” given that Prime Minister Narendra Modi has also announced a panel to address various issues raised in the panel report.

“I don’t view it as a setback,” he told ET. “The report was submitted in a particular context when these laws were there. The performance matrix we have drawn up is a whole lot more than the farm laws and they are not contingent on the latter.”

While the commission had earlier tied grant of incentives to states to implementation of model laws on farmer produce facilitation and contract farming, once it was satisfied that its recommendations on policy gaps were addressed through the new farm laws, it went on to identify four other criteria. These are – land lease reforms, sustainable and efficient water use in agriculture, export promotion, and contribution towards Atmanirbhar Bharat.

With the assurance of the larger reform structure afforded by the farm laws now gone, the efficacy and adequacy of the performance incentives framework for states is bound to come under question.

Singh, however, said the performance matrix drawn up by the commission are not contingent on the farm laws. “They are in keeping with the idea of a new India, also in tune with the ecological sustainability concerns discussed recently at Glasgow climate conference and , in fact, a key aspect of reform,” he said.

“Sustainable water usage and agricultural practices, crop diversification are very much the centrepiece of the commission’s recommendations,” Singh said. “They were also mentioned by the PM when he talked of the farm laws and many concerns will be taken up by the committee to be set up.”

The panel reports, however, seem to underline the centrality of the farm laws to the envisaged reform framework.



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Sensex may rally up to 80,000 next year in bull case, predicts Morgan Stanley, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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NEW DELHI: Driven by the new profit cycle, India will continue to outperform other markets but that will come along with higher relative volatility, said Ridham Desai, Morgan Stanley’s equity strategist, in a note authored on Thursday.

“India appears to be in a structural uptrend with a likely new profit cycle, supportive policy, likely rise in fixed income flows, new issuances and falling return correlations with the world,” he said.

“We expect earnings to compound 27 per cent annually over the next couple of years and the Sensex to rise 16 per cent in our base case to 70,000 (Dec 22) – albeit mostly in the back half of 2022. Our FY22 earnings estimate has been lowered by 7 per cent, but FY23 numbers are unchanged. Index returns are likely to trail earnings growth as the market digests trailing returns,” Desai added.

In bull case, Morgan Stanley believes Sensex could hit 80,000 in 2022, but for that some things need to come along India’s way – India gets included in the global bond indices resulting in near $20 billion inflows, there is no COVID wave 3 or any associated lockdowns, dollar and oil prices are range bound and RBI’s exit is delayed.

Desai, in the note co-authored with two others, accepted that the current headline valuations look rich, but argued that they must be seen in the context of depressed long-term earnings. Thanks to the humongous rally, Nifty50’s price-to-earnings multiple has reached all-time high levels of 26 while price-to-book stood on the cusp of kissing 5 level.

Indian equities are running into many challenges, including the US rate cycle, rising oil prices, elections in key states, potential Covid wave 3, upward inflexion in domestic interest rates, rich headline valuations and strong relative trailing performance, noted the analysts.

In the run-up to the all-time high till now, the volatility indicator has largely been subdued, but that may become a thing of the past, said analysts. They added that the risk to the market is also increasing, which will keep traders on their toes. Interestingly, Morgan Stanley had recently downgraded India to equal-weight.

“The index has been remarkably devoid of volatility over the past several months with both implied and realized vols low relative to history. With higher valuations and more event risks on the horizon, volatility is slated to rise, especially in the broad market,” said Desai.

Morgan Stanley’s strategy going forward is to focus on stock picking rather than macro investing, sticking with cyclicals rather than investing in defensive and choosing largecaps over smallcaps.

“Our key macro themes include a strong pick up in consumption, normalization of RBI policy and rising share of manufacturing share in GDP. We are backing financials, cyclical consumption and industrials and are relatively cautious on export sectors,” said Desai.

According to him, the key theme for the upcoming calendar year will be clean energy spend, defence indigenisation, a new residential property, auto and air travel cycle, multiyear credit cycle for financials, life insurance, digital transformation, hyper-local commerce and market share concentration plus horizontal growth for discretionary and staple consumption and electric vehicles.



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IDFC First Bank partners up with HPCL to facilitate fuel payments using FASTag, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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IDFC First Bank has partnered Hindustan Petroleum Corporation Ltd (HPCL) to facilitate fuel payments at their retail outlets using the bank’s FASTags. In addition, IDFC First Bank’s FASTags can now also be bought, recharged and replaced by passenger vehicle users at select HPCL retail outlets.

This tie-up makes the purchase and use of tags convenient for about five million motorists, it said in a statement. “As a digital-first bank, our effort is to make all transit-related payments simpler. IDFC First Bank has issued close to five million FASTags and these tags are used actively by motorists across toll plazas with transactions averaging two million a day,” said B Madhivanan, chief operating officer, IDFC First Bank.

The company said motorists will now have the convenience of a single form factor and single balance for payments related to road travel in the form of FASTag.

So far, FASTags have only been used to pay for toll charges. Last year, IDFC First Bank was the first to introduce fuel payments using FASTag balances for commercial vehicles users at HPCL retail outlets. Now, it is being extended to personal vehicle users as well.

“We were the first to introduce FASTag based fueling at HPCL retail outlets in the last financial year, by way of acceptance of IDFC First Bank FASTags through our fleet loyalty program“DriveTrack Plus”. We are now introducing payment through IDFC BANK FASTag on “HP Pay” mobile app. We are also starting a FASTag marketing arrangement with IDFC FIRST Bank at select retail outlets, which is also the first of its kind,” Sai Kumar Suri, ED-Retail of HPCL said, in a statement.

The FASTag program was jointly launched by the National Highway Authority of India (NHAI), Indian Highways Management Company Ltd (IHMCL) and National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI) as a medium to accept toll fare across all National Highway plazas. Banks act as issuers and acquirers in this ecosystem which processes close to seven million transactions a day.



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PSBs line up local AT-1 bonds issues, but private-sector lenders stay away, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Public sector banks have started issuing AT-1 bonds in the domestic market more than a year after wriding down of such bonds of Yes Bank spooked the market

However, private sector banks are still keeping away and raising money via the instrument overseas, where interest rates are low.

At present, nearly three-four state-owned including SBI, Union Bank, Canara Bank and Bank of Baroda are looking to raise funds through AT-1 bonds.

In March this year, prodded by the Finance Ministry, the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) had relaxations in valuation norms. However, the main issues that AT1 bonds will continue to be treated as 100-year bonds stayed. The deemed residual maturity of Basel-III AT-1 bonds would be 10-year until March 31, 2022. Sebi said from April to September 2022, it would be valid at 20 years, and from October 2022 to March 2023, it would have a life span of 30 years. From April 2023, the residual maturity will be 100 years from the date of issuance of the bond.

In September SBI Rs 4,000 crore via additional Tier 1 bonds at a coupon rate of 7.72%, the first such issuance in the domestic market after Sebi issued new rules.

The plan

SBI is weighing options to raise money either through local additional tier-1 securities for the third time in this financial year or rupee-denominated ‘masala’ bonds for overseas investors. Bank of Baroda has approved the issuance of AT1 and AT11 bonds worth Rs3000 crore. Capital Raising Committee of our Bank has today approved the issuance of Basel III Compliant Additional Tier 1 (AT1) / Tier II Bonds for an aggregate total issue size of Rs3000cr in single or multiple tranches,” the bank said earlier this month.

What are AT1 bonds?

These are unsecured bonds which have perpetual tenure — or no maturity date. They have a call option, which can be used by the banks to buy these bonds back from investors. AT1 bonds are subordinate to all other debt and only senior to common equity. Mutual funds are among the largest investors in perpetual debt instruments, and hold over Rs 35,000 crore of the outstanding additional tier-I bond issuances of Rs 90,000 crore.

The mutual fund position

Mutual funds, which once used to buy heavily in AT1 bonds, are lukewarm about this asset class after the banking regulator last year ordered that these instruments be written off in Yes Bank’s state-sponsored bailout. Also, on March 10, Sebi had ordered mutual funds to cap ownership of bonds with special features at 10% of the assets of a scheme and value them as 100-year instruments from next month, potentially triggering a redemption wave. Later, the capital markets regulator eased valuation rules but with some riders after the finance ministry asked it to withdraw the directive to mutual funds.

The muted response by MFs had prompted the lenders to tap the overseas market.

Perpetual bond sales by banks have nearly halved to Rs 18,772 crore in FY21 from Rs 34,860 crore three years earlier.



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Crypto Currency: Moderate Regulation Is Better

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Investment

oi-Sunil Fernandes

By Vinshu Gupta

|

Crypto currency in India is not reglauted. In every industry that has survived, the adoption has always been top down. The regulators are first one to come in followed by the big organisations that create needed infrastructure and finally the retail end users are the last ones to join. It usually balances power in the hands of bigger companies and regulators.

Crypto is the only industry, which has started bottoms up. You see p2p trades happening even before regulators had any clue what was going on. Retailers owned more BTC than institutions, governments didn’t know or created any framework, organisations didn’t build any infrastructure. It did empower the common man and tilted the balance on power in their power.

This is one big reason that so much chatter is there against bitcoin and the industry at large. Since it is by and for retailers so even if it is banned, it will not die, since billions of small people are all around the world. Someone, somewhere will hold Bitcoin, in some part someone else will keep on mining. If regulators leave this alone, it will grow itself. If they don’t leave it alone, it will still survive. As honorable Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharam said – “We cannot be moving ahead as if this doesn’t exist”.

Crypto Currency: Moderate Regulation Is Better

Having said that, controlled moderate regulation is still better as long as its not stiffling. The definition of decentralisation is still evolving. it’s possible that next generation of crypto apps would require KYCs and filter out terror, blood or drug money and purge the system.

Vinshu Gupta, the author of the article is Founder and Director, Nonceblox Blockchain Studio

Story first published: Saturday, November 20, 2021, 8:06 [IST]



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Lower base: NBFC loan sanctions pick up in Q2, but below last year’s levels

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A data sheet released by industry association Finance Industry Development Council (FIDC) showed that NBFCs sanctioned loans worth Rs 2.17 lakh crore during the quarter ended September 2021, down 9% from the value of sanctions made in Q2FY20.

The value of loans sanctioned by non-banking financial companies (NBFCs) rose 17% on a year-on-year (y-o-y) basis in Q2FY22, but remained below the amount of sanctions made in the comparable quarter of FY20. A data sheet released by industry association Finance Industry Development Council (FIDC) showed that NBFCs sanctioned loans worth Rs 2.17 lakh crore during the quarter ended September 2021, down 9% from the value of sanctions made in Q2FY20.

Mahesh Thakkar, director general, FIDC, said that the 17% y-o-y growth in sanctions should be seen in the light of a very low base in Q2FY21. Segments that drove the improvement in sanctions were auto loans (up 40% y-o-y), commercial vehicle loans (up 31%), consumer loans (up 58%) and home loans (up 40%). Barring housing and consumer loans, though, the other two categories saw sanctions shrinking as compared to Q2FY20 — two quarters before the pandemic outbreak in India. The growth in sanctions vis-a-vis Q2FY21 is largely attributable to a lower base. While gold and personal loans saw a pick-up, loans against securities (LAS) contracted 42% y-o-y.

The Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI’s) guidelines on initial public offer (IPO) financing should further restrict LAS growth in the next quarter, FIDC expects.

Thakkar said that while consumption-oriented loans have grown, productive usage loans, such as secured business loans, equipment loans and medium to long term loans have shrunk, signifying that the capex cycle is still in the negative growth territory. “This is not very encouraging as it indicates that the corporate and SME (small and medium enterprises) sectors are not yet confident about investing for future growth,” he said. Rural demand for loans has improved even as compared to FY20, but urban demand remains sluggish, Thakkar added.

The second wave of the pandemic has prolonged the recovery of some asset segments, such as CVs, business loans and microfinance, analysts at Icra said in a recent report. Despite NBFCs’ assets under management (AUMs) shrinking in Q1, Icra maintains the growth outlook at 8-10% for the sector, given the revival in demand, an upturn in macro-economic indicators, and the low base of the last fiscal. “Sustained supply-side constraints, especially in the vehicle segment, could be a growth impediment and would be monitorable in the near term,” the report said.

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PM Modi to inaugurate key fintech event on December 3

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The event brings to the fore growing efforts of the government and the regulators to harness fintech to further bolster the financial sector ecosystem. (File image)

Prime Minister Narendra Modi will inaugurate a first-of-its kind, two-day thought leadership programme on fintech on December 3, hosted by the International Financial Services Centres Authority (IFSCA) in Gujarat.

Reliance Industries chairman Mukesh Ambani, SoftBank chairman and chief executive Masayoshi Son and Infosys co-founder Nandan Nilekani will be among the key speakers at the event.

The event brings to the fore growing efforts of the government and the regulators to harness fintech to further bolster the financial sector ecosystem.

The first edition of the “InFinity Forum” is being hosted by the IFSCA under the aegis of the central government in collaboration with GIFT City and Bloomberg in virtual mode. Indonesia, South Africa and the UK are partner countries.

The idea is to unite the world’s leading minds in policy, business, and technology to discuss and come up with actionable insight into how technology and innovation can be leveraged by the FinTech industry for inclusive growth and serving the humanity at large.

Presenting the Budget for 2020-21, finance and corporate affairs minister Nirmala Sitharaman announced support to a “world-class FinTech hub” at GIFT IFSC, the country’s first IFSC. IFSCA is a unified authority for the development and regulation of financial products, financial services and financial institutions in the IFSCs in India.

IFSCA chairman Injeti Srinivas said the authority is “focused on fostering and enabling growth of the financial services industry on a global scale”. “Our flagship Infinity Forum is part of our endeavor to bring together all key stakeholders of the global FinTech Industry to explore the limitless future of the industry in the spirit of mutual cooperation,” he said.

FM to visit IFSC on November 20

Separately, Sitharaman will visit the IFSC at GIFT City, Gandhinagar, on Saturday, along with two ministers of state and seven secretaries from her ministry, to brainstorm on ways to further develop the IFSC.

Her meeting will focus on the role of GIFT-IFSC as a gateway to global financial services for companies within India, drawing global financial business to the country and growth of the IFSC as a global fintech hub.

Get live Stock Prices from BSE, NSE, US Market and latest NAV, portfolio of Mutual Funds, Check out latest IPO News, Best Performing IPOs, calculate your tax by Income Tax Calculator, know market’s Top Gainers, Top Losers & Best Equity Funds. Like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter.

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