Sundaram Finance eyes ‘decent’ growth in FY22 amid limited stress

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Sundaram Finance Ltd, a leading NBFC in the country, said it continues to see accounts from a few segments seeking restructuring and delinquency rates move northwards amid improving business.

Though business is returning to pre-second wave levels, there are still accounts up for restructuring, especially in the education and school bus segment, which is a fairly big portfolio for the company. Tourist buses have been impacted, as have inter-State buses.

In the car segment, tourist taxis have been impacted. In pockets, market load operators on haulage have been affected, said Rajiv Lochan, Managing Director, Sundaram Finance, in an exclusive interaction with BusinessLine.

As of March 31, the company had restructured 4.2 per cent of its portfolio, and this financial year it has further restructured 2.6 per cent. That is higher than industry. Delinquency rates increased to 4.2 per cent by the end of June.

“We are still quite good compared to the industry,” he added.

Growth complications

The first round of restructuring last year was in the commercial vehicle (CV) and bus segments.

Many who expected recovery in Q4 did not opt for it. Some school bus operators, inter-State bus operators and tourist buses expected recovery this year, but the second wave hit them hard and they have come for restructuring now.

The other complication is that viability of operators has been impacted. Freight rate has not increased in the last six months, there has been excess capacity in the system, return trips have been empty, and diesel prices have gone up. There are also Covid-related temporary issues.

Rallying business

Nevertheless, business has been picking up and getting better every succeeding month. September is also trending well.

“Compared to FY20, we will still do decent, especially if the third wave does not hit us too badly. We have to go granular. In terms of growth, that’s the thrust. We are seeing steady progress,” Lochan said.

There are a few segments that promise a favourable growth outlook for the company in the coming years. The tipper and construction equipment (CE) segments have picked up on the back of infrastructure activities.

Also see: Sundaram Finance presents favourable near-term outlook amid caution

“I expect a secular positive growth in the next three years in CE, which constitutes over 10 per cent of our business. It has gained momentum in the last three years and I see it gaining even more traction going forward. The agri-related segment (tractors or farm equipment) that constitutes about 7-8 per cent is doing well. Going forward, we expect to see double digit growth in this segment,” said Lochan.

Within the CV segment, the company has diversified into the intermediate CV, used CV, light CV and small CV segments over the last decade, and these are witnessing growth driven by e-commerce.

“We are seeing a nice momentum in this space. There is real action for us in these three asset classes. In the passenger vehicle segment, which constitutes 25 per cent of the business, we will ride with the wave,” Lochan added.

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Regulatory forbearance has reduced immediate capital requirements for Banks: Fitch

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Regulatory forbearance has reduced the Indian banking sector’s need for fresh core capital to meet minimum regulatory capital requirements up to the financial year ending March 2025 (FY25), according to Fitch Ratings latest base-case assumptions.

However, under the global credit rating agency’s stress case scenario, it estimates that State banks would require an aggregate of $50 billion in fresh equity capital over the period to FY25 to maintain their CET1 ratios above the regulatory minimum of 8 per cent.

The lower system level fresh capital requirement of $27 billion nets out the capital surplus among private banks. The stress scenario incorporates less benign assumptions about the economic outlook.

Also read: RBI aligns deposit-taking norms for HFCs with NBFCs

Fitch Ratings observed that the system capital requirements are lower than under its 2020 estimates, but this partly reflects the effects of regulatory forbearance and is unlikely to create near-term upward momentum for Indian banks’ Viability Ratings.

In 2020, Fitch had estimated higher capital needs for the system (mostly the state banks) of $15 billion and $58 billion under moderate and high stress scenarios, respectively. These stress tests assumed recognition of asset-quality stress over a two-year period.

The agency’s updated assessment, covering a four-year period, reflects the key role of regulatory forbearance in suppressing immediate capital requirements by deferring timely recognition of asset-quality stress and giving banks time to build capital buffers.

Fitch underscored that delayed IFRS (International Financial Reporting Standards) implementation means that Indian banks’ capacity to make pre-emptive provisions is quite limited, being guided by incurred instead of expected losses.

Deferred recognition of stress will thus dampen credit costs for Indian banks, supporting their capacity to generate capital internally through profits. “This, coupled with continued delays in full implementation of the Basel III capital conservation buffer, will contain capital needs for the banking sector, including the State banks, in our opinion,” Fitch said in a report on “Capital Estimates for Indian Banks”.

The agency said its updated capital findings also reflect a significant amount of equity raised by private banks since the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic, its expectation of modest credit growth, and its forecasts for India’s economic recovery.

NPL ratio

As per Fitch’s assessment, the estimated peak non-performing loan (NPL) ratio of 9.7 per cent by FY25 under its latest base case is below its previous moderate stress case estimate of 13.4 per cent.

This primarily reflects a more gradual unwinding of restructured loans into bad loans after FY22 (over two-three years, giving customers more time to pay) coupled with the agency’s reassessment of lower stress in certain key segments, such as retail.

Fitch expects banks’ operating profitability to improve until FY23 in light of the deferred credit costs.

Stable net interest margins (NIM), low funding costs and treasury gains have supported banks’ pre-provision operating profitability, offsetting the effects of low credit growth.

Loan growth

The agency views loan growth and risk appetite as key determinants of the sector’s capital needs.

Fitch believes that banks with more vulnerable capitalisation positions will hesitate to deploy capital for growth, instead preserving it to deal with the impact of asset stress as it emerges in the future.

The agency assessed that State banks’ core capitalisation is lower than that of private banks, and its base case assumes their loan growth will average 4 per cent in FY22-FY25, lower than the system credit growth of 6.7 per cent.

However, there is a risk that their credit growth could exceed this, if policymakers influence lending decisions.

Large and mid-sized private banks should be able to withstand stress better, given their significantly stronger core capital buffers (CET1: 16.4 per cent versus 10.4 per cent for State banks in FY21).

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HSBC simplifies cross-border transactions – The Hindu BusinessLine

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HSBC India has launched a digital proposition aimed at simplifying cross-border transactions.

Called HSBC UniTransact, it aims to provide seamless integration of all aspects of transaction banking while minimising manual intervention through the transaction journey, it said in a statement on Wednesday.

It provides a range of benefits, including a comprehensive dashboard, real-time status throughout the life-cycle of all the cross border transactions, online discrepancy resolution, efficient management of documentation, alerts and notifications and seamless execution, it further said.

“The launch of HSBC UniTransact is aimed at unifying all the processes and interactions for our clients in any cross border transaction journey. From reducing the number of touchpoints they need to go through, to providing them end-to-end visibility of each transaction, we are confident that UniTransact will create a truly unique world class user experience for our clients,” said Hitendra Dave, General Manager and CEO, HSBC India.

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Auto debit transactions: Bounce rates in August near pre-second wave levels

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Bounce rates for auto-debit transactions in August were at similar levels as March 2021 as businesses and borrowers shrugged off the impact of the second wave of the Covid-19 pandemic.

According to data from the National Payments Corporation of India from the National Automated Clearing House (NACH), the bounce rate or percentage of unsuccessful auto-debit transactions in August 2021 was 32.98 per cent.

This is the lowest since March 2021 when the bounce rate was 32.76 per cent. In all, a total of 8.76 crore auto-debit transactions were reported on the NACH platform in August, of which 5.87 crore were successful and 2.89 crore were returned or unsuccessful.

Also read: Resilient demand keeps driving India’s world-beating growth

Typically, auto-debit transactions are for recurring payments such as EMIs and insurance premiums although it does not capture intra-bank transactions. With the second wave of the pandemic leading to localised lockdowns and impacting economic activities, bounce rates had started to climb up from April 2021 after easing from December 2020.

In the last two months, as Covid cases have come down in most parts of the country and the economy has opened up again, bounce rates have started coming down again. Many lenders have reported that collection efficiencies have returned to normal and are at the pre-second wave levels.

“The collection efficiency was reported at about 97 per cent for August 2021, further improving on 95 per cent reported in July 2021 (collection efficiency in April, May and June was 72 per cent, 67 per cent, 90 per cent respectively),” Mahindra Finance had said, recently.

Also read: Latest PLFS suggests India’s labour market is reviving post-pandemic but some segments are hit

With the opening of the economy and improved mobility, it witnessed a meaningful reduction in the NPA contracts during the month as customer cash flows improved and said it expects the downward trajectory to continue in September.

Similarly, CreditAccess Grameen reported that standalone collection efficiency including arrears improved to 99 per cent in August 2021 from 97 per cent in July 2021 and 84 per cent in June 2021, indicating consistent improvement in overdue collections.

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SBI’s Amit Saxena joins RBI Innovation Hub as CTO, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Amit Saxena, Global Deputy CTO of State Bank of India joins RBI Innovation Hub as the CTO today.

On Aug 6, 2020, the Reserve Bank announced that it would set up Reserve Bank Innovation Hub (RBIH) to promote innovation across the financial sector by leveraging on technology and creating an environment that would facilitate and foster innovation.

The RBIH shall create an ecosystem that would focus on promoting access to financial services and products. This will also promote financial inclusion. The Hub will collaborate with financial sector institutions, the technology industry, and academic institutions and coordinate efforts for the exchange of ideas and development of prototypes related to financial innovations. It would develop internal infrastructure to promote fintech research and facilitate engagement with innovators and start-ups.

As the CTO of Reserve Bank Innovation Hub, Saxena will be tasked with building an innovation ecosystem for India’s banking and financial services industry. In his new position, Saxena will be based in Bangalore and will report to Rajesh Bansal CEO of RBI Innovation Hub.

Saxena has over 22 years of experience in IT Strategy formation, Application development, Stakeholder Management, and product development. At SBI played a leading role in driving digital initiatives and innovations in customer-centric journeys. Before joining SBI, Saxena worked for companies like Syntel, HCL technologies, TechMahindra, and Quark.



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Will banks clamp down on cryptocurrency transactions again?, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Banks which had started processing cryptocurrency transactions after RBI clarification may be again shying away from virtual currencies.

The country’s largest lender, State Bank of India, has blocked the receipt of funds by crypto bourses on its UPI platform. The bank has told payment processors to disable SBI UPI for crypto merchants, according to a report.

With this, traders cannot buy Bitcoin or any cryptocurrency by transferring funds via UPI, as none of the processors which handle funds for

exchanges will be unable to receive money sent for crypto purchases on their SBI accounts.

The largest domestic crypto bourse, WazirX, has already been impacted by the decision, with the processing agency following the directive of SBI. Industry circles said payment processors may stop accepting payment for other exchanges as well, unless SBI does a rethink.

With UPI blocked, many traders on WazirX are using one of the e-wallet services to transact.

But due to wallet charges and limits on fund transfer, traders prefer UPI in the absence of other payment modes like credit and debit cards, NEFT (national electronic fund transfers) and net banking.

After SBI’s decision, many banks may be reluctant to onboard crypto merchants on their respective UPI platforms.

The RBI decision

After the Reserve Bank of India told banks that they no longer can use the regulator’s 2018 circular prohibiting dealings in virtual currencies, as the direction has been struck down by the Supreme Court, banks were allowing crypto transactions.

Lenders including HDFC Bank, ICICI Bank and Axis Bank are allowing transactions in virtual currencies through the UPI platform.

According to crypto exchanges, more banks are now warming up to them and several channels are available for customers to buy crypto assets.

Till June this year banks were sending official notices to many customers warning them of curbs, including permanent closure of accounts.

Lenders were asking customers to clarify the nature of transactions and warning credit card users that transactions of virtual currency will lead to suspension/cancellation of card.

While trading in cryptocurrency is not illegal as per existing Indian laws, individual institutions can enforce their terms based on their risk assessment.

A grey area

Despite the boom, cryptocurrencies are in a grey area in India, with the Reserve Bank hostile towards it and the government unsure about its prospects.

There is no legislation or regulatory code yet to govern the crypto ecosystem, leading to confusion among customers, businesses and financial institutions providing banking services.

In 2018, the Reserve Bank of India barred financial institutions from supporting crypto transactions, which the Supreme Court overturned in 2020. The government has circulated a draft bill outlawing all cryptocurrency activities, which has been under discussion since 2019.

The RBI asked banks not to cite its 2018 circular and clarified that banks can do their own KYC for crypto clients. With this, banks are now reassessing the situation, but several banks currently lack the technical expertise to make a supervisory assessment on these transactions.



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AIBEA wants director posts filled in all public sector banks

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The All India Bank Employees’ Association (AIBEA) has urged the finance ministry to expedite steps to fill the vacant posts of directors in nationalised banks. It claimed that the bank boards were functioning with skeletal strength.

CH Venkatachalam, General Secretary, AIBEA, said in a letter to Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, that 52 per cent of the director posts in the 11 nationalised banks were vacant.

The vacancies would defeat the purpose of these important posts — namely, taking care of the varied interests of banking operations, he said.

FM unveils EASE 4.0 for PSB’s tech transformation

“It also runs counter to the much-professed principles of good governance,” he said.

According to the association, the posts of Workman Director and Officer Director, representing the employees and officers of the banks, respectively, were incorporated in 1970 and had remained filled for 44 years without interruption.

Since 2014, however, when the NDA government came to power, these posts have stayed vacant, the letter added.

PSBs to make additional provision of over ₹21,300 cr for higher family pension, NPS

Venkatachalam emphasised that the association had submitted a panel of names to the banks concerned and the government, as prescribed, but none had been appointed all these years.

The association has learnt that the names it proposed “have been duly recommended by the concerned Banks to the Department of Financial Services in the Ministry of Finance, Government of India, and all these proposals and recommendations are pending consideration by the Government”, he wrote.

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MSMEs, retail loans to take bank NPAs to Rs 10 lakh crore by March 2022, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Banks’ bad loans might cross Rs 10 lakh crore by the end of this fiscal, mainly on account of slippages in retail and MSME sectors, a study said.

“NPAs are expected to rise to 8.5-9 per cent by March 2022, driven by slippages in retail, Micro, Small and Medium Enterprise (MSME) accounts, besides some restructured assets,” the study by industry body Assocham and ratings firm Crisil said.

Reserve Bank of India (RBI) Governor Shaktikanta Das this month had said the current levels of non-performing assets (NPA) looks manageable.

At the end of June, the gross NPA level of the banking system was 7.5 per cent and the capital adequacy level was around 16 per cent, which gives an adequate cushion, Das said at an event.

MSME, retail hit

The current asset quality stress cycle will be different than that witnessed a few years back. NPAs then came primarily from bigger, chunkier accounts.

According to the study, this time, smaller accounts, especially the MSME and retail segments, are expected to be more vulnerable than large corporates, as the latter have consolidated and deleveraged their balance sheets considerably in the past few years.

Even though the restructuring scheme announced for MSMEs and small borrowers should prevent the NPAs from rising too much, there is an opportunity for stressed asset investors with expertise and interest in these asset classes, it added.

”The effectiveness of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC) will be tested by the potential spike in NPAs as the standstill on initiation of fresh insolvency cases for year ended in March 2021 and as most of the pandemic-induced policies or measures are unlikely to be continued”the study said.

IBC to rescue

The expected increase in GNPAs of both banks and non-banks this fiscal, because of the pandemic, will provide an opportunity for players in the stressed assets market through resolution via various routes, with IBC likely to be the most preferred.

However, the GNPAs of banks have declined from the peak seen in March 2018 and were lower as of March 2021 as against March 2020. Supportive measures, including the six-month debt moratorium, Emergency Credit Line Guarantee Scheme (ECLGS) loans and restructuring measures were among the main reasons.

According to the study, the risk management practices of Indian banks, especially public sector banks, have scope for improvement.

In the past, laws were not in favour of lenders and allowed erring promoters to exploit the tedious recovery procedure. This is borne out by the high number of wilful defaulters of banks, it noted.

”However, RBI has tightened norms for such defaulters and made stressed asset resolution norms more stringent. That, coupled with increased resolution of large-ticket NPAs under the IBC framework, have contributed to better recovery of NPAs,” the study said.

Click here for more IBC news updates



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RBL Bank credit cards go live on Visa

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Private sector lender RBL Bank on Wednesday started issuing credit cards to its new customers on Visa’s payment network.

“The launch follows the successful completion of technology integration with the new platform following the agreement between RBL Bank and Visa on July 14, 2021,” it said in a statement.

RBL Bank has a five per cent market share in credit cards in India. Its card issuance had got disrupted after the Reserve Bank of India imposed a bar on Mastercard from on-boarding new customers on its domestic network. RBL Bank earlier had an exclusive partnership with Mastercard.

Also read: Can you bank on neobanks?

The bank said it will leverage its partnership with Visa to offer a wide range of credit cards to a variety of customer segments, adding that the technology integration has been done in record time.

“With this launch, we are confident of meeting our annual plan of issuing 1.2-1.4 million credit cards in 2021-22,” said Harjeet Toor, Head – Retail, Inclusion and Rural Business, RBL Bank.

Sujai Raina, Head – Business Development, India, Visa said, “At a time when consumers are looking for more ways to pay without using cash, we are pleased to announce our partnership with RBL Bank to issue Visa-powered credit cards to their consumers.”

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MFIN, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The microfinance industry’s gross loan portfolio (GLP) rose 4.2 per cent to Rs 2,37,369 crore as of June 30, 2021, compared with Rs 2,27,727 crore as of June 30, 2020, according to a report by Microfinance Institutions Network (MFIN). Microfinance loan disbursals during the first quarter of the financial year 2021-22 improved significantly to Rs 25,503 crore, compared with Rs 6,186 crore in the corresponding quarter last year.

MFIN is an industry association comprising 58 NBFC-MFIs and 39 associates including banks, small finance banks (SFBs) and non-banking financial companies (NBFCs).

It released the Micrometer report for the April-June 2021 quarter on Tuesday.

The report showed that 13 banks hold the largest share of the portfolio in micro-credit with a total loan outstanding of Rs 1,02,405 crore, which is 43.14 per cent of the total micro-credit universe.

NBFC-MFIs are the second-largest provider of micro-credit with a loan amount outstanding of Rs 75,021 crore, accounting for 31.61 per cent of the total industry portfolio.

SFBs have a total loan amount outstanding of Rs 38,624 crore with a total share of 16.27 per cent. NBFCs account for another 7.89 per cent, and other MFIs account for 1.09 per cent of the universe, it said.

As of June 30, 2021, the microfinance industry served 5.68 crore unique borrowers, through 10.30 crore loan accounts, the report showed.

The microfinance active loan accounts decreased by 0.67 per cent during the past 12 months to 10.30 crore as of June 30, 2021, it said.

The report said the gross loan portfolio (GLP) of NBFC-MFIs stood at Rs 76,237 crore as of June 30, 2021, a 6.9 per cent year-on-year rise as compared to Rs 71,301 crore as of June 30, 2020.

Loan amount of Rs 6,511 crore was disbursed in Q1 FY 2021-22 by NBFC-MFIs through 17.97 lakh accounts, compared with Rs 561 crore disbursed in Q1 FY 2020-21 through 1.99 lakh accounts.

NBFC-MFIs received a total of Rs 3,596 crore in debt funding during the April-June quarter of this fiscal, which is 39.6 per cent lower than that in the year-ago period.

Total equity of the NBFC-MFIs grew 11.9 per cent year-on-year to Rs 18,660 crore as of June 30, 2021. PTI HV HRS hrs



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