Shaktikanta Das, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The Reserve Bank of India‘s (RBI) role as a full-service central bank – North Block’s debt manager, banking regulator, and monetary policy conductor – helped keep the financial markets stable during volatile times, said Governor Shaktikanta Das, blunting the debate to spin off government borrowing from the central bank.

“In the wake of the pandemic, when fiscal response resulted in a sharp increase in government borrowing, the market operations conducted by Reserve Bank not only ensured non-disruptive implementation of the borrowing programme, but also facilitated the stable and orderly evolution of the yield curve,” Das said. “Monetary policy, G-sec market regulation and public debt management, therefore, need to be conducted in close coordination, and the primary focus of such coordination is the G- sec market.”

The RBI’s role as the investment banker to the government and banking regulator came in handy when the state had to respond to extreme stress in the economy – unlike the US where balkanisation of regulations disrupted the market, he said.

“The Reserve Bank’s regulation of the G-sec market has also a strong synergy with its role as the banking regulator – as banks are the largest category of participants in these markets,’’ said Das. “The importance of this aspect is also highlighted in the recent G30 report, which identified the balkanized regulation of US Treasury markets where banking regulations seem to have adversely impacted market-making.’’

Governor Das said direct oversight of various markets and the obligations to keep the markets stable and expand the economy have synergies.

“The synergy between the Reserve Bank’s responsibility for key macro market variables – interest rates and exchange rates, which ensures overall financial market efficiency – and its obligation to ensure stability while keeping in mind the objective of growth is well-accepted,’’ Das said. “Indeed, its effectiveness in managing stress in foreign exchange and interest rate markets is made possible by direct access and oversight of the G-sec market.’’

Insurance and pension funds, among the largest holders of government bonds, should take the next step to be active in the securities lending market so that market liquidity is not concentrated and that during times of volatility, the yield curve moves in an orderly way, he said. Das said that discussions held by the Securities Lending and Borrowing Mechanism (SLBM) on augmenting secondary market liquidity, by incentivizing investors like insurance companies and pension funds, should be carried forward.

The RBI is also making efforts to enable international settlement of transactions in G-secs through International Central Securities Depositories (ICSDs), he said.

“Once operationalized, this will enhance access of non-residents to the G-secs market, as will the inclusion of Indian G-secs in global bond indices, for which efforts are ongoing,” Das said.

Separately, Das also said that the global economy is showing some signs of recovery but the problems aren’t over yet.

“While there are signs of recovery, we are not yet out of the woods,” he said “Many central banks also implemented measures targeting specific market segments that were witnessing heightened stress. These measures were, in many cases, complemented by regulatory relaxations (lower capital and liquidity requirement) aimed at supporting credit flow from banks and other financial intermediaries and at stabilizing the financial system and restoring confidence in financial markets,” Das said.



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Depositors of Madgaum Urban Bank asked to submit claims within 2 months, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Depositors of the Madgaum Urban Co-operative Bank Ltd, Margao, which has been placed under liquidation, have been asked to submit their claims against the bank, if any, within two months.

A public notice to that effect has been issued under provisions contained in the Goa Cooperative Societies Rules 2003 by the liquidator appointed for the bank.

The claims for submission have to be duly filled in the ‘Depositor’s Claim’ forms at the respective branch of the bank, as per the notice.

“The claims received shall be investigated and decided on the basis of the account books of the said bank and as per Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporation (DICGC) general terms and conditions,” the notice reads.

Also, through the same notice, all locker holders have been asked to arrange for the surrender of lockers and to take custody of their valuables on or before September 30.

The bank’s licence was cancelled by the Reserve Bank of India by an order dated July 27 following which it stopped functioning with effect from the close of business on July 29.



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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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PNB waives service charge, processing fee on retail products, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Punjab National Bank on Tuesday said it has waived all service charges and processing fee on retail products as part of its festival season offering. Punjab National Bank (PNB) has launched a festival bonanza offer to enhance the availability and affordability of credit to customers, it said in a release.

PNB now offers an attractive interest rate starting from 6.80 per cent on home loans and 7.15 per cent on car loans, it said.

In the festive offer, the bank will waive all service charges/processing fees and documentation charges on its retail products like home loans, vehicle loans, myProperty loans, personal loans, pension loans and gold loans, PNB said.

Besides, PNB is offering personal loans starting from 8.95 per cent, which is one of the lowest in the industry, it added.

It also announced offering home loan top-up at an attractive rate of interest. PNB said customers can avail these offers till December 31, 2021.

The Delhi-headquartered lender said it is confident of seeing an encouraging revival in overall consumer spending, which will help boost its credit portfolio.



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Prosus strikes $4.7-billion deal to buy BillDesk

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Bob van Dijk, group CEO at Prosus, said the regulatory clearances for the deal should be in place by February 2022. (Representative image)

Prosus, a global consumer internet group and one of the largest technology investors in the world, is acquiring local digital payments provider BillDesk in a $4.7-billion deal, one of the largest in the digital payments space.

Through this acquisition, Prosus plans to scale up it payments and fintech business PayU, which operates in more than 20 markets globally, as one of the leading online payment providers globally by total payment volume (TPV), aggregating $147 billion.

The deal, subject to the approval of the Competition Commission of India (CCI), will bring Prosus’s cumulative investment in Indian tech to over $10 billion, the company said in a statement on Tuesday.

The development comes amid rapid adoption of fintech services by Indian consumers. The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) expects more than 200 million new users to adopt digital payments over the next three years with the average annual transactions per capita rising tenfold from 22 to 220. In fact, India and China accounted for the highest fintech adoption rate in the world’s emerging markets, according to a joint report published by EY and IVCA earlier this year. India stood at an 87% adoption rate compared with the 64% global average as of March 2020.

Founded in 2000, BillDesk’s TPV stood at over $90 billion in FY21, the firm’s website showed. PayU India and BillDesk that run complementary businesses within India’s digital payment industry jointly expect to handle 4 billion transactions annually, four times that of PayU’s current level in the country.

“The ecosystem we are building through the acquisition of BillDesk provides the scale and growth opportunities to position PayU at the forefront of digital payments in India. The combination will allow us to gain scale, build market leadership across all payment verticals and establish a strong presence in the payment value chain serving merchants across all segments,” said Anirban Mukherjee, CEO at PayU India.

The deal marks PayU’s fourth fintech acquisition in India in less than five years, after CitrusPay, Paysense and Wibmo. “Together, PayU India and BillDesk will be able to meet the changing payments needs of digital consumers, merchants and government enterprises in India and offer state-of-the-art technology to even more of the excluded sections of society,” the companies said.

Bob van Dijk, group CEO at Prosus, said the regulatory clearances for the deal should be in place by February 2022.

The Indian fintech market is expected to grow at a CAGR of 22.7% during 2020-25, analysts said. Local fintech firms attracted some $2 billion in funding in the first half of the calendar year alone, almost nearing the total investments the space garnered in the whole of 2020, analysts at KPMG said in a recent study.

One of the largest technology investors in the world, Prosus has backed a slew of Indian internet firms, including Swiggy, Byju’s, Meesho and Urban Company.

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Naspers’ arm-backed PayU to acquire BillDesk for $4.7 billion

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In one of the largest deals in India’s booming fintech sector, Naspers’ technology investment arm Prosus on Tuesday acquired Mumbai-based BillDesk for $4.7 billion. The acquisition is being done through Prosus’ global fintech business PayU.

“The proposed acquisition will see PayU, the payments and fintech business of Prosus which operates in more than 20 high-growth markets, become one of the leading online payment providers globally by volume,” Prosus said in a statement.

PayU India and BillDesk run complementary businesses and the two expect to create a financial ecosystem handling four billion transactions annually, which would be four times PayU’s current level in India. The combined entity would have a total payment volume (TPV) of $147 billion. Founded in 2000, BillDesk had a TPV of over $90 billion in 2020-21. PayU has a TPV of $55 billion across India, Latin America and EMEA.

PayU’s fourth buy

This is the fourth acquisition by PayU in India after CitrusPay, Paysense and Wibmo. This marks the largest exit by an Indian start-up through an acquisition, zooming past Snapdeal’s $400-million acquisition of Freecharge, and BYJU’s $950-million buy of Aakash Educational Services.

Bob van Dijk, Group CEO of Prosus, said: “We’ve invested close to $6 billion in Indian tech to date, and this deal will see that increase to more than $10 billion… Along with classifieds, food delivery, and education technology, payments and fintech is a core segment for Prosus, and India remains our No 1 investment destination.”

Noting the complementarity of the two companies, Dijk said in a media call that payments systems need scale to be efficient.

Anirban Mukherjee, CEO of PayU India, said the company hopes to provide a full fintech ecosystem of diversified products. “We will take time to figure out how to bring the platforms together. Anything we do will be in consultation with the RBI,” he said on the roadmap.

MN Srinivasu, Co-founder of BillDesk, said in a statement that the investment by Prosus validates the significant opportunity in India for digital payments that is being propelled by innovation and the progressive regulatory framework put into place by the RBI.

Prosus, which came from Naspers, invests in areas including health, logistics, blockchain, and social commerce. It is known for its 28.9 per cent stake in Tencent and has also invested in Indian firms including Swiggy.

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Despite signs of recovery, economy not yet out of the woods: RBI Governor

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The Governor of the Reserve Bank of India, Shaktikanta Das, on Tuesday said while there are signs of recovery in the economy, it is not yet out of the woods. The Governor made the observation at the 21st FIMMDA-PDAI annual conference.

It may be pertinent to note that Das, in his statement in the last monetary policy committee meeting, had said that managing the economy and the financial markets since the beginning of the pandemic has thrown up several challenges with cross-currents and conflicting objectives. “Under such circumstances, macroeconomic policies have to be carefully nuanced by making judicious policy choices,” he said.

“Continued policy support with a focus on revival and sustenance of growth is indeed the most desirable and judicious policy option at this moment,” the Governor had then said.

In order to facilitate the process for gradual restoration of the variable rate reverse repo (VRRR) auction 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, Das said at the 21st FIMMDA-PDAI annual conference.

The aforementioned operations are to manage unanticipated and one-off liquidity flows so that liquidity conditions in the system evolve in a balanced and evenly distributed manner.

New instruments

The Governor felt that this is also an opportune time to consider new instruments to facilitate hedging of long-term interest rate and reinvestment risk by market participants such as insurance companies, provident and pension funds and corporates

He assured the participants at the conference that on its part, the RBI will endeavour to ensure adequate liquidity in the Government Securities (G-Sec) market as an integral element of its effort to maintain comfortable liquidity conditions in the system.

Das observed that while the market for ‘special repo’ facilitates borrowing of securities, it is worthwhile to consider other alternatives that ensure adequate supply of securities to the market across the spectrum of maturities.

The suggestion comes as liquidity in G-Sec market tends to dry up during periods of rising interest rates or in times of uncertainty.

Securities: Lending and borrowing

Das also mentioned that discussions were held on the introduction of Securities Lending and Borrowing Mechanism (SLBM) with a view to augment secondary market liquidity, by incentivising ‘buy and hold’ type of investors (insurance companies, pension funds) to make available their securities to other market participants.

He urged that these discussions should be carried forward with a view to evolving market-based mechanisms that enable the lending and borrowing of securities as part of overall market development.

Emphasising that expansion of the investor-base is key to further development of the G-Sec market, Das noted that the RBI, together with the Government, is making efforts to enable international settlement of transactions in G-Secs through International Central Securities Depositories (ICSDs).

“Once operationalised, this will enhance access of non-residents to the G-Secs market, as will the inclusion of Indian G-Secs in global bond indices, for which efforts are ongoing,” he said.

Das felt that there is a need to develop a yield curve that is liquid across tenors.

In this regard, he remarked that the secondary market liquidity, as measured by the turnover ratio, is found to be relatively low on several occasions and tends to remain concentrated in a few securities and tenors.

“The yield curve accordingly displays kinks, reflecting the liquidity premium commanded by select securities/tenors,” he said.

“To a certain extent, this is the result of the market microstructure in India, dominated as it is by ‘buy and hold’ and ‘long only’ investors,” Das added.

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Das emphasises importance of G-Sec market in RBI policy making

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The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) made it plain to the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) that it will not yield ground when it comes to regulation of the government securities (G-Sec) market.

RBI Governor Shaktikanta Das, on Tuesday, emphasised the importance of the central bank’s direct access and oversight of the government securities market, stating that it enables the management of stress in the foreign exchange and interest rate markets.

The Governor’s observation assumes significance as it comes in the backdrop of SEBI Chairman Ajay Tyagi seeking unification of the G-Sec and corporate bond markets, which could bring G-Sec under the market regulator’s ambit.

Critical market

Highlighting the criticality of the G-Sec market for effective discharge of RBI’s functions, Das underscored that the RBI’s regulation of it has a strong synergy with its role as the banking regulator as banks are the largest category of participants in these markets.

Unified regulation

He mentioned that this is also highlighted in the recent G30 report which identified the balkanized regulation of US Treasury markets as having adversely impacted market making.

In his address at the 21st FIMMDA-PDAI annual conference, Das highlighted that the current arrangement of the G-Sec repository residing with the RBI facilitates seamless conduct of liquidity operations and simultaneous settlement of G-Sec trading.

“This provides confidence to investors, removes custodial risk, and minimises transaction costs. Access to real time market intelligence arising from ownership or oversight of market infrastructure is critical for fine-tuning timely policy responses,” he said.

Das called attention to the fact that the current regulatory arrangement offers synergies in terms of a unified market for G-Secs, repo in G-Secs, liquidity and other monetary operations, exchange rate management, regulation for key derivative markets, public debt management, and prudential regulation of banks, the largest category among market participants.

Close coordination

He noted that the synergy between the RBI’s responsibility for key macro market variables – interest rates and exchange rates, which ensures overall financial market efficiency – and its obligation to ensure stability while keeping in mind the objective of growth is well-accepted.

“With the development of the domestic financial markets and deregulation of interest rates, effective transmission of monetary policy impulses relies on the G-Sec market being deep and liquid so as to create the intended impact on interest rates by linking expectations of future short-term rates to current long-term rates,” Das said.

Similarly, a well-functioning G-Sec market ensures efficient discharge of the public debt management function.

He also remarked that the public debt structure – quantity, composition and ownership of debt – also influences monetary conditions.

“In the wake of the pandemic, when fiscal response resulted in a sharp increase in government borrowing, the market operations conducted by the Reserve Bank not only ensured non-disruptive implementation of the borrowing programme, but also facilitated the stable and orderly evolution of the yield curve,” the Governor said.

Das stressed that monetary policy, G-Sec market regulation and public debt management, therefore, need to be conducted in close coordination, and the primary focus of such coordination is the G-Sec market.

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PhonePe receives insurance broking licence

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PhonePe has received an insurance broking licence from the Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority of India (IRDAI). Last year, PhonePe entered the insurtech sector with a limited ‘corporate agent’ licence, which allowed the company to partner with only three insurance companies per category. With the new ‘direct broking’ licence, PhonePe can distribute insurance products from all insurance companies in India.

It also allows PhonePe to offer personalised product recommendations to its 300-million user base, and a bigger portfolio of insurance products for Indian consumers.

Digital transactions grew 80% in last 250 days: Razorpay report

PhonePe forayed into the insurance segment in January 2020 as a ‘corporate agent’ and has since launched offerings in general insurance, term insurance and health insurance.

On the direct broking licence, PhonePe’s Vice-President and Head of Insurance Gunjan Ghai said, “This licence is a big milestone in our insurance journey. We are building a full-service platform through innovative products in partnership with insurers. This move will lead us closer to our goal of becoming a one-stop destination for insurance needs.”

Government notifies law to shed holding in public sector general insurance company

PhonePe is a digital payments platform where users can send and receive money, recharge mobiles, DTH, data cards, pay at stores, make utility payments, buy gold, and make investments. PhonePe forayed into financial services in 2017 with its product Gold, which allows users to buy 24-karat gold securely on its platform.

PhonePe has since launched several mutual funds and insurance products like tax-saving funds, liquid funds, international travel insurance and Corona Care, a Covid-focused insurance product, among others. PhonePe also launched its Switch platform in 2018; customers can place orders on over 600 apps including Ola, Swiggy, Myntra, IRCTC, Goibibo, RedBus and so on, from the PhonePe app. PhonePe is accepted at 20-plus million merchant outlets across India.

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