RBI opens up RTGS, NEFT to non-banks in phases

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Authorised non-banks payment system providers including prepaid payment issuers, card networks and white label ATM operators will be eligible to participate in central payment systems like RTGS and NEFT in the first phase, according to the Reserve Bank of India (RBI).

By extending access to payment systems to more entities, the central bank is seeking to provide impetus to digital payments.

As per RBI’s notification on “access for Non-banks to Centralised Payment Systems” to authorised non-bank payment system providers (PSPs), non-banks include entities like PSPs and NBFCs that are regulated by Reserve Bank as also entities that are under the remit of other financial sector regulators like PFRDA, IRDAI, SEBI.

Currently, apart from banks, very few select non-banks have been given approval to participate in CPS so far. Banks have been providing the services to non-banks for their payment and settlement needs.

Also read: RBI’s digital index shows online payment is on the rise

“Direct access for non-banks to CPS lowers the overall risk in the payments ecosystem,” RBI noted, adding that it also brings advantages to non-banks like reduction in cost of payments, minimising dependence on banks, reducing the time taken for completing payments, eliminating the uncertainty in finality of the payments as the settlement is carried out in central bank money.

A non-bank getting direct access to CPS will be allotted a separate Indian Financial System Code (IFSC), can open a Current Account with the Reserve Bank in its core banking system (e-Kuber), maintain a settlement account with RBI, and get membership of Indian Financial Network (INFINET) and use of Structured Financial Messaging System (SFMS) to communicate with CPS.

Eligibility criteria

For access to CPS, non bank PSPs would require, among others, a valid certificate of authentication by the RBI under the Payment and Settlement Systems Act, 2007, networth of at least ₹25 crore, incorporation in India, adequate technical and system readiness including cyber resilience and compliance with local payment data storage requirements.

Also read: Mastercard to file an independent audit report

“Entities incorporated outside India shall empower their local offices to carry out all operations in respect of CPS, but the responsibility for all operations and management of any contingency, including settlement obligations, shall remain with the foreign parent institution, which has taken authorisation as PSP,” the RBI further said.

Nature of transactions that can be executed will depend upon the type of membership approved for RTGS while some categories of PSPs will be permitted to participate in NEFT also.

RTGS/ NEFT customer payments can be initiated by PPI issuers to merchants/ payment aggregators; WLA operators to agencies handling ATMs; and Full-KYC PPI customers to load the PPIs from their bank account.

RTGS inter-bank transfers can be initiated by non-bank PSPs to maintain sufficient balance in their escrow account with member bank/s based on net debit or credit position; and WLA operators and PPI issuers to other member banks/ non-banks.

Also read: Cryptocurrency, CBDC and the RBI Act

RBI said card networks will not be allowed to use the RBI current account for their settlement guarantee and related activities. Non-banks would be expected to submit applications for membership to CPS to the RBI.

“Reserve Bank shall endeavour to complete the process of scrutinising the applications, that are complete with all required documents, within 60 days of receipt,” it said.

The RBI had in April this year proposed to enable regulated payment system operators to take direct membership in Central Payment Systems such as RTGS and NEFT.

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RBI’s digital index shows online payment is on the rise

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The Reserve Bank of India–Digital Payments Index for March 2021 rose to 270.59 as against 207.84 for March 2020.

“The RBI-DPI index has demonstrated significant growth in the index representing the rapid adoption and deepening of digital payments across the country in recent years,” the RBI said on Wednesday. The index stood at 217.74 for September 2020.

Also read: Mastercard to file an independent audit report

The composite RBI-DPI with March 2018 as base aims to capture the extent of digitisation of payments across the country. The index was launched on January 1 this year.

It comprises of five broad parameters that enable measurement of deepening and penetration of digital payments in the country over different time periods.

Also read: Reserve Bank working towards phased implementation of digital currencies

These parameters are payment enablers, payment infrastructure – demand side factors, payment infrastructure – supply-side factors, payment performance and consumer centricity.

Digital payments have seen a sharp growth in recent years, particularly since the Covid-19 pandemic that led to social distancing and work from home.

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Central Bank of India reports standalone net profit of ₹206 crore

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Central Bank of India (CBoI) is back in the black, reporting a standalone net profit of ₹206 crore in the first quarter (Q1 FY22) on the back of healthy growth in net interest income (NII) and a substantial decline in loan loss provisions.

The public sector bank had reported a net loss of ₹1,349 crore in the fourth quarter of FY21. It posted a net profit of ₹135 crore in Q1 FY21. Net interest income/NII (difference between interest earned and interest expended) rose 41 per cent quarter-on-quarter (q-o-q) to ₹2,135 crore (₹1,516 crore in Q4 FY21).

Also read: PSBs vacating branches open doors for other lenders

However, NII in the reporting quarter was a tad lower vis-a-vis year-ago period’s (Q1 FY21) ₹2,146 crore.

Non-interest income, NPA

Total non-interest income, comprising commission, exchange & brokerage, treasury income and recoveries in written-off accounts, was down 15 per cent q-o-q at ₹767 crore (₹902 crore). But it was up 8 per cent up on year ago period’s ₹710 crore. Non-performing asset (NPA) provisions declined 98 per cent q-o-q to ₹ 76 crore (₹3,259 crore in Q4 FY21). On yoy basis too, NPA provisions fell 85 per cent. Standard assets provisions increased to ₹240 crore against a write-back of ₹ 152 crore in Q4FY21 and a provision of ₹182 crore in Q1 FY21.

Also read: Mastercard to file an independent audit report

Provisions towards restructured accounts jumped to ₹328 crore against ₹32 crore in Q4FY21 and ₹20 crore in Q1FY21. Write-back in provisions on investments was higher at ₹105 crore against ₹37 crore in Q4 FY21. In the year ago period, the Bank made a provision of ₹282 crore. Net interest margin (annualised) improved to 2.84 per cent from 2.04 per cent in Q4FY21.

Total deposits increased by 3.18 per cent y-o-y to ₹3,31,483 crore (₹3,21,252 crore in Q1FY21), with the proportion of current account, savings account (CASA) in total deposits improving to 49.20 per cent (47.30 per cent). Total advances declined 0.72 per cent yoy to ₹1,75,229 crore (₹1,76,496 crore), with retail, agriculture and MSME (RAM) advances growing 4.69 per cent and corporate advances declining 9.55 per cent.

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RBI imposes ₹5-crore monetary penalty on Axis Bank

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The Reserve Bank of India has imposed a monetary penalty of ₹5 crore on private sector lender Axis Bank.

The penalty is for contravention of and non-compliance with certain provisions of directions issued by RBI on ‘Strengthening the Controls of Payment Ecosystem between Sponsor Banks and SCBs/UCBs as a Corporate Customer’, ‘Cyber Security Framework in Banks’, ‘RBI (Financial Services provided by Banks) Directions, 2016’, ‘Financial Inclusion- Access to Banking Services – Basic Savings bank Deposit Account’ and ‘Frauds – Classification and Reporting’.

“The penalty has been imposed in exercise of powers vested in RBI under the provisions of section 47 A (1) (c) read with section 46 (4) (i) of the Banking Regulation Act, 1949 (the Act),” the RBI said on Wednesday, adding that the action is based on the deficiencies in regulatory compliance and is not intended to pronounce upon the validity of any transaction or agreement entered into by the bank with its customers.

The RBI had conducted statutory Inspections for Supervisory Evaluation (ISE) of Axis Bank with reference to its financial position as of March 31, 2017, March 31, 2018 and March 31, 2019.

The examination of the Risk Assessment Reports pertaining to ISE 2017, ISE 2018 and ISE 2019, the report of scrutiny carried out by RBI in the backdrop of the incident relating to fraud and related correspondence, and the incident report submitted by the bank in June 2020 relating to a few suspected transactions and related correspondence, revealed contravention of or non-compliance with the directions of RBI.

Axis Bank was then issued notices to show cause as to why penalty should not be imposed on it for its failure to comply with the directions, the RBI said.

After considering the bank’s replies to the notices, oral submissions made during the personal hearing and examination of additional submissions made by the bank, RBI came to the conclusion that the charges of non-compliance with and contravention of the RBI directions were substantiated and warranted imposition of monetary penalty on the bank.

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Dhanlaxmi Bank posts 11% rise in net profit at ₹6.79 cr in Q1 of FY21

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Dhanlaxmi Bank has registered 11.5 per cent increase in its net profit at ₹6.79 crore in Q1 of current fiscal.

The operating profit for the quarter stood at ₹8.89 crore. The total business reached ₹18,575 crore as on June 30 from ₹17,847 crore as on June 30, 2020, registering growth of 4.08 per cent.

A press statement here said that total deposits recorded growth of 4.94 per cent to ₹11,658 crore as on June 30, from ₹11,109 crore. CASA grew by 15.61 per cent to ₹3,859 crore from ₹3,338 crore.

Gross advance improved to ₹6,917 crore from ₹6,738 crore. Retail advance grew by 14 per cent and reached ₹3,560 crore. Gold loans improved by 37 per cent and reached ₹1,822 crore.

CRAR improved to 14.57 per cent as on June 30, against 13.94 per cent as on June 30, 2020.

Return on Assets improved to 0.21 per cent against 0.20 per cent. Return on Equity improved to 3.13 per cent against 2.93 per cent. Book Value of shares as on June 30 was ₹34.42.

The bank will continue the focus on retail advances including gold loans and SME advances, NPA recovery, CASA deposit growth and non- interest income would be the thrust areas, the statement added.

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Dvara KGFS acquires digital financial services platform TransactNow

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Dvara KGFS, a non-deposit taking NBFC, announced that it has acquired ‘TransactNow’, a digital platform from early phase tech start-up Transact Nexus Tech Private Limited, for an undisclosed sum.

TransactNow offers digital financial services to the unbanked and underserved population. The current transaction will help the rural-focussed Dvara KGFS to strengthen its digital platform and take its financial services offerings closer to the rural customers.

“With this, Dvara KGFS is starting a new Channel – KGFS Digital — which will foray into the agent driven business model providing an array of financial services to rural customers through Agent Touch Points located in close proximity to the villages in line with the Omni-Channel Strategy envisaged by Dvara KGFS,” the company said in a press release.

“We are excited about the acquisition of TransactNow. The team and technology will help us to scale up our Digital channel – a network of agents offering all our products with a great amount of transaction convenience to customers in the close proximity of their village. We are hoping that this initiative would help customers avoid travel during the pandemic and avail all financial services in their village,” Joby CO, CEO, Dvara KGFS said in the release.

According to the company website, TransactNow empowers retailers and Farmers Producers Organisations (FPOs) with CRM-based – Super point-of-sale (POS) that works on cloud computing to carry out the banking digital services and commerce. Its service offerings also include domestic money transfer, Aadhar Banking, mobile recharge services, micro-ATMs among others.

“There is a huge potential for financial services in rural India which remains untapped. We decided to help Dvara KGFS to tap that by developing a software which will help the rural population carry out all their financial transactions on digital mode through the agent network,” Sathiskumar, CEO of Transact Nexus Tech Pvt Ltd was quoted in the release.

Sathiskumar will lead the KGFS Digital channel and will foresee the scaling up of the agency network.

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JM Financial Q1 consolidated profit jumps 117% to ₹203 crore

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JM Financial consolidated net profit surged by 117.01 per cent to ₹203.14 crore for the first quarter ended June 30, 2021 led by a sharp rise in its total income.

Its consolidated net profit was ₹93.61 crore in the corresponding period a year ago.

“This is the highest-ever quarterly operating net profit reported,” JM Financial said in a statement on Wednesday.

Its total income rose by 43.62 per cent to ₹992.55 crore from ₹ 691.11 crore a year ago.

The consolidated loan book grew by 1.7 per cent to ₹11,014 crore as on June 30, 2021 compared to ₹10,833 crore as of June 30, 2020.

Gross non-performing assets and net NPA stood at 3.46 per cent and 1.89 per cent, respectively, as of June 30, 2021 compared to 1.8 per cent and 1.22 per cent, respectively, as of June 30, 2020.

Gross provisions

“We have made additional gross provisions (including fair value loss) of ₹132 crore on account of the uncertainties around Covid-19 for the quarter ended June 30, 2021, thereby taking the total provisions to ₹515 crore on account of the pandemic,” it said.

During the quarter ended June 30, 2021, the underlying businesses of the reportable segments have been reclassified to investment bank, mortgage lending, alternative and distressed credit and asset management, wealth management and securities business, JM Financial further said.

“Our diversified business model has demonstrated time and again resilience through economic and market volatility. This new realignment of business segments will facilitate seamless execution of our strategy,” said Vishal Kampani, Managing Director, JM Financial Group.

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Foreign banks lose card market share, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Foreign banks have seen their share of credit cards come down by a third in the last three years. In terms of value of transactions, their share has halved as that of private and public sector banks have grown.

According to data released by the RBI, foreign banks had 57 lakh credit cards outstanding as of March 2018. At that time, there were 3.8 crore credit cards in India, which gave the multinationals a market share of 15%. However, despite losing market share, the foreign banks had significant clout because of the higher value of transactions by their customers who spent more than the average cardholder. In 2018, the foreign banks had monthly card spends of Rs 10,380 crore — a 23.4% share.

Fast forward to March 2021, when the total market expanded to 6.2 crore cards while the number of cards issued by foreign banks stood at 66 lakhs, reflecting a market share of nearly 11%. It is not just in the number of cards that the multinationals have been losing ground. In terms of value of transactions too, foreign banks have a market share of 11.8% in the Rs 72,372-crore monthly volume.

While private banks have consolidated their market share in the card space, increasing their share from 63% to 66%, public sector banks have grown from 21.6% to 23.2% in three years. State Bank of India accounts for almost 80% of all public sector banks. Overall, SBI has 19% of the credit card market, which is still behind the 24% share of HDFC Bank.In global banks, four dominate the credit card space — Citi, Amex, StanChart and HSBC. These MNC banks have also played a pioneering role in the card business in India and they dominated the market in the ’90s. Citi’s decision to exit its retail business in India could further reduce share of foreign banks, should the portfolio be taken by a local player. Additionally, American Express faces a freeze on on-boarding new customers due to data-localisation norms even as more private banks are stepping in.

In 2018, American Express had 3% of the credit card market in terms of number of customers. But it accounted for 10% of all spending by credit card customers in India. In 2021, their share of cards shrunk to 2.5%, while the share of spending declined to 4%. Citibank, which had a 7% share of cards and 9% share of spend, saw these fall to 4% and 6%, respectively. HSBC has held ground better than others with a market share of 1.4% as of March 2021 (1.5% in ’18) and retaining its 1% share of total spend.



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RBI announces Digital Payments Index, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The Reserve Bank of India had earlier announced the construction of a composite Reserve Bank of IndiaDigital Payments Index (RBI-DPI) with March 2018 as base to capture the extent of digitisation of payments across the country.

The index for March 2021 stands at 270.59 as against 207.84 for March 2020, announced while launching the index on January 1, 2021.

The RBI-DPI comprises of 5 broad parameters that enable measurement of deepening and penetration of digital payments in the country over different time periods. These parameters are – (i) Payment Enablers (weight 25%), (ii) Payment Infrastructure – Demand-side factors (10%), (iii) Payment Infrastructure – Supply-side factors (15%), (iv) Payment Performance (45%) and (v) Consumer Centricity (5%). Each of these parameters have sub-parameters which, in turn, consist of various measurable indicators.

The RBI-DPI index has demonstrated significant growth in the index representing the rapid adoption and deepening of digital payments across the country in recent years.

The RBI-DPI has been constructed with March 2018 as the base period, i.e. DPI score for March 2018 is set at 100. The DPI for March 2019 and March 2020 work out to 153.47 and 207.84 respectively, indicating appreciable growth.

The index series since its inception is as under:

March 2018 (Base) : 100
March 2019 : 153.47
September 2019 : 173.49
March 2020: 207.84
September 2020: 217.74
March 2021: 270.59



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Yes Bank, Indiabulls Housing Finance sign co-lending agreement

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Yes Bank and Indiabulls Housing Finance have entered into a co-lending agreement for home loans.

“The partnership aims at synergising capabilities to provide an efficient and seamless experience to retail home loan customers,” said a joint statement on Wednesday, adding that the Reserve Bank of India’s co-lending framework provides a collaboration tool to benefit from the low-cost funding model of a bank and the cost-efficient sourcing and servicing capabilities of a non-bank.

Rajan Pental, Global Head, Retail Banking, Yes Bank said, “The partnership is in line with Yes Bank’s strategy of expanding its retail franchise through a mix of organic and partnership-led origination models. The bank is looking forward to further build a profitable and quality home loan portfolio through this partnership.”

Home loans constitute about 10 per cent of Yes Bank’s retail banking assets as on June 30, 2021.

Gagan Banga, Vice Chairman and CEO, Indiabulls Housing Finance said, “We can now leverage Yes Bank’s deposit-led franchise and complement that with our technology-led distribution to provide efficient solutions around home loans to a wide gamut of customers across geographies, ticket-sizes and yield spectrum, to give us balance-sheet light growth and profitability.”

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