Axis Bank CEO, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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NEW DELHI: Large banks with strong balance sheet would continue to grow faster than their peers in an environment impacted by the pandemic, and sustained fiscal and monetary support by the government and the RBI would help economic recovery by the second half of this fiscal, Axis Bank‘s top official said.

The impact of the second wave of COVID-19 continues, Axis Bank Managing Director and CEO Amitabh Chaudhry said.

“I…hope that the acceleration in vaccination drives and continued fiscal and monetary measures by the government and the (banking) regulator would help the economy to recover from this pandemic by H2 of fiscal 2021-22,” Chaudhry said in the bank’s annual report for 2020-21.

Axis Bank will further strengthen its core, he said adding that the building blocks are firmly in place with granularity built across businesses, improving operational performance, strong capital and balance sheet position to counter any unforeseen risks arising out of second COVID-19 wave.

He said the medium-term growth drivers are firmly in place on the back of several initiatives taken by the government to boost manufacturing and small industries, and the recent shift in global manufacturing supply chain dynamics towards India.

“In such an environment, large banks with healthy operational performance, strong balance sheet and capital position, superior risk management, and operational capabilities would continue to grow faster than the overall sector,” Chaudhry said in his message to shareholders in the annual report.

During 2020-21, the bank’s focus was on building granularity across businesses coupled with strong focus on execution that helped it deliver strong growth across focused segments, he said.

The bank’s CASA (current account savings account) deposits grew 20 per cent, with the share of CASA increasing by 3.72 percentage points to 45 per cent in overall deposits. The retail savings accounts grew 19 per cent, while the current accounts rose 26 per cent.

“Our corporate loan book, including TLTRO, grew 16 per cent, with significantly higher growth across our focussed segments like mid-corporates and MNC. Retail disbursements touched all-time highs during the fourth quarter (January-March 2021),” he said.

TLTRO is targeted long-term repo operations.

Axis Bank reported a 305 per cent growth in its net profit at Rs 6,588 crore during 2020-21.

“Our domestic subsidiaries delivered 75 per cent yearly growth in net profits. Our focus still continues to be further scaling up the subsidiaries so that they gain higher market share in their respective businesses,” said the official.



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Federal Bank’s gross advances grow 8% in Q1

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CASA is seen at Rs 58,959 crore during the first quarter, an y-o-y increase of 19%. The CASA ratio is reported at 34.81%.

Deposits of Federal Bank grew 9% year-on-year (y-o-y) during the first quarter of the current fiscal, while gross advances reported an 8% y-o-y growth, the bank said in a regulatory filing.

The Kerala-based lender said at the end of the June 2021 quarter, total deposits stood at Rs 169,393 crore as against Rs 155,938 crore in the year-ago period. Total advances at the end of the first quarter were at Rs 132,770 crore.

However, total deposits and advances degrew when compared sequentially with the fourth quarter. Total deposits degrew 1.8%, from Rs 172,644 crore in Q4 of FY21. Advances declined by 1.5% from Rs 134,877 crore reported in the fourth quarter of the previous fiscal.

CASA is seen at Rs 58,959 crore during the first quarter, an y-o-y increase of 19%. The CASA ratio is reported at 34.81%.

The lender’s liquidity coverage ratio is reported at 215.20% for the June quarter, compared to 233.14% for the year-ago period and 211.74% for the preceding quarter.

The bank reported the highest-ever quarterly net profit of Rs 477.81 crore for the fourth quarter of FY21, which was higher by 58.6% year-on-year, mainly because of lower provisioning.

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Private banks report deposit surge, muted advances growth till June 30

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Private sector banks have reported a steady increase in deposits though advances remained subdued as local lockdowns impacted business activity. On Monday, the banks filed provisional data on deposits and advances with stock exchanges for the period ended June 30, 2021.

Bucking this trend, HDFC Bank reported a 14.4 per cent growth in advances to about ₹11,47,500 crore as of June 30, 2021 compared to ₹10,03,300 crore a year ago. Its domestic retail loans as of June 30, 2021 rose 10.5 per cent over June 30, 2020 and remained at a level similar to that of March 31, 2021. Domestic wholesale loans jumped around 17 per cent over June 30, 2020 and around 2 per cent over March 31, 2021, HDFC Bank said in its filing.

The bank’s deposits grew 13.2 per cent to about ₹13,46,000 crore as of June 30, 2021 versus ₹11,89,400 crore a year ago.

YES Bank reported a 0.4 per cent decline in loans and advances as of June 30, 2021 to ₹1,63,914 crore against ₹1,64,510 crore as on June 30, 2020. On a sequential basis, loans fell 1.8 per cent from the March 31, 2021 quarter. In contrast, the bank’s deposits soared 39.1 per cent to ₹1,63,295 crore by June-end this year from ₹1,17,360 crore a year ago.

 

Federal Bank reported an 8 per cent growth in gross advances to ₹1,32,770 crore against ₹1,23,437 crore a year ago. Its total deposits increased by 9 per cent to ₹1,69,393 crore as of June 30, 2021 from ₹1,54,938 crore a year ago. However, deposits fell 1.9 per cent on a sequential basis.

IndusInd Bank reported a 7 per cent growth in its net advances to ₹2,11,159 crore during the period against ₹1,98,069 crore a year ago. On a sequential basis, its net advances fell 1 per cent compared to ₹2,12,595 crore as of March 31, 2021.

The bank’s deposits surged 26 per cent to ₹2,67,629 crore as of June 30, 2021 (₹2,11,800 crore). “Retail deposits and deposits from small businesses amounted to ₹1,05,737 crore as of June 30, 2021 compared to ₹95,811 crore as of March 31, 2021,” it said.

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RBI to introduce new 10-year G-Sec

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The Reserve Bank of India has decided to introduce a new 10-year Government Security (G-Sec), which will become the benchmark paper, through which the government will borrow ₹14,000 crore at the upcoming auction on Friday.

This announcement was expected by market participants as the outstanding limit in the current 10-year G-Sec/GS (coupon rate: 5.85 per cent) has reached about ₹1.20-lakh crore. At this level of outstanding amount, usually, a new 10-year G-Sec is issued.

Moreover, the RBI has mopped up about three-fourth of the 5.85 per cent GS via its G-Sec Acquisition Programme and special open market operations, and the trading volume in this paper has been gradually drying up.

Since the 5.85 per cent 2030 GS was first issued on December 1, 2020, its yield has jumped about 25 basis points to close at 6.0877 per cent on Monday, with the price declining about ₹1.82 to ₹98.31.

Overall, the government will be borrowing ₹26,000 crore on Friday through auction of the 4.26 per cent GS 2023 (₹3,000 crore), New GS 2031 (₹14,000 crore) and 6.76 per cent GS 2061 (₹9,000 crore). It will also have the option to retain additional subscription up to ₹6,000 crore against the above security/securities.

G-SAP 2.0 on July 8

A day prior to the auction of the aforementioned G-Secs, the RBI will be purchasing five G-Secs aggregating ₹20,000 crore under its G-Sec Acquisition Programme (G-SAP 2.0) on July 8.

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Banks’ crypto blockade: Exchanges try other modes to enable trade

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As traditional banks and prominent payment gateways continue to be wary of allowing cryptocurrency transactions, some digital payments players such as MobiKwik and Airpay have stepped into this space.

Currently, these are the only two payment processors or gateways serving the cryptocurrency exchanges, said Gaurav Dahake, founder and CEO, Bitbns. Relatively lesser known Airpay was co-founded by Amit Kapoor, Kunal Jhunjhunwala and Rohan Deshpande in 2012. Jhunjhunwala comes from the family of ace stock market investor Rakesh Jhunjhunwala. Rakesh Jhunjhunwala and his brother Rajesh Jhunjhunwala are also investors in the firm along with Kalaari Capital. Bitbns has created its own gateway solution which helps its customers deposit money through UPI and other modes for free. He added, “MobiKwik is launching its IPO this year. A large chunk of its revenue is going to come from cryptocurrency exchanges, as it is the only one that is serving the industry right now. MobiKwik has made a significant amount of money through cryptocurrency clients in the last few months.” An email sent to MobiKwik didn’t elicit any response.

Also read: Indian crypto exchanges flounder as banks cut ties after RBI frown

Last month the Reserve Bank of India had issued a statement clarifying that banks cannot cite 2018 order for not working with cryptocurrency startups. The banks were cautioned also to participate at their own risk ensuring diligence.

Banks are wary

Over a month on, there hasn’t been any change in the banks’ official stance on catering to the crypto exchanges, while they are yet to give access to payment processors or gateways to work with them.

“We were hoping that things would improve post clarification from RBI. Although things haven’t got bad, nothing has improved either with banks like ICICI Bank, Yes Bank and Paytm. They are still reluctant to work with cryptocurrency exchanges and other banks are not very positive either. We were hoping for clarification soon after RBI’s statement, but the talks are on as of now,” Avinash Shekhar, Co-CEO, ZebPay told BusinessLine.

Nischal Shetty, CEO, WazirX, though, believes that the RBI circular at least clarifies that the banks can work with the exchanges. WazirX being one of the largest players in the space has been following the conversations closely. “The business teams of banks are open to it because crypto industry is rapidly growing, but the compliance teams are still trying to put their thoughts together. At present, no bank has come forward to service the exchanges, but hopefully, they will soon,” he said.

“Banks don’t want to miss out the opportunity. They want to be seen as someone supporting this but because we don’t have a very clear legal framework for it in India, banks are being cautious and asking for a few more documents, discussing facilities and limits,” Ramalingam Subramanian, CMO, CoinDCX said.

The process and challenges

In absence of banking partners and payment gateways, WazirX has moved to peer-to-peer (P2P) trading transaction mode. Through P2P way, buyers and sellers of crypto on the exchange transfer money directly into each other’s bank account on trading a cryptocurrency, unlike earlier, when the money would first go into WazirX’s account and then get credited from there.

Others are still relying on the payment processor, doing a lot of the back-end clearance work of transactions manually themselves, as they don’t have access to automated API banking as of now. This leaves customers with limited options to do active trading and transacting when the cryptocurrency values are falling sharply. “Though smaller amount transactions can be done through UPI, but there is a daily limit to that. Customers are missing out on opportunities as larger transactions are restricted. New entrepreneurs don’t want to get into direct cryptocurrency startups right now and even if they do, they are setting up businesses abroad,” Shetty said.

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RBI’s first purchase of G-Secs under GSAP 2.0 for Q2 on July 8

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The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) will buy five Government Securities (G-Secs) aggregating ₹20,000 crore under its G-sec Acquisition Programme (G-SAP 2.0) on July 8.

This will be the first purchase of G-Secs under G-SAP 2.0. The central bank will be purchasing five G-Secs, maturing between 2027 and 2033.

Overall, in the second quarter, the central bank will conduct open market purchase of G-Secs of ₹1.2 lakh crore under the G-SAP to support the market.

Under G-SAP 1.0, RBI committed upfront a specific amount (₹1-lakh crore in the first quarter of FY22) of open market purchases of G-Secs to enable a stable and orderly evolution of the yield curve amidst comfortable liquidity conditions.

“The endeavour (of G-SAP) will be to ensure congenial financial conditions for the recovery to gain traction…The positive externalities of G-SAP 1.0 operations need to be seen in the context of those segments of the financial markets that rely on the G-sec yield curve as a pricing benchmark,” RBI Governor Shaktikanta Das said in a statement on April 7, 2021.

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Western Union aims to scale up outbound remittance service

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Western Union, a global leader in cross border, cross-currency money movement and payments, wants to scale up its outbound remittance service from India this year, Sohini Rajola, Head of Network — APAC and Middle East, has said.

“Today sending money to India is easy. But for sending money from India there is still a room for process streamlining and improvement. We need to make it as seamless as sending money to India currently is. Scaling our outbound remittance service will be the focus area for Western Union India business this year,” Rajola told BusinessLine in an interview.

“As infrastructure develops at our end, we need to offer the same convenience to people sending money out as well. As and when we are able to offer direct debit or have simplified documents based on guidelines, our product will keep changing,” Rajola added.

India is the largest remittance recipient market in the world with annual inbound remittance of over $80 billion. The market for outbound remittance is however smaller at estimated level of $14 billion as of end March 2021. Infact, there has been a steady growth in outward remittance under the Liberalised Remittance Scheme (LRS) route over the last few years with volumes going up from as little as $1.33 billion in 2014-15 to $ 13.79 billion in FY’18-19 and touch high of $18.76 billion in FY’19-20.

Outbound market biz

“In any country we operate, we want to offer both inbound and outbound services. Outbound is definitely a smaller market in India. But if we have been serving the Indian consumer for 25 years, we definitely want the next phase where we can serve that segment well. It is not about whether it is worth it or not. It is about the gamut of services that Western Union offers,” Rajola said when asked it was worth the effort to focus energies on relatively smaller outbound market in India.

Rajola said that her aspiration this year would be to see how Western Union can work together with the regulator and authorities to simplify the processes and offer the same level of convenience of digital remittances to people sending money out of India as available for those making inward remittances.

Impact of Covid-19

On the overall impact of Covid-19 on remittance business, she said that personal remittances saw resilient volumes despite the pandemic. “Overall as a business we processed more business in 2020 than in 2019. We don’t share corridor-specific information, but our principal increased globally,” she said.

“When the pandemic struck initially, there was an apprehension that this will drop overall remittance volumes. What we saw was there was only minor impact. We saw a big jump on the principal volume that was transacted through Western Union,” she added.

Infact, in the first wave, given the cash restrictions, Western Union’s digital business took off in a big way as from people were sending money to support their family, she added. Also, RBI categorising remittance service as an essential service helped some locations to remain open, according to Rajola.

However, in the second wave there was not that big impact on the retail locations. The impact on the physical retail business has been more muted and digital continues to be showing healthy business, she added. At a global level, Wester Union is on course to clock digital revenues of $1 billion this year.

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LoanTap sees 120% increase in loan demand during January-May 2021

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Digital lender LoanTap witnessed a 120 per cent growth in loan applications between January and May 2021 compared to the same period last year.

“With a total of 58,131 loan applications between the months of January and May 2021, the company disbursed personal loans worth over ₹105 crore,” LoanTap said in a statement on Monday.

LoanTap saw demand and applications for credit lines and vehicle loans pick up second to term loans. Over 8,000 unique customers came on its platform, largely for term loans.

Most of the loan demand came from salaried personnel in Tier-I cities, it said. Additionally, millennials were keen on catering to their lifestyle needs from the comfort of their homes. This led to increased interest in convenient, one-tap personal loans.

LoanTap saw a 20 per cent increase in its assets under management, which now stands at ₹370 crore. The company has also expanded to 22 cities from its earlier presence in 15 cities.

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HDFC Bank loans rise over 14 % to Rs 11.47 lakh crore in June, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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NEW DELHI: HDFC Bank on Monday said it has registered 14.4 per cent growth in its advances to over Rs 11.47 lakh crore as of June 30 this year.

“The bank’s advances aggregated to approximately Rs 11,475 billion as of June 30, 2021, a growth of around 14.4 per cent over Rs 10,033 billion as of June 30, 2020, and a growth of around 1.3 per cent over Rs 11,328 billion as of March 31, 2021,” HDFC Bank said in a regulatory filing.

The private sector lender said it’s domestic retail loans by the end of the first quarter of the current fiscal moved up by 10.5 per cent year-on-year, while the domestic wholesale loans grew by around 17 per cent.

Among loan categories, retail loans grew by around 9 per cent over June 30, 2020, and were lower by around 1 per cent as compared to March 31, 2021.

Commercial and rural banking loans grew by around 25 per cent over June 30, 2020, and around 4 per cent over March this year. Other wholesale loans grew by around 10.5 per cent over June last year and around 1.5 per cent over March 2021.

Retail disbursements during Q1 FY22 stood at about Rs 43,600 crore (Rs 436 billion), 202 per cent up from the year-ago period. However, it was down by 30 per cent from Rs 62,500 crore (Rs 625 billion) during the quarter ended March 2021.

These retail disbursements included the home loans sourced from parent company HDFC Ltd.

On the deposit front, the bank witnessed 13.2 per cent growth at Rs 13.46 lakh crore (Rs 13,460 billion) as of June 30, 2021. It was up by 0.8 per cent from Rs 13.35 lakh crore (Rs 13,351 billion) in March 2021.

Retail deposits grew by around 16.5 per cent year-on-year and around 3.5 per cent over March, and wholesale deposits remained stable as compared to June last year, but were lower by around 10 per cent from March this year, the bank said.

“During the quarter ended June 30, 2021, the bank purchased loans aggregating Rs 5,489 crore (Rs 54.89 billion) through the direct assignment route under the home loan arrangement with Housing Development Finance Corporation Limited,” it added.

Shares of HDFC Bank were trading at Rs 1500.95 apiece on BSE, up 1.35 per cent from its previous close.



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