Future, Voda Idea rulings threaten Rs 50,000 crore loans, underscore legal risks for banks, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Banks have been cautious in big-ticket lendings, taking into consideration various parameters.

Now they need to be overcautious about the adverse court rulings as just two verdicts of Future Group and Vodafone Idea delivered last week have put over Rs 50,000 crore loans in jeopardy.

Last week, the Supreme Court effectively blocked Future Group’s $3.4 billion sale of retail assets to Reliance Industries, jeopardising nearly Rs 20,000 crore the retail conglomerate owes to Indian banks.

Loans to Future worth nearly 200 billion rupees were restructured earlier this year, giving it more time to come up with repayments due over the next two years, but that was on the premise that Reliance would bail it out,

That Future ruling was delivered days after the Supreme Court rejected a petition to allow telecom companies to approach the Department of Telecommunications to renegotiate outstanding dues in a long-runinng dispute with Indian telecom players.

That raises concerns over whether Vodafone Idea will repay some Rs 30,000 crore it owes to Indian banks and billions of dollars more in long-term dues to the government.

At the end of March, Indian banks had total non-performing assets of Rs 8.34 lakh crore, the government has said.

Vodafone Idea

If the telecom firm fails to repay its adjusted gross revenue dues to the government and its guarantees are invoked, it would immediately turn into debt and would soon be classified as a non-performing asset. The Supreme Court last week rejected telecom firms’ plea for reconsidering calculation of adujsted gross revenues.

The hit on PSU banks will not be as large as their exposure because in recent years lenders have been demanding a substantially higher cash margin for their guarantees. IDBI Bank is understood to have up to 40% margins for the guarantees it has extended. But even then it will be large enough to wipe out profits for many.

What ahead?

The insolvency process can work only when there are buyers. In the case of Vodafone, the Rs 53,000-crore AGR (adjusted gross revenue) dues to the Centre are a deterrent. This is despite Birla being willing to write down his entire equity. The government dues cannot be avoided as the Centre cannot make an exception for one company. Even in insolvency cases, the department of telecom has claimed its dues to be that of a financial creditor although there have been attempts to mark them as operational creditors.

The uncertainty over DoT’s claims, which is already being experienced by lenders in the Reliance Communications insolvency case, would make telecom resolutions a challenge. Lenders do not want to risk insolvency as this would result in the exit of customers which was the case with RCom.

With the company’s debt obligations being equal to 1.5% of the banking sector’s credit, experts have suggested the debt be converted into equity shares, the company be nationalised and perhaps merged with BSNL and MTNL. However, it seems highly unlikely the government will nationalise the company. On balance, they would reckon it is better to give up the revenues than act politically incorrectly in bailing out a private sector player—one with a foreign promoter.

The Future is bleak

Local and overseas banks — 28 of them led by Bank of India — were counting on Reliance Retail’s takeover of the Future Group for recovery of their dues.

In April, the KV Kamath Committee set up by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) approved a proposal by the lenders to restructure loans to Future Retail and

Future Enterprises, the main units of the Kishore Biyani-led group. Bank of India is the lead lender among the 28 local and overseas financiers that floated the loan recast plan.

According to that deal, Future Group had promised to pay banks Rs 6,900 crore in two tranches by the end of FY22, mainly by selling its small format stores.

This would allow lenders to convert the short-term loans, non-convertible debentures and overdue working capital loans into term loans, which were to be repaid in two years. The group has not yet identified any buyers for these stores.

Bankers had agreed on the deal as a temporary arrangement on expectations that the Reliance takeover will be completed soon, meaning the lenders would no longer depend upon Future to make the payments.

With this latest court order, all such plans will have to be reconsidered.

The group has very little immovable property that can be sold. All its assets are in the form of inventory and receivables that are very difficult to recover. The Reliance-led plan is the best option right now because the recovery will be very low in the bankruptcy courts.

Future Retail is the largest debtor in the group, with about Rs 10,000 crore of dues. Two other listed companies — Future Enterprises that holds its supply

chain, and Future Lifestyle Fashions that houses apparel brands such as Central and Brand Factory — add another Rs 11,000 crore to the debt pile.

Lenders had agreed to an interest moratorium between March 1, 2020 and September 30, 2021. They had also agreed upon waiving all penal interest and charges, default premiums and processing fees unpaid since March 2020 to the date of the implementation of the Reliance Retail takeover.

There is some respite in the central bank’s extension of the timeframe for meeting the financial parameters for companies undergoing restructuring.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

CUB June quarter net profit grows 12%

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


The bank’s capital adequacy as per Basel III norms stood at 19.58% and tier-1 capital adequacy was at 18.51%, well above the regulatory requirement.

City Union Bank (CUB) has reported a 12% increase in its net profit at Rs 173 crore for the first quarter of FY22, compared with Rs 154 crore in the corresponding quarter of previous fiscal. Total income of the bank was lower at Rs 1,193 crore, against Rs 1,210 crore.

The bank’s bad assets increased in the quarter, with gross NPA at 5.59%, rising from 3.90%. Net NPA too rose to 3.49% from 2.11%.

Net interest income was up by 2%, from Rs 437 crore to Rs 448 crore, while net interest margin stood at 3.86%, the lender said in a release.

Total business rose 7%, from Rs 75,562 crore to Rs 81,001 crore. Deposits increased 9%, from Rs 41,026 crore to Rs.44,606 crore, while advances grew 5% to Rs 36,395 crore from Rs 34,536 crore. CASA deposits increased by 22% to Rs 12,299 crore, it said.

The bank’s capital adequacy as per Basel III norms stood at 19.58% and tier-1 capital adequacy was at 18.51%, well above the regulatory requirement.

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

Financial Express is now on Telegram. Click here to join our channel and stay updated with the latest Biz news and updates.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

SAT’s split verdict leaves PNB-Carlyle deal in limbo; case may go to apex court

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


The ₹4,000-crore deal involving PNB Housing Finance Company’s preferential allotment of shares to private equity major Carlyle continues to be in limbo with the Securities and Appellate Tribunal (SAT) giving a split verdict on the objections raised by SEBI.

While Justice MT Joshi held that SEBI had correctly asked PNB HFC to obtain a valuation report, per the Articles of Association, to be placed before the general body of shareholders, Justice Tarun Agarwala ruled that SEBI ought not to have intervened since the PNB board had approved the issue of shares, per the Issue of Capital and Disclosure Regulations (ICDR).

CCI green signals Carlyle Group-led ₹4,000 cr investment in PNB Housing

SAT functions with a three-member Bench, but one of the members retired recently and the vacancy is yet to be filled. This has led to a rare split-decision situation, as otherwise, cases have been decided on the basis of a majority verdict.

Valuation of shares

According to legal experts, the Supreme Court will now have to decide on the dispute. In May, PNB HFC had announced the preferential allotment of shares worth ₹4,000 crore to a clutch of investors led by private equity firm Carlyle. The deal gives management control of the HFC to the new investors.

A proxy advisory report by Mumbai-based Stakeholders Empowerment Services (SES) had said that Carlyle was getting control of PNB HCF, which could cause a loss to minority shareholders.

SAT reserves order in ₹4,000-crore PNB HCF, Carlyle deal

Subsequently, SEBI blocked the deal until the housing finance company undertook a valuation of its shares. PNB HFC insisted that the acquisition of shares by the Carlyle group and other investors was at a fair price and beneficial to the company’s existing investors. They further argued that PNB HFC was in dire need of funds and its single largest shareholder, PNB, was barred by the RBI from infusing any further capital into the HFC.

According to JN Gupta, Managing Director, SES, the best way for PNB to divest the PNB Housing stake is to come out with a rights issue and renounce in favour of Carlyle at a market discovered price so that retail investors also benefit from the deal.

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

RBI moves to ease overseas direct investment regulations under FEMA

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


The Reserve Bank of India is planning to rationalise the existing provisions governing overseas direct investment regulations under the Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA), 1999.

This is to further liberalise the regulatory framework and promote ease of doing business, per the RBI’s draft Foreign Exchange Management/FEM (Non-debt Instruments – Overseas Investment) Rules, 2021 and the draft Foreign Exchange Management (Overseas Investment) Regulations, 2021.

Where a person resident in India wants to make any financial commitment or disinvesting such financial commitment has an account appearing as a Special Mention Account-1/2 or non-performing asset (NPA) or wilful defaulter or is under investigation by a regulatory body or investigative agencies in India, a no-objection certificate has to be obtained from these entities before making financial commitment or undertaking disinvestment of such financial commitment.

Where the disinvestment by the person resident in India pertains to ODI, the transferor shall not have any dues outstanding for receipt.

Restrictions

A person resident in India is prohibited from making ODI in a foreign entity engaged in (i) Real estate activity; (ii) Gambling in any form; and (iii) Offering financial products linked to Indian Rupee except for products offered in an International Financial Services Centre (IFSC).

Overseas investment by a person resident in India shall not be made in a foreign entity located in countries/ jurisdictions that are not FATF (Financial Action Task Force)and IOSCO (International Organisation of Securities Commission) compliant country or any other country/ jurisdiction as may be prescribed by the Central Government.

The Financial Commitment by a person resident in India in a foreign entity that has invested or invests into India which is designed for the purpose of tax evasion/ tax avoidance by such person is not permitted and any contravention under this rule shall be considered to be a contravention of serious/sensitive nature.

Acquisition of immovable property outside India (1) A person resident in India may acquire immovable property outside India by way of inheritance or gift or purchase from a person resident in India who has acquired such property as per the foreign exchange provisions in force at the time of such acquisition.

ODI in financial entity

An Indian entity which is engaged in financial services activity in India may make ODI in a foreign entity, which is directly or indirectly engaged in financial services activity subject to conditions, including the regulated Indian entity Indian entity posting net profits during the preceding three financial years.

An listed India entity having a minimum net worth of ₹500 crore based on the last audited balance sheet, can make ODI including by way of contribution in an Overseas Technology Fund, for the purpose of investing in overseas technology start-ups engaged in an activity which is in alignment with the core business of such Indian entity.

An Indian entity may engage in agricultural operations, including purchase of land incidental to such activity, either directly or through an office outside India.

Financial commitment

The total financial commitment made by an Indian entity, excluding capitalization of retained earnings, in all the foreign entities taken together at the time of undertaking such commitment shall not exceed 400 per cent (or as directed by the Reserve Bank from time to time) of its net worth as on the date of the last audited balance sheet.

However, financial commitment made by “Maharatna” public sector undertakings (PSUs) or “Navratna” PSUs or subsidiaries of such PSUs in foreign entities outside India engaged in strategic sectors shall not be subject to the limits laid down above.

The limit shall not apply where the investment is made out of the balances held in its EEFC (Exchange Earners Foreign Currency) account.

Overseas portfolio investment

A listed Indian company may make Overseas Portfolio Investment including by way of reinvestment within the limit of 50 per cent of its net worth as on the date of its last audited balance sheet.

An Indian entity, which is a software exporter, or any other entity as may be prescribed by the Central government in this regard, may receive foreign securities up to 25 per cent of the value of exports made to a foreign software company irrespective of whether such company is listed or not.

A registered trust or a registered society engaged in the educational sector or which has set up hospital(s) in India, with the prior approval of the Reserve Bank, may make ODI in a foreign entity. This is subject to the foreign entity being engaged in the same sector that the Indian trust or society is engaged in.

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Consultant for MARS: Pension regulator comes with new RFP

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Pension regulator Pension Fund Regulatory & Development Authority (PFRDA) has come up with a new Request for Proposal (RFP) for appointment of a consultant to help design a Minimum Assured Return Scheme (MARS) under the National Pension System (NPS).

The new RFP has relaxed the eligibility criteria set earlier for a bidder and has now allowed those with experience of designing or development of atleast one scheme with guarantee for its client, to bid for the consultant role, sources close to the development said.

Former RFP

The eligibility criteria had to be tweaked as the response for the previous RFP— issued in May this year— was very tepid with only one entity showing interest, they added.

The earlier RFP mandated that a bidder, which has to be a corporate entity registered in India, should have experience of designing or development of schemes of guarantee with atleast three schemes being in operation or running in India, after being offered by its clients to the public at large. This RFP was cancelled on July 22.

MARS

The whole idea behind having MARS is to have a separate scheme that can offer a guaranteed minimum rate of return to NPS subscribers, especially those who are risk averse. Currently, the NPS gives returns annually, based on prevailing market conditions.

The appointed consultant, with requisite actuarial skills, is expected to help formulate or design a MARS that can be offered to existing and prospective subscribers by the pension funds.

The chosen consultant is also expected to set up a procedure to evaluate and approve basic scheme design modifications by the pension funds and supervise MARS. The consultant would be required to prescribe fees, solvency requirements, risk management and reporting mechanisms for pension funds in respect of MARS.

Pension funds

To enable pension funds and its sponsors to offer MARS like products, PFRDA has already tweaked the capital requirement norms for the sponsors and stipulated higher net worth and paid up capital for those looking to set up pension funds in the country. As such products carry risk, it is better to be well capitalised to take care of eventualities, experts said.

India’s pension assets under management have already crossed the ₹6 lakh crore mark and are expected to touch ₹7.5 lakh crore by end March this fiscal. PFRDA is aiming for AUM of ₹30 lakh crore by the year 2030.

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

RBI policy review: A subtle shade of policy normalisation, says Acuite Ratings

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


The expanded scope of Variable Rate Reverse Repo (VRRR) auctions for temporary absorption of liquidity surplus could act as a precursor for monetary policy normalisation, according to Acuite Ratings & Research.

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) had announced on August 6, 2020, that it will conduct fortnightly VRRR auctions of ₹2.5 lakh crore on August 13, 2021; ₹3 lakh crore on August 27; ₹3.5 lakh crore on September 9; and ₹4 lakh crore on September 24.

“In our opinion, the policy review of August 2021 has a subtle shade of policy normalization in the form of the scale up of the VRRR auctions for temporary deployment of excess liquidity since it can lead to some firming of short-term rates and realignment of the yield curve.” the credit rating agency said.

The agency continues to expect the central bank to start normalisation of the policy rates by increasing reverse repo rate from 3.35 per cent currently, to 3.75 per cent by end of Q3FY22 or during Q4FY22. Then followed by a 25 basis points hike in the repo rate to 4.25 per cent in Q1FY23.

In his bi-monthly monetary policy review statement on August 6, RBI Governor Shaktikanta Das emphasised that the enhanced VRRR auctions should not be misread as a reversal of the accommodative policy stance, as the amount absorbed under the fixed rate reverse repo is expected to remain more than ₹4.0 lakh crore at end-September 2021.

Referring to the Governor’s post policy press conference statement that the RBI continues to remain in “whatever it takes” mode for providing support for nurturing nascent growth impulses, Acuite said this highlights the unambiguous policy desire to backstop growth till Covid related economic and financial uncertainties remain.

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

GIFT City, India Insurtech Association ink pact to promote fintech in insurance space

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


India Insurtech Association (IIA), a not-for-profit body promoting tech-driven insurance ecosystems in India inked a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with International Financial Services Centre at GIFT City, (GIFT-IFSC) to collaborate on building thought leadership in the field of insurance and promoting GIFT City for Indian and foreign insurance companies.

To raise awareness about GIFT IFSC, the collaboration will organise events, information series, seminars, and conferences. The two institutions will also research regulatory sandbox projects for GIFT IFSC, which will benefit insurtech start-ups, re-insurance businesses, politicians, service providers, and individuals.

Tapan Ray, MD and Group CEO, GIFT City, said, “We have presence of some of the major insurance players in GIFT City and now, with this collaboration, we can aspire to be a vibrant hub for world-class insurance products and services and encourage innovation in the segment.”

Through the integrated platform of GIFT City, the endeavour is to highlight India’s international financial services potential by offering international firms a world-class infrastructure and facilities to conduct their business in India.

Elaborating on the collaboration, Prerak Sethi, Director and Co-founder of IIA, said, “Through this collaboration, our goal is to assist worldwide financial organisations in developing top-notch financial services. IIA will provide support towards bringing various Indian and global insurance, re-insurance and insurtech participants to benefit from the regulatory sandbox initiatives at GIFT City.”

Under the terms of the MoU, the IIA has promised to work closely with the GIFT SEZ in various areas, including bringing global insurance businesses, Indian insurtech companies, and insurance players to the GIFT City.

The association will promote new digital business models, build collaboration between start-ups and all the other participants of the insurance industry.

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Banks report improved NII, lower NPA provisioning in Q1, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


The provision for cumulative non-performing assets (NPA) by banks softened in the June 2021 quarter after a spike in the previous quarter when they resumed accounting for slippages after RBI’s schemes to defer the recognition of actual NPAs ended in December. For a sample of 28 banks, the loan loss or NPA provision fell by 6.8% year-on-year and 43.8% sequentially to Rs 36,805.4 crore in the June quarter.

The aggregate provision by the public sector (PSU) banks fell by 27% year-on-year due to a sharp double digit drop reported by State Bank of India, Punjab National Bank, Canara Bank, and Bank of Baroda. On the other hand, private sector banks reported 51% jump following a sharp increase reported by HDFC Bank, Kotak Bank, Bandhan Bank and RBL Bank. As a result, their share in the total NPAs increased to 42.5% from 26.1% in the year-ago quarter.

The total sample’s net interest income (NII) increased by 4.8% year-on-year to Rs 1.2 lakh crore. A majority of the banks, 20 to be precise, reported higher net interest from the year-ago level. The share of the private banks in the sample’s net interest expanded to 43.8% from 41.7% a year ago.

The sample’s cumulative COVID provisioning increased to Rs 34,641.5 crore in the June quarter from Rs 29,892.8 crore in the previous quarter. Here, the share of PSU banks increased to 34.7% from 26.7% sequentially.

June ’20 September ’20 December ’20 March ’21 June ’21
Loan loss provision (Rs crore) 39504.8 33896.1 28828.5 65542.2 36805.4
Loan loss provision (YoY % change) -17.0 -11.0 -59.6 19.5 -6.8

Share of PSU banks in quarterly provisioning (%)

June ’20 September ’20 December ’20 March ’21 June ’21
PSU share (%) 73.9 77.5 63.7 66.4 57.5
Non-PSU share (%) 26.1 22.5 36.3 33.6 42.5

Data for a sample of 28 banks. Source: Bank data, ETIG



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

HDFC Bank to hire 500 more to expand MSME coverage, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Country’s largest private sector lender HDFC Bank, which has a focus on the MSME sector, is hiring 500 more relationship managers this fiscal as the bank is expanding its coverage to 575 districts, a senior banker has said. The headcount addition will take the bank’s Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (MSME) vertical strength to 2,500. As of June end, the HDFC Bank’s employee strength stood around 1.23 lakh.

The bank’s MSME vertical covers 545 districts now with dedicated relationship managers and supervisors, which will be expanded to 575 districts or more by the end of this fiscal.

“As we are expanding our MSME footprint to 575 districts from 545 now, we are hiring over 500 more to the 2,000-strong headcount at the MSME vertical this fiscal year. This should take the overall headcount at the vertical to a little over 2,500,” Sumant Rampal, senior executive vice-president for business banking & healthcare finance, told PTI on Monday.

After reclassification and the resultant tagging of wholesaler and retailer loans under the MSME book, the bank closed the MSME book at Rs 2,01,833 crore in March 2021 quarter, marginally up from Rs 2,01,758 crore in December 2020, when it grew by over 30 per cent.

The government recently asked MSMEs to be re/de-classify themselves based on their turnover and get a Udhyam registration certificate.

The bank’s MSME portfolio is spread across sectors like textiles, fabrication, agri-processing, chemicals, consumer goods, hotels & restaurants, auto components, pharma and paper industry, and also include the entire selling chain ranging from wholesalers, retailers, distributors, stockists and supermarkets, Rampal said.

Rampal said the bank has been increasing its focus on the sector since the past two years, and the same only increased since the pandemic when the government opened a slew of measures to help small businesses tide over the crisis with the emergency credit line guarantee scheme (ECLGS) being the biggest booster helping it disburse 30 per cent more loans by December 2020, to Rs 2,01,758 crore.

Rampal said his team has already identified the districts for expansion. Though the bank has regular branches in these identified districts, MSME lending needs special focus based on their unique needs, he said.

He said of the over 5,500 branches, a little over 1,800 of them have more than 25 per cent of their loans coming in MSME accounts and 4,800 of them service this segment of customers.

Geographically speaking, the bank is present in 630 districts of which 545 districts now have special MSME counters.

Giving a break-up of the hiring, he said, of the total 500 planned additions, half will be for the small & medium sub-vertical, which already is a 975-strong team.

Though the RBI last Friday said there was nothing alarming about rise in MSME bad loans, a SIDBI-CIBIL report in late July said, the NPA levels among MSME borrowers surged to 12.6 per cent in the March 2021 quarter, up from 12 per cent in December 2020, while loans to them have jumped to Rs 9.5 lakh crore in FY21 from Rs 6.8 lakh crore in FY20.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

RBL Bank selects AWS to accelerate AI efforts

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


RBL Bank has selected Amazon Web Services (AWS), an Amazon.com company, as its cloud provider.

AWS would help RBL Bank strengthen its AI-powered banking solutions and drive digital transformation at the lender.

“The bank is building on its analytics practice and investing in AI capabilities to implement various use cases across multiple segments, including risk, customer service, human resources, and operations,” RBL Bank said in a statement on Monday.

It will leverage Amazon Textract, a machine learning service that automatically extracts text, handwriting, and data from scanned documents, across the bank’s risk and operations divisions to analyse documents such as financial statements, stock statements, and stock audit reports to predict default risk.

“Using ML allows analysts at RBL Bank to extract data and automate the handling of 2,500 documents per quarter,” the bank said.

Other use cases already being tested within the operations division include using services like Amazon Rekognition and Amazon Textract to automatically extract and match customer signatures and running fuzzy match algorithms to replace manual name match for various processes, it further said.

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

1 208 209 210 211 212 540