A surprise bond rally sweeps over India as global funds pile in

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A rally in India’s sovereign bonds, fueled by mutual funds and overseas investors after weeks of indifference, has left most Mumbai traders baffled at their sudden fortune.

Yields dropped across the curve last week, with those on the benchmark 10-year bond declining ten basis points, the biggest weekly drop since April. Government debt auctions are finding buyers again, after a spate of earlier sales were canceled or rescued by underwriters.

“The sudden demand is surprising,” said Ritesh Bhusari, deputy general manager for treasury at South Indian Bank. “The lower inflation trajectory for the next two months and global factors are supporting this,” he said.

Turn in sentiment

The quick turn in sentiment came after the benchmark 10-year yield rose to its highest since March, accentuated by a Reserve Bank of India policy review held on August 6, where one member dissented on the accommodative stance. The subsequent minutes showed more members had indicated excess liquidity could be whittled down. While many traders have been left wondering about the market turnaround, others suggested that lower-than-expected growth for the June quarter and expectations of benign inflation in the coming readings may have nudged investors to recalibrate.

Mutual funds turned net buyers with purchases of ₹151 billion ($2.1 billion) of debt over the last 10 trading days, data compiled by Bloomberg shows. Foreigners were also lured back after a long break following a sharp rally in the rupee.

Overseas investors picked up ₹28.2 billion of bonds under the so-called Fully Accessible Route, where there are no caps on foreign purchases, and ₹15.2 billion under the general category since the last week of August. A special route for long-term foreign investors called the Voluntary Retention Route, also suddenly saw all its ₹906 billion quota taken up.

While the GDP release on August 31 helped, it’s likely that comments by Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell at Jackson Hole reassured global investors that the US central bank would be gradual in removing stimulus. That has boosted risk sentiment globally.

“The GDP numbers triggered the change in sentiment and show RBI will continue with its extended accommodative stance,” said Vikas Goel, chief executive at PNB Gilts. “I do not expect any hike in the reverse repo this year.”

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Cashfree launches Banking-as-a-service offering ‘Accounts’

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Bengaluru-based Cashfree, a digital payments and banking technology company on Monday launched its Banking-as-a-service offering ‘Accounts’ to help neo-banks and fintech platforms integrate banking services into their product.

Accounts will allow businesses to offer features such as account opening, linking, deposits, check balance and interest earning to their customers, partners and vendors, the company said in an official release. It will help enable 100 per cent paperless bank account creation.

Also read: Cashfree raises funds from SBI

Currently supporting the creation and management of current accounts, Cashfree intends to add support for savings accounts, virtual accounts and other payments instruments soon.

“The product is currently running pilots with fintech start-ups, and will also enable other technology platforms to generate and customize payment instruments using Cashfree APIs,” it said.

Akash Sinha, CEO and Co-Founder, Cashfree said, “India is witnessing a dramatic rise in the number of digital-first start-ups and enterprises. While the ecosystem is evolving rapidly to adapt to the change, start-ups and tech-first businesses often struggle with access to banking services.”

“Cashfree aims to build a bouquet of Fintech APIs to help empower businesses and individuals. Our first product under it, ‘Accounts’, will not only allow businesses to open banking accounts for their customers to collect payments and make payouts easily, but also bring their customers under the fold of digital payments,” said Sinha.

The announcement comes close on the heels to the launch of the Account Aggregator ecosystem last week.

Cashfree works closely with all leading banks to build the core payments and banking infrastructure that powers the company’s products, and is also integrated with major platforms such as Shopify, Wix, Paypal, Amazon Pay, Paytm and Google Pay, it said.

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Tech, balanced infra & government intervention key for supply chain rehaul, say ETILC members, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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According to the Logistics Performance Index issued by the World Bank, India ranked 44th in global logistics performance. Its logistics costs amount to a high 14 percent of GDP, 6 percent representing transportation (Arthur D. Little Analysis 2020). Despite being large and well-connected, India’s Supply Chain and Logistics sector is ripe with challenges. However, this can be transformed should we implement balanced logistics more and tackle the systemic issues around infrastructure and storage.

Setting Up Infrastructure
Road transportation, weighing around 64 percent of the country’s logistics infrastructure, has a necessitous transportation infrastructure. Not only is our rail and sea network infrastructure under-utilized and is wanting in terms of digital tech. Moreover, the cost of road transportation also stands higher than the latter. Better Inventory planning and demand forecasting could reduce the high indirect costs, amounting to USD 120 to 180 billion. India also has to set up more cold storage capacity that is 226.7 lakh tons, instead of the required 350 lt. As per the Indian Council of Food and Agriculture, this leads to a wastage of 30 percent of the total agricultural produce. India’s retail market comprises scattered micro-scale sellers, with a vast 90 percent of the total being kirana shops.

“Indian government’s reduction of global allocation of vaccine due domestic needs has created a gap between supply and demand, This has created imbalance in supply chain for third world countries dependent on India manufactured vaccines, further due infrastructure challenges mainly in cold chain supply chain and shortage of cold transportation equipment & trucks has added strain in entire vaccine supply chain,” says Karthi Baskar, Deputy Managing Director, Kintetsu World Express.

Covid-19 & Supply Chain
According to WHO, the ban, against the backdrop of the lethal second wave of Coronavirus, had affected around 91 countries as of June 1st. Adding to this predicament, with around 353 innovator drug contract manufacturing sites, Maharashtra saw a total 6 million Covid cases by June 15th. Apart from that, the inadequate capacity and an incompetent infrastructure of the cold chain supply adds to this disruption and is in need of urgent enhancement and augmentation with respect to the particular temperature requirements, and inventories for special equipments at airports. The lopsided distribution of cold supply prioritizing urban cities over other areas also needs to be recalibrated. Moreover, orders mandating the truck drivers to carry negative RT-PCR reports issued within the preceding 48 hours further added to the already struggling freight networks. However, despite these shortcomings, the Indian Pharmaceutical and healthcare supply chain has surprisingly shown significant potential in the post-covid scenario.

The Indian pharmaceutical sector, although previously underutilized, has now been pushed by the successive covid waves to become the sole means of allocating medicines, blood and plasma transfusions, oxygen concentrators, surgical kits, and vaccines. As per the health-tech report by IAMAI-Praxis, e-pharmacies and teleconsultation platforms witnessed an escalation of up to 200% and 300% in the frequency of orders in 2020. Despite critical infrastructural issues in the Indian healthcare chain, the covidian impact has catalyzed our health tech with disruption and technological intervention. We already benefit from an operative R&D and clinical trials framework. That, along with the recent ingenious solutions in R&D, owing to the rapid adaptation of AI, ML, deep science, and data analytics, make palpable India’s potential success in medical R&D based on tech.

With the preexisting Covid-19 outbreak along with the imposed nationwide lockdown, India also witnessed an increased exigency and frequency of orders. With respect to goods mobility, the logistics industry also encountered impediments concerning manpower, process visibility, accessibility to outlying areas as well as contactless delivery. Not only has the e-grocery industry tackled these obstacles, but it also further expanded the digitalization to small and medium business owners across categories such as consumer goods, grocery, fashion, electronics, books, and professional services. This led to both the augmentation of shopfloor digitalization in terms of its geographic operations as well as the widening of the merchants’ digital footprint.

“With the establishment of an effective infrastructure built upon cross-state standardized IT systems, interoperability and the adoption of global data standards, the Indian Supply Chain awaits an optimistic future,” says Sameer Khatri, Regional Director – Indian Subcontinent & MD India, DSV Air & Sea Pvt. Ltd.

“Post-covid, supply chains will be more localized, agile and flexible. At DICV, all these aspects have been amplified and accelerated, leading to enhanced transparency across the value chain and real time risk tracking,” says Managing Director & CEO, Daimler India Commercial Vehicles Pvt Ltd (DICV).

Cold Chains
The JLL report predicts the national cold chain sector to multiply at over 20% CAGR by 2025, owing to the reorganization of conventional cold storage into a modern storage facility. This can moreover give way to a proliferation of the same in both Tier-I cities like Mumbai, Bengaluru, Chennai, Pune, Kolkata, Delhi-NCR, and Hyderabad, along with Tier-II cities like Lucknow, Kanpur, Ranchi, and Patna. Both conventional and upcoming service providers now implement warehouse automation, digitally monitoring temperature-sensitive cargo, along with the incorporation of AI, ML, and IoT for medicine and vaccine transportation. With the expansion of cold supply chains and a gradual increase in organized logistics, the Indian startup ecosystem has also contributed tremendously by devising innovative services like digital solutions for tracking, payment, and dispatch. The government granted infrastructure status to the supply chain sector, leading to all this growth; this clears the sector for availing 100 percent foreign direct investment, enabling them to borrow vast amounts under the ECB.

Skill Development
A recurring obstacle in the refurbishment of the manufacturing and logistics sector appears to be the insufficiency of skilled workers. To this end, the Centre for Product Design and Manufacturing (CPDM) at the Indian Institute of Science, along with TalentSprint, has furthermore introduced a PG-level advanced certification program in digital manufacturing and smart factories. The program will aid management and small factory strategy professionals, along with IoT, FMCG, automotive aerospace pharma, and energy industry aspirants.

“On top of omni-channels providing seamless and cost-effective solutions, digitalization has added an extra edge to SCM,” says Vaibhav Vohra, Managing Director, Continental Carriers.

Owing to a multichannel approach to sales, it has been predicted that the Indian omni-channel and warehouse management systems’ market size will strengthen to USD 488 million by 2024 from USD 231 million in 2019 at a CAGR of 16.2%. Furthermore the CII Supply Chain Leadership Conclave (CPG & Pharma) held last year, examined the defects and limitations of the Indian Supply Chain Sector and devised a roadmap to “a resilient 21st century supply chain.” According to their Vision 2030, “India will be one of the top 20 countries in the World Bank Logistics Performance Index by 2030.” They aim to achieve these ends via optimization, digitalization, simplification of distribution systems, and adopting a sustainable, agile, and resilient supply chain. AI, ML, Blockchain, and IoT, Analytics, Robotics, AR, VR, Cyber Security, 3D Printing, and Additive Manufacturing are the means of revolutionizing the logistics industry. They would add to data management, traceability, security, end-to-end visibility, and analytical-based risk management. What seems to be next is the step towards Omni-channels to integrate virtual sales and in-store general sales.

“Government intervention is integral for promoting a fair competitive logistics market, balancing risk sharing between public and private sector, and avoiding creation of monopolie,” says Raaja Kanwar, Chairman and Managing Director, Apollo International.

As per Arthur D Little’s report, instituting regulatory and enabling policies is vital on the part of both the national as well as regional governments. Policies can be implemented pertaining to standardization of turnaround time, truck size, swifter license and permissions approvals as well as GST consolidation. Subsequently, SCM-friendly policies will also help expand logistics and broadband connectivity to relatively rural areas, thus working towards reimagining the Indian Supply Chain as a globally competitive one via “Atma Nirbhar Bharat” and “Make in India.”

“Since Logistics has a great environmental impact, it is crucial to work towards a Green Supply Chain by reducing emissions and eradicating waste,” says Sam Katgara, Partner, Jeena & Co.

With the integration of technology into the logistics sector, our next step to productivity should be optimizing transportation routes and adapting more renewable and durable models of transportation. Minimizing supply chain wastage and embracing recyclable means will further ensure compliance, profitability, and customer satisfaction.

“To ease digitalisation for small and medium sized retailers, access to dedicated, customised and affordable end-to-end integrated omni channel services is a game changer. At FM Logistic India, we have a complete portfolio of integrated services to facilitate this adaptation,” says Alexandre Amine Soufiani, MD & CEO, FM Logistic India.



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Rahul Shukla, HDFC Bank, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Rahul Shukla, Group Head, Commercial & Rural Banking, HDFC Bank, counters common misconceptions regarding India’s rural economy. Edited excerpts from his interview to ET Now:

ET Now: Commercial rural banking is a sizable business for HDFC Bank. The perception is that it has got hit because of the second wave. What is the reality?
Rahul Shukla: The reality is very different from what we talk about in TV news rooms. The mood on the ground is positive. This is a busy season for agricultural financing. Business for both farmers and us is robust.

The commercial vehicle & construction equipment business is going strong coming out of the pandemic. Credit utilisation by MSMEs is steadily increasing every month. Healthcare sector is currently fairly credit-strong. So we continue to expand our geographic footprint, extending credit in rural and semi-urban areas of the country and we see no credit challenges in finding new business.

Underlying each one of these trends is the visible hand of government policy. You have ECLGS. You have the scrappage policy which is coming into force from October. There are a variety of far-sighted agri schemes and the policy support for expansion of the healthcare segment in the non-metro areas.

The strength from the government has stabilised the sector, the economy as well as the banking system. That is being seen in the numbers that are coming out.

So you are confirming to us that there is a big difference between perception and reality, and that things for your business are looking up?
That is correct. Even in Kerala, there are 40% unoccupied COVID beds available; for ICU beds for COVID, the percentage availability is even higher. So during this wave we seem to be managing much better. Business momentum is pretty strong.

In my last conference call with investors, I had said that we had grown at 4% quarter on quarter growth. This was below what should be the natural growth rate for my businesses. I can tell you that we are progressing quite smoothly in terms of expansion of growth rate towards its natural trajectory as it settles down.

The markets are very open. We are blessed that we are a large country and a large market which is underpenetrated in credit. The policy-led transformation of agri and strong policy support for MSMEs will continue to allow banks to find high growth opportunities for a long time to come without any undue credit concerns.

Can we safely say that seasonality will kick in, and in Q2 and Q3 things will only start improving?
That is actually the case. Let me take one of the segments that we are pretty active on — transportation finance, where we finance trucks and construction equipment and tractors. The disbursements that we did in the month of June was 110% of May. May was shut down. So you can say that looks pretty high. The month of July was 40% higher than the month of June. August, which closed just about three days ago, was about 20-25% higher than July.

We are a large financer, so a lot of growth cannot be attributed to market share increase. A lot of that growth has to be attributed to underlying strong trends in terms of growth. That is the indicator that we are seeing in pretty much all of the businesses. I can go granularly in terms of data, but I just wanted to give you an overall sense. You can connect the dots.

What about the unsecured end of the rural business? Does that bother you?
The total agricultural lending in the country is Rs 15 lakh crore. Rs 5 lakh crore is secured and Rs 10 lakh crore is unsecured. People have to figure out a way to play in that particular segment. Today we operate in one lakh villages and in two years we would like to expand this to two lakh villages. That is a huge jump, but that is still only 30% of the market. At that point of time, we have to follow and also extend credit to the small and marginal farmers. When we expand, we will have to do so in a manner which is credit responsible.

There are different things happening in the rural economy. Today if you think that the rural segment will continue to remain the same as a sector and also for the banks in the next 10 years, nothing can be farther from the truth. The entire ecosystem is changing quite dramatically. You have a shift towards rural agri businesses which is the value addition businesses. You have village warehouses as well as the rural logistic systems that are coming up and you have the FPOs (farm producer organisations) which allow you to channel credit to the small and marginal farmer on an unsecured basis but on the back of robust cash flows. These organisations also allow the farmer to go out and get a little bit of better pricing in the marketplace.

The way the structures are evolving on the back of at least 25 different government schemes, it is possible today to go out and lend. If we have to sustainably grow, we have to push credit into the hinterland. If we push credit into the hinterland, we have to look at structures where we will be able to provide credit without creating an NPA book, because that will only increase my cost of lending. You have to price your products right.

So I am not worried in terms of the rural growth rate. In fact, this is a quarter where I think I am going to surprise myself at the amount of NPA recoveries. The next quarter will have the harvest income, so that is going to give a further uplift.

We do business on the basis that the common man is an honest man. You go out and push credit to MSME or in the rural segment, and by and large 99.99% of the people want to pay back their debt to the bank. They are also indebted to the bank because the bank has helped them grow and come out of the poverty cycle. So, this would be my very long answer to a very short question of yours.

Don’t you think that lending to MSMEs could expose you to credit risk, because they don’t have competitiveness?
The MSME sector, taking into account both bank credit as well as the non-banking finance space, is roughly about Rs 20 lakh crore. There are about 6.5 crore entities of which roughly about 1.5 crore or thereabouts are borrowing, and the others are non-borrowing. That is the backbone that creates jobs; it is 35% of the economy. This is a segment that needs to be protected.

Just look back at the CHGS scheme. It was very important at that point of time for the entire ecosystem to stabilise this segment. Now you can say that MSMEs have to be competitive. But look at top companies of today — where they were between 1990 and 1995. I do not want to name the companies, but they would have been MSMEs then.

There is a lot of technology infusion that is happening. There is a lot of tech support that has been provided through a variety of schemes — whether it is through industry associations, through government policy as well as through nodal financing agencies. So I am pretty positive that this is a segment where the NPAs will continue to remain low as far as we are concerned.

In fact, just as we want to improve from one lakh village coverage to two lakh, we want to improve our coverage in terms of MSME lending from 550 districts to 575, and in two years thereafter to 625 districts. That is a lot of districts. That is how the bank is betting itself in this space.

Are you gaining market share, or is it that the market itself is expanding?
If you ask me what we should be doing in MSMEs, I would say we should be present in every pin code. So number one, you know that we are expanding footprint and number two, after expanding footprint we are measuring what is our standing in each one of these spaces.

So, obviously we are expanding our presence and we are also gaining market share.

Now, why are we gaining market share? At the end of the day, we have a digital platform which is fairly robust. You have to allow the account opening to the local businesses digitally, you have to allow that to transact digitally and you have to also answer their queries digitally. In this pandemic, many of the entrepreneurs in the far-flung areas have figured out that their platforms may not be working. But our platform is fairly robust, which is why we have seen an increased number of new customer additions. It gives us confidence that we are on the right track in terms of our platform. That is what I see as the reason for the growth in this segment for us.

How do you see technology implementation helping you? When you are looking at expanding reach, scale & size, obviously you cannot open that many branches. What kind of new digital infrastructure could be there in terms of rural and SME lending?
Even though we are the largest private sector banker to MSMEs, we only have a 10% market share in secured agri credit. MSME and agri put together, we may have about 2 million customers. That is a pretty small number and there is potential for dramatic expansion.

Let me give you one example. We launched a dukandar overdraft scheme a month ago in partnership with the Common Services Centre of the government on the basis of six month’s bank statement. We sanctioned unsecured credit from Rs 50,000 up to Rs 10 lakh. This enables the programme to support even the corner Jhal Muri wala. You cannot do this physically. The programme has to be digital.

But there is a lot to do. We are good at the digital frontend and the customer self-service leg. We are good in transaction, barring in areas such as mortgage creation which are not digital. They are all moving towards the right direction. We also now have several years of experience behind us in digital credit decision, which is what we need to continue to improve upon.

Is technology helping you increase deposit franchise in rural areas?
The deposit accounts have largely remained with the nationalised banking system. Rural customers apparently have some kind of a specific belief. But we are making steady progress.

We have the tools, we have the solutions and we have embarked on that journey. We are continuing to see a pretty good deposit growth rate in semi-urban and rural markets.

Do you see the rural business becoming large in terms of fee-based transactions?
Rural lending today is about 90% crop lending. Crop lending is largely behind the price of dal and sugarcane. That ecosystem is completely changing. Now there is a lot of horticulture, there is a lot of push in vegetables, fruits etc and poultry, piggery, those sort of things.

Today, the farmer’s income is no longer only crop lending-based. It is about 35-40%, but the rest is coming from those allied agri activities as well as some value-added products. So that is where the trend is growing.

According to credit flow data, today a lot of credit is going towards home improvement, towards consumer durables, towards auto and two-wheeler loans. If you have to be relevant to the customer you have to be in all of those spaces. Basically, you want to be a bank which is going out and supporting the entire 360 degree credit as well as deposit needs of the customer.

When you give them crop lending or value-added agricultural business lending, you are also looking at their personal borrowings, what their need is. That is a whole strata of products that you look at.

But below that, one also has to look at 85% of the farmers which are small and marginal farmers. These are people who do not get full banking credit, and so they rely on informal lending. There are ways of going out and providing full credit needs of these farmers without unduly risking the balance sheet of the bank. That is how we should look at this opportunity.

You are the number two player in MSME lending. Do you plan to become number one? If yes, how soon?
Neither Mr Puri nor Shashi nor our chairman has ever said that we are chasing a ranking. Podium finish is not the goal of banking. Economic upliftment is the goal of banking. Credit extension is the goal of banking.

It is a matter of belief that we have to do more rural and more MSME. We have to deliver growth similar to retail, we have to turn it into a large profit segment by controlling NPAs similar to wholesale banking and almost all of the books should be priority sector lending which is in line with the country’s objective. But it also enables other parts of the bank to continue to grow.

So we will look at trying to achieve all these objectives. But this is not possible without strong digital processes. So what we are doing at this point of time is making sure that in mofussil towns digital is out there, it is connected, CASA accounts are getting digitally opened enabling 100% transactions digitally and solving queries digitally.

Customers continue to come towards us and join with us, and that makes us believe that we are doing the right thing.

You are the perfect person to update our viewers as to how the face of rural India is changing…

Rahul Shukla: I will just take you back in time. This agrarian economy is just a recent phenomenon. 500 years ago, we had villages but they were not dependent only on farming. There was a very good rural ecosystem. Old texts talk about artisans, ironsmiths, goldsmiths, and of a lot of stress on value-added products from farming.

The way agri lending is happening today, things are going to change dramatically. You have the agricultural infrastructure fund which is talking about village warehouses as well as village cold logistics systems. You have Swanidhi or the PM KUSUM scheme — things that are changing the face of rural systems. There are about 25 or 30 different schemes which are slowly effecting a dramatic shift in how the rural ecosystem is going to look like over the next five to 10 years.

Also, we have reached the limit in terms of scale farming which the green revolution gave us: food security. Putting more chemical pesticides can no longer increase yield from that particular farm. That is where these other things come in.

And this is changing quite dramatically on the ground. A marginal farmer who was making about Rs 25,000 a month has shifted to certain fruit crops, and his/her income has grown to about Rs 5 lakh – Rs 7.5 lakh per annum. This is what is leading to growth in rural consumption.

So the fear of large NPAs and rural slowdown is actually a false fear? The economic reality, at least for HDFC Bank, is that the rural economy is doing okay and progressively things will only improve?
You have summarized it very well. I will just say that we are an underpenetrated market in credit. It is HDFC Bank’s belief that the banking system can continue to expand. And we will continue to expand our footprint as well as the credit book. We do not see any challenges in terms of NPA creation as a result of this expansion.



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Scrappage policy to give a boost to used CV financing plans: Indostar Capital

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Indostar Capital Finance is betting big on used vehicle financing along with affordable housing and small and medium enterprise (SME) financing, as it looks to turn into a completely retail focussed non-banking financial company (NBFC).

“In the commercial vehicle (CV) business, we will focus on used vehicle financing. There is a lot of demand for old vehicles in the five to 10 year category and there are very few companies in this segment. Further, we also expect a lot of demand following the scrappage policy,” said R Sridhar, Executive Vice-Chairman and CEO, IndoStar Capital Finance.

Also see: Delhi govt bans plying of 10-year old diesel and 15-year old petrol vehicles in city

From about ₹3,000 crore disbursements in the segment, the company believes that the used CV business has the potential to grow 10 times in the next five years.

In an interaction with BusinessLine, Sridhar said the NBFC has also seen collection efficiencies move back to pre-second wave trends.

Branch expansion

Sridhar said the company is working on a branch expansion plan that aims to increase the current 250 branches to 1,000 over the next five years and be present in geographies across the country.

It will be on a hub and spoke model where it will move to 200 hubs in the next 5 years.

“The geographical expansion will consist of all the four zones of the country. We have also started building a presence in the north-east,” he further said.

Exit corporate lending sector

Indostar Capital Finance is also on track to exit the corporate lending business by March 2023 and will focus exclusively on retail lending.

“We have full conviction to be a 100 per cent retail lending organisation,” Sridhar said.

The company has a 77 per cent retail portfolio and 23 per cent corporate. It expects to bring the corporate book to 10 per cent by March 2022, and then bring it to zero in the year after that.

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Ola Electric ties up with banks, financial institutions for loans to customers, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Ola Electric on Monday said it has tied up with leading banks and financial institutions, including HDFC Bank, ICICI Bank, Kotak Mahindra Prime and TATA Capital, for providing loans to customers for its S1 electric scooter that will be available for purchase from September 8.

The company, which had last month launched the Ola S1 electric scooter in two variants — S1 and S1 Pro — at prices Rs 99,999 and Rs 1,29,999, respectively (ex-showroom including FAME II subsidy and excluding state subsidies), said it will start deliveries in October.

“We have tied up with all the major banks and (financial) institutions…we will have many of them live starting September 8 and then others will be live soon after,” Ola Electric Chief Marketing Officer Varun Dubey told PTI.

The banks and financial institutions that Ola Electric has tied up include Bank of Baroda, Axis Bank, HDFC Bank, ICICI Bank, IDFC First Bank, IndusInd Bank, AU Small Finance Bank, Jana Small Finance Bank, Kotak Mahindra Prime, TATA Capital and YES Bank.

Dubey said as consumers will be buying online the entire process is going to be “very seamless” and all those who choose financing should be able to avail of the option.

“They will be able to also get all the details in terms of what is the loan approval amount they have, what they need to do…Also, we have got very attractive financing options, with the EMI starting at just Rs 2,999 for S1…,” he added.

When asked about the delivery plans for the scooters, Dubey said from September 8 onwards, people who have reserved can convert that to a purchase by paying the remaining amount and finalise vehicle variant and colour options.

“Then we will start deliveries for them from October onwards. We will be doing home delivery and we will actually take the scooters to their doorsteps,” Dubey added.

When asked about the impact of the current semiconductor shortage on the company’s ability to meet demand, he said, “It’s definitely an evolving situation. Currently the timelines that we have given out factor in the various constraints.”

As people keep converting orders into purchases, he said Ola Electric will update its customers about the waiting period on the basis of “where they are in the queue or when they have exactly purchased how many people purchased before them”.

Ola Electric had opened pre-launch bookings of its electric scooters in July for Rs 499 and had received 1 lakh orders in just 24 hours but it has not disclosed how many orders it has received so far.

On August 15, the company announced its foray into the green mobility space with the launch of its first electric scooter, Ola S1.

The scooter comes in 10 colours with in-house development 8.5 KW motor and 3.97 kWh battery packs. Ola is setting up a manufacturing plant, spread across 500 acres, in Tamil Nadu.

The company had stated that it would initially start with 10 lakh annual production capacity and then scale it up to 20 lakh, in line with market demand, in the first phase.

When fully completed, Ola Electric had claimed that its plant would have an annual capacity of one crore units “that is 15 per cent of the world’s entire total two-wheeler production”.



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Orange Retail Finance eyes to disburse loans worth ₹1,000 crore

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Orange Retail Finance, a rural-focussed non-banking finance company, aims to disburse loans of about ₹1,000 crore over the next two years amid signs of economic recovery and pent-up demand for credit in the rural economy.

“Over the last eight years, we have disbursed loans worth ₹900 crore. Our current AUM is at ₹400 crore. In the next two years, we are planning to disburse about ₹1,000 crore in two-wheeler loans and loan against property (LAP),” said Ebenezer Daniel G, Founder, MD & CEO, Orange Retail Finance India Private Limited.

Affordable financial solutions

Started in 2013, the Chennai-based NBFC is focused on providing affordable mobility and livelihood finance solutions to semi-urban and rural India. Currently, the company has over 100 branches across the five southern States covering over 10,000 villages with a base of 1.45 lakh customers.

“Two-wheeler loans are our core product. Every year, rural two-wheeler growth is around 10-15 per cent while urban market growth is almost saturated,” Daniel said, adding, “There is growth in the rural segment because two-wheeler is a livelihood asset, and we can survive by creating an impact in this market.”

Currently, 80 percent of Orange Retail Finance’s loan portfolio comprises two-wheeler loans followed by swift cash loans (10 per cent) and LAP (5-10 per cent). In the next two years, the company plans to increase the share of LAP and swift cash loans to 25 per cent and 20 percent of the loan book, respectively.

Mobile app

The company recently launched ‘Orange Finmobi’, a mobile app where a customer can manage the end-to-end process of two-wheeler purchase including loan application, vehicle selection, RTO registration, EMI mandate and home delivery of vehicle.

“During the first Covid wave when the lockdown was in place for six months, over 22,000 of our cash mode customers migrated to digital payments using QR codes,” Daniel said. “Digitalisation is one of the key reasons for our survival. Now, we want to scale up in a big way using the digital infrastructure.”

The company also sees a big growth opportunity in electric two-wheeler financing.

“We have signed up with Hero Electric as a preferred financier and in the final stage of signing an MoU with Ola as a preferred financier for south India. We are also having discussions with TVS, Bajaj and Ather for a tie up,” Daniel said.

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How to convert purchase via SBI Debit card into EMI, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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If you are a State Bank of India (SBI) debit card holder, then you have the option of making big-ticket purchases via EMI. As per the bank’s press release, “SBI offers EMI facility for its customers using SBI debit card in order to purchase consumer durables from merchant stores by swiping their cards at POS (Point of sale). They can also avail this facility while buying online via e-commerce portals such as Amazon & Flipkart through SBI debit card.”

Eligibility
Before availing the EMI facility, customers must confirm the amount they are eligible to claim. This can be checked by sending SMS from the mobile number that is registered with the bank.

The SMS must be sent in the following format: DCEMI to 567676 from the registered mobile no. with the bank.

Steps for availing EMI facility with SBI debit card
Here’s how SBI debit card holders can avail EMI via debit card.

If the debit card EMI is being availed at merchant store:
a. Swipe SBI Debit Card on POS Machine at merchant store
b. Select > Brand EMI > Bank EMI
c. Enter > Amount > Repayment tenor
d. Enter PIN and press OK after the POS machine has checked the eligibility
e. Loan amount is booked after successful transaction
f. Charge slip containing Terms & Conditions of Loan is printed and the customer has to sign on the same

If the EMI is being availed for purchases made on an e-commerce website:
a. Login on Amazon or Flipkart from the mobile no. registered with the bank
b. Select the required brand, article and proceed for payment
c. Select the Easy EMI option from different payment options that appear and then select SBI
d. The amount is auto fetched, enter the tenor and click on proceed
e. SBI Login page appears, enter the internet banking or Debit Card credentials
f. Loan is booked, terms & conditions (T&C) are displayed, if accepted, the order is booked

Loan amount and interest rate:
As per the bank, customers can avail of the loan ranging from Rs. 8,000 to Rs. 1 lakh at an effective interest rate of 2-year MCLR + 7.50% which is 14.70% currently. The loan is available with flexible tenure options of 6/9/12/18 months.

Other benefits:
As per the bank’s press release, there are several other benefits offered on making an EMI purchase via an SBI debit card. These are as follows:

  • Zero processing fee
  • Zero documentation & instant disbursal
  • No blocking of Savings account balance
  • A Standing Instruction equivalent to the monthly instalment amount will be set up on customers’ savings bank account automatically upon availing this facility.



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ADB clears $150 million loan for urban poor housing project in Tamil Nadu

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Multilateral funding agency Asian Development Bank has approved a $150 million (about ₹1,095 crore) loan for a sustainable housing project for the urban poor in Tamil Nadu.

The loan to provide access to inclusive, resilient, and sustainable housing for the urban poor in Tamil Nadu was approved on September 3, 2021, ADB said in a release on Monday.

The Manila-headquartered funding agency said Tamil Nadu is vital to India’s economic growth, contributing 8.54 per cent to the country’s gross domestic product (GDP).

Economic opportunities have increased rural–urban migration in the state, which already has one of the highest urbanisation rates in India.

“Tamil Nadu’s housing shortfall accounts for 6.66 per cent of the national deficit, and when mapped against income levels, low-income households bear most of the shortage,” said ADB Principal Safeguards Specialist for South Asia Ricardo Carlos Barba.

The aim is to provide vulnerable and disadvantaged households access to inclusive, safe, and affordable housing infrastructure and services, Barba said.

Tamil Nadu has a population of more than 72 million (7.2 crore), nearly half of which are living in urban areas.

The rapid urbanisation and growth in the urban population will require adequate urban infrastructure and services, including housing, ADB said.

The project

With this $150 million loan, through the Tamil Nadu Slum Clearance Board, the project will construct housing units in nine different locations and relocate about 6,000 households vulnerable to natural hazards to safer locations.

It will also help Tamil Nadu’s Directorate of Town and Country Planning develop regional plans to map the State’s economic and infrastructure development including affordable housing, environmental protection, disaster risk management, and gender, ADB said.

A portion of ADB’s assistance will be invested by the State government as equity into the Tamil Nadu Shelter Fund to catalyse private sector financing and support investments mainly in industrial housing and working women’s hostels for low-income and migrant workers.

In addition, ADB will provide a $1.5 million (nearly ₹10.95 crore) technical assistance (TA) grant from its Technical Assistance Special Fund to support the capacity building of government agencies responsible for delivering affordable housing and regional planning in the state.

The TA will document successful approaches to affordable housing delivery, including the graduation programme for vulnerable relocated beneficiaries, that can be adopted in other cities and countries, it said.

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Small finance banks seen offering high interest rates for fixed deposits, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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For those who seek to invest with guaranteed returns, fixed deposits (FDs) are still among the preferred investment products. They continue to be popular among senior citizens and investors who are looking for low-risk investment tools.

These days, small finance banks (SFBs) are offering lucrative interest rates than top lenders–State Bank of India (SBI), HDFC Bank and ICICI Bank.

On an average, small finance banks are offering interest rates ranging from 3.5% to 6.50%, while top lenders are offering 2.5 % to 5.5%.

Here are some small finance banks to consider for investing in FDs

Suryoday Small Finance Bank

Suryoday Small Finance Bank is offering interest rate ranging from 3.25% to 6.75% on deposits with maturity of seven days to 10 years.

North East Small Finance Bank

North East Small Finance Bank offers interest rates from 3% to 7% on deposits maturing in seven days to 10 years.

Utkarsh Small Finance Bank

Utkarsh Small Finance Bank offers interest rate from 3.00% to 6.75% on FDs maturing in seven days to 10 years.

Equitas Small Finance Bank

Equitas Small Finance Bank offers interest rates from 3.50 % to 6.50 % on FDs maturing in seven days to 10 years.

AU Small Finance Bank

AU Small Finance Bank offers interest rates ranging from 3.50 % to 6.00 % on FDs maturing in seven days to 10 years.

Jana Small Finance Bank

Jana Small Finance Bank offers interest rates from 2.50% to 6.75% on FDs maturing in seven days to 10 years.



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