SBI raises Rs 4000 crore through AT1 bonds, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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State Bank of India (SBI) has raised Rs 4,000 crore of the Basel compliant Additional Tier 1 (AT1) bonds on Wednesday at a coupon rate of 7.72 %. This is the first AT1 Bond issuance in the domestic market post the new SEBI regulations.

“The issue garnered overwhelming response from investors with bids in excess of Rs. 10,000 crores received against a base issue size of Rs. 1,000 which is an indicator of the trust the investors place on the country’s largest Bank. This also very clearly demonstrates the maturity of the Indian Investors in their selection of Issuers for such instruments” said SBI in a release.

Based on the response, the Bank has decided to accept Rs 4,000 crores at a coupon of 7.72% . This is the lowest pricing-ever offered on such debt, issued by any Indian bank since the implementation of Basel III capital rules in 2013. The AT 1 instrument is perpetual in nature, however, it can be called back by the issuer after five years or any anniversary date thereafter.

While the Bank has AAA credit rating from local credit agencies, the AT1 offering is rated AA+, which is the highest rating in the country for these instruments in view of the hybrid and high-risk nature of these instruments.

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Banking venture of Centrum Financial Services christened Unity SFB

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Centrum Financial Services Ltd (CFSL) has christened its proposed banking venture as Unity Small Finance Bank (SFB).

Unity SFB, which has its registered office in New Delhi, currently has three Directors — Jaspal Singh Bindra, Executive Chairman, Centrum Capital Ltd (CCL); Sriram Venkatasubramanian, CFO, CCL; and Ranjan Ghosh, MD & CEO, CFSL.

Tally Solutions and Cosmea Financial Holdings apply to RBI for SFB licence

The SFB will eventually take over the scam-hit Punjab and Maharashtra Co-operative (PMC) Bank. Currently, there are 11 SFBs in the country.

Revamp of operations

RBI had accorded “in-principle” approval to CFSL, which is a wholly-owned subsidiary of CCL, on June 18, 2021, to set up an SFB. This approval was in specific pursuance to CFSL’s February 2021 offer in response to PMC Bank’s November 2020 Expression of Interest (EoI) notification.

Depositors of PMC Bank still await clarity on withdrawals

Under the “in-principle” approval, CFSL will first operationalise Unity SFB in 120 days. Thereafter, the RBI will place in public domain a draft scheme of amalgamation of PMC Bank with the SFB. The last step will be the government sanction for the scheme.

Mobile payments firm BharatPe is expected to be an equal partner in Unity SFB.

In the run-up to the formation of the SFB, CCL announced a restructuring of its operations, whereby its board approved the sale of the entire business of two wholly-owned material subsidiaries — CFSL and Centrum Microcredit Ltd — to its proposed step-down subsidiary (proposed SFB), subject to members’ and other requisite statutory and regulatory approvals.

Pooling of business of the aforementioned subsidiaries into the proposed SFB is required to be done as per the “in-principle” approval received from the RBI to set up the SFB, CCL said in an exchange filing on August 24.

The consideration for the sale of the entire business of CFSL and Centrum Microcredit to the proposed SFB is ₹316 crore and ₹110 crore, respectively, per the filing. This sale is subject to adjustments for any material change in financial status till effective date of the business transfer.

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Outlook for non-banks and housing financiers shifts to ‘improving’ from ‘stable’: Ind-Ra

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India Ratings and Research (Ind-Ra) has changed the outlook for retail non-banking finance companies (NBFCs) and housing finance companies (HFCs) to “improving” from “stable” for the second half (2H) of FY22.

The credit rating agency opined that adequate system liquidity (because of regulatory measures), along with sufficient capital buffers, stable margins due to low funding cost and on-balance sheet provisioning buffers, provides enough cushion to navigate the challenges from a subdued operating environment.

This operating environment could lead to an increase in asset quality challenges due to the second Covid wave impacting disbursements and collections for non-banks.

Ind-Ra observed that the operating environment is dynamic due to the likelihood of a third Covid wave, its intensity, regulatory stance and its impact.

After a lull, NBFCs banking on better times

The agency believes the segments facing heightened delinquencies for non-banks are two-wheelers, passenger vehicles, unsecured and secured business loans, microfinance and commercial vehicles. It expects these segments to remain under pressure during 2HFY22 as business momentum remains subdued.

The housing and gold finance segments have been more resilient to the pandemic and would remain so over the medium term.

The agency believes that in this environment, meaningful variations are likely in the performance among different asset classes, which would reflect on non-banks, depending on their assets-under-management mix.

RBI aligns deposit-taking norms for HFCs with NBFCs

“NBFCs with a diversified asset mix and non-overlapping customer segments could be considered better placed to navigate operating challenges and may report a less volatile operating performance,” Jinay Gala, Associate Director, Ind-Ra, said.

High delinquencies

The agency found that asset quality for non-banks had deteriorated in FY21, and there was a build-up in 1Q (April-June) FY22, keeping headline numbers elevated in FY22.

The overall stressed book (gross non-performing assets plus restructured book) for the top 10 NBFCs rose to 6.4 per cent in FY21 from 5.4 per cent in FY20, Ind-Ra said.

Furthermore, the book’s benefit through the Emergency Credit Line Guarantee Scheme (ECLGS) would be around 5.1 per cent, where there could be slippages post moratorium, mostly in FY23.

Similarly, HFCs witnessed a rise in delinquencies where the overall stressed book for the top 10 entities rose to 3.8 per cent in FY21 from 2.3 per cent in FY20.

Ind-Ra underscored that the rise in delinquencies was high in 1QFY22 for NBFCs (top 10) and HFCs (top 10), where gross non-performing assets increased quarterly by 35 per cent and 26.5 per cent, respectively.

Gala observed that as the overall stress on the loan book is on the rise, loss, given default, could increase if resolution delays are longer than envisaged.

Due to the pandemic, there were frequent lockdowns across states, leading to difficulties in the enforcement of hard collateral and the possibility of a resolution through Section 13(2), SARFESAI, or through debt recovery tribunals, the report said.

“NBFCs are well capitalised to withstand any impact due to the fluid operating environment. Larger NBFCs have raised equity capital over the past 1-1.5 years and smaller NBFCs were anyway less levered. So, from a stress case perspective, the buffers are adequate to absorb any asset quality shock,” Gala said.

Unchanged growth

In FY22, the agency expects growth for NBFCs to be maintained at 9-10 per cent, in line with earlier stated expectations, and HFC growth could be maintained at 10 per cent.

Ind-Ra believes diversification in product lines remains crucial for non-banks to drive growth during cyclical downturns and to have a wider product basket that negates the risk of a single asset class franchise.

Impact on asset classes

In a report, Gala noted that growth in the commercial vehicle segment remains challenged, whereas certain sub-categories of vehicle finance such as tractors and small commercial vehicles could sustain their growth momentum during 2HFY22.

The gold segment, which witnessed reasonable growth due to rising gold prices in FY21, is likely to witness tapered growth in FY22, in the absence of a sharp pullback in prices, the report says.

Loan against property remains challenged where collateral values have been impacted due to the lack of resolution and challenges faced across micro, small and medium enterprises amid cash-flow disruptions, it added.

Further, lenders in the personal loan and business loan segments in the unsecured category are likely to be among the most impacted asset classes and the lenders would remain cautious.

Lenders are likely to look for stronger borrowers; supply-chain financing, where their obligations remain on strong anchors, could gain traction.

“The microfinance segment witnessed challenges during the second wave, where the collection efficiency was impacted due to the widespread nature of the pandemic in rural areas.

“Although collection efficiency and disbursements would improve, they will not without taking their toll in the form of elevated credit costs,” Gala said.

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Yes Bank appoints Atul Malik & Rekha Murthy as Non-Executive Directors, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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YES BANK has announced the appointment of Atul Malik and Rekha Murthy as Non-Executive Directors, effective from August 30, 2021. The decision comes pursuant to approval of the Board of Directors, based on the recommendation of the Nomination & Remuneration Committee of the Board.

Malik is a veteran banker with more than 30 years of widespread experience. He is presently serving as a Senior Advisor to TPG for their financial services portfolio. He represents TPG as the Chairman of UBC, one of the largest private sector banks in Sri Lanka.

Previously, Malik was a Senior Advisor to General Atlantic for their financial services portfolio. He has also served as the CEO of Maritime Bank, one of the largest private banks in Vietnam from 2012 to 2015.

Prashant Kumar, Managing Director & CEO, YES BANK, said, “We are pleased to welcome the two new Non-Executive Directors to the Board. Their global experience in driving significant business growth, exhaustive knowledge of the industry, and professional expertise in advising large international enterprises will be invaluable as we continue to strengthen and grow Yes Bank.”

Murthy possesses 30 years of extensive global experience in the Technology sector across India, Asia Pacific and the USA. She has held senior and country leadership roles at leading global companies such as IBM, Harvard Business School Publishing, Wyse Technology, SAP, PeopleSoft, Digital Equipment Corporation and Korn Ferry International, the statement added.

Currently, she is engaged with start-ups in an advisory role and as a mentor.

“Ms. Rekha Murthy’s extensive background in technological transformation and change management along with Mr. Atul Malik’s wide-ranging experience as a veteran banker are ideal for accelerating the organization’s transformation – by advancing innovation, developing strategic alliances and elevating customer experience,” added Kumar.



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Medium industries show a sharp 72% jump in credit growth in July, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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With the easing of restrictions of movement and economy, credit offtake is also rising.

The credit growth in the last two months is being led by is led by MSMEs, agriculture and retail even as corporate lending stays tepid.

Lending to MSMEs, agriculture and retail picked up sharply in July this year over previous year’s levels, data on sectoral deployment of bank credit released by the Reserve Bank of India showed.

Credit to agriculture and allied activities expanded 12.4% in July 2021 as compared with 5.4% in last July. But credit to medium industries rose at a much faster pace – by 72% – in July 2021 as compared to a contraction of 1.8% a year ago.

Hinterland growth

Much of the growth has accordingly come from urban, semi-urban and rural areas. Weighted average lending rates on outstanding and fresh loans are down 91 basis points (bps) and 80 bps, respectively, since the pandemic-induced lockdown in March 2020.

Credit to micro and small industries rose 7.9% in July 2021 as compared to a contraction of 1.8% a year ago.

Retail loans, too, expanded at a faster pace of 11.2% in July 2021 as compared to 9% a year ago, primarily due to higher growth in ‘loans against gold jewellery’ and ‘vehicle loans’ growth of 1.4% a year ago.

Credit growth to the services sector slowed to 2.7% in July 2021 from 12.2% in

July 2020, mainly due to slowdown in bank lending to ‘NBFCs’, and ‘commercial real estate.

In June

Loans to agriculture and allied activities showed an accelerated growth of 11.4 per cent in June 2021 as compared to 2.4 per cent in June 2020.

Retail loans, covering housing and vehicles, among others, registered an accelerated growth of 11.9 per cent in June 2021 compared to 10.4 per cent a year ago.

The overall credit growth in the industrial segment fell by 0.3 per cent in June 2021 from growth of 2.2 per cent a year ago.

Credit to medium industries rose by 54.6 per cent in June 2021 compared to a contraction of nine per cent a year ago.

Credit growth to micro and small units rose to 6.4 per cent in June 2021 compared to a contraction of 2.9 per cent in June 2020.



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Indian banks facilitate cryptocurrency transactions amid a fresh boom, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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As Indians flock to the cryptocurrency market with renewed enthusiasm, banks are joining the party.

They are again allowing the purchase of Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies through their channels, easing curbs that they had imposed on such services.

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

Crypto exchange WazirX has listed the net banking facilities of Punjab National Bank, Union Bank of India, IDBI, IDFC First Bank, Federal Bank and Deutsche Bank to make payments for crypto purchases.

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

The change in stance happened 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, said people in the know.

Banks have also reopened accounts with crypto exchanges after conducting due diligence, in absence of any specific regulation. This comes at a time when Indians are flocking back to cryptocurrencies.

Reluctant banks

As early as June 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.

Last month, 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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UPI registers robust growth in August

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Digital payments continued to grow at a robust pace and touched a new record in August with further easing of lockdown restrictions by many States and resumption of economic activities.

Unified Payments Interface registered 355 crore transactions worth ₹6.39 lakh crore in August 2021, according to data released by the National Payments Corporation of India on Wednesday. Transactions on the UPI platform had breached the ₹6 lakh crore-mark in July to amount to ₹6.06 lakh crore.

The Immediate Payment Service (IMPS) also witnessed a sharp growth in transactions. The number of transactions on the IMPS platform rose to 37.79 crore in August and valued at ₹3.18 lakh crore. It had processed 34.97 crore transactions amounting to ₹3.09 lakh crore in July.

ALSO READ e-RUPI could be bigger than UPI, say experts

FASTag collection up

Payments on NETC FASTag crossed 20 crore in terms of volume in August to 20.12 crore. In value terms, it amounted to ₹3,076.56 crore. In contrast, 19.23 crore transactions worth ₹2,976.39 crore were processed on NETC FASTag in July.

Aadhar Enabled PaymentSystem (AePS) transactions, too, scaled the 10-crore transaction mark last month. As many as 10.84 crore payments worth ₹27,353.87 crore took place through AePS in August compared to 8.88 crore transactions totalling ₹23,447.11 crore in July.

The BharatBill Pay platform registered 5.88 crore payments totalling ₹10,307.4 crore in August versus 5.1 crore transactions amounting to ₹9,612.87 crore in July.

ALSO READ UPI sets new record in July

“We believe that continued opening of the economy and markets coupled with the upcoming festive season would enable spends to grow at a better pace over the medium term ,” Motilal Oswal had said in its Digital Payments Tracker report for July that looked at card and UPI spending.

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RBI to deepen retail mkt, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Mumbai: Reserve Bank of India (RBI) governor Shaktikanta Das on Tuesday spoke of measures to deepen retail participation even as he hinted at preparations to normalise the liquidity pumped into markets in the wake of the pandemic.

“As markets settle down to regular timings and functioning and liquidity operations normalise, the RBI will also conduct fine-tuning operations from time to time as needed to manage unanticipated and one-off liquidity flows so that liquid conditions in the system evolve in a balanced and evenly distributed manner,” Das said. He was delivering the keynote address at the annual conference organised by the Fixed Income & Money Market Derivatives Association (FIMMDA) and the Primary Dealers Association of India (PDAI).

Das also said that the RBI will work with primary dealers to popularise STRIPS — Separate Trading of Registered Interest and Principal of Securities. This is a system that will enable conversion of government securities into zero-coupon bonds where a lump sum is paid on maturity. This will be one of the measures by the RBI to develop a retail market for government securities.

Under the STRIPS mechanism, if there is a long-term bond for, say, 10 years, a primary dealer can sell the principal to one investor and the periodic interest payments to other investors. The advantage is that an investor looking for short-term government bonds can buy the coupon (interest) payments and a long-term investor can buy only the principal.

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Indians invest record sums in global debt, equities and bank deposits, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Resident Indian individuals invested in overseas assets for a record sum since the central bank opened up the avenue through the Liberalised Remittance Scheme (LRS).

Indians have invested $1.53 billion in debt, equities and bank deposits through the LRS since the pandemic-induced lockdown in March 2020, the highest since 2004-05 when the window was introduced, data on outward remittances released by the central bank showed.

Investment advisors say this trend could accelerate with brokerages such as ICICI Direct and HDFC Securities facilitating direct investments, and mutual funds offering schemes that buy overseas stocks such as Facebook, Alphabet (Google) or Amazon.

“A combination of factors triggered interest among resident Indians to invest in global securities during the pandemic,” said Vijay Chandok, managing director at ICICI Securities. “While diversification of assets prompted them to look overseas, the growth story of new-age companies too was a draw-card. Moreover, investors drew comfort from the familiarity of investing into companies whose platforms they have been using or reading about – like Google, Facebook or Amazon.”

Under the LRS, all resident individuals, including minors, are allowed to freely remit up to $ 250,000 per financial year (April – March) for any permissible current or capital account transaction or a combination of both. These include capital account transactions such as investment in debt/equity instruments, deposits and purchase of properties. The permitted remittances also include most current account transactions like expenses on travel, studies, maintenance of relatives, gifts and donations.

“A lot of Indian brokers have started to offer the easy facility of investing abroad through tie-ups. The new class of investors post the pandemic beginning has seen the way tech stocks abroad (mainly US- Nasdaq) have performed and want to participate in that up-move,” said Deepak Jasani, head of retail research – HDFC Securities.

As global economic activity started picking up, so have the investments in equities and debt securities. They more than doubled to $171 million during April-June’21 compared to $84 million in the same period a year ago. Also, investments in deposits rose sharply during the period.

Financial players have launched technology initiatives to take outward remittance services to the country’s micro-markets. Emkay Global Financial Services recently tied up with Stockal – a global investment platform – to help its clients invest in US-listed stocks and securities.

“Diversification is critical as it reduces risk and helps optimise the gains,” said Ashish Ranawade, Head of Products, ‎Emkay Wealth Management. “The US markets, through equities and exchange-traded funds, offer one of the most interesting avenues to diversify.”



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Indian banks facilitate cryptocurrency transactions amid a fresh boom, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


As Indians flock to the cryptocurrency market with renewed enthusiasm, banks are joining the party.

They are again allowing the purchase of Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies through their channels, easing curbs that they had imposed on such services.

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

Crypto exchange WazirX has listed the net banking facilities of Punjab National Bank, Union Bank of India, IDBI, IDFC First Bank, Federal Bank and Deutsche Bank to make payments for crypto purchases.

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

The change in stance happened 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, said people in the know.

Banks have also reopened accounts with crypto exchanges after conducting due diligence, in absence of any specific regulation. This comes at a time when Indians are flocking back to cryptocurrencies.

Reluctant banks

As early as June 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.

Last month, 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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