HDFC Bank moving to new digital platform, says high volumes not the reason for outages, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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HDFC Bank, which suffered a fresh outage this week, has unveiled its longer-term digital banking plans. It plans to build a new digital bank, rather than limit the solution to scaling up systems, and increased monitoring to address glitches.

The bank is moving from traditional core banking to a new architecture that involves ‘hollowing out’ the core. This will enable a lot of functions to be done outside the core banking architecture. Operations too are being moved to the cloud so that things can be scaled up on demand during festivals and big sale days. The bank has added 50 people as part of its ‘enterprise factory’ and ‘digital factory’ initiatives that aim to address glitches in the present system and parallelly build a new system for the future.

Earlier, HDFC Bank had said that had drawn up short-, medium-, and long-term action plans to address digital banking outages.

HDFC Bank chief information officer Ramesh Lakshminarayanan, who joined the bank seven months ago, said it is hiring from across the spectrum like financial technology players and large technology companies, and not just from banks.

Transformation plan

As part of the transformation, it is working with big cloud services providers, entrenched fintechs and also niche start-ups, he said declining to name any of the vendors.

He made it clear that the bank has always been at par with peers when it comes to spends on technology, but declined to share the investments which are now going in. The bank’s spends on technology will be at par with global benchmarks now, he said.

Going into the reasons for the past failures, Lakshminarayanan said none of the troubles were due to high volumes and hinted that the large and complex legacy technology systems may have some issues.

“The existing technology landscape is complex, large and we process a record number of transaction volumes.

“None of these issues that came out have been on account of capacity. We have had issues like a hardware failure, sometimes some components would not have worked effectively,” he said.

He added that none of the outages have been repeat ones, pointing out that some newer challenge has come up every time. The top officer for IT systems also declined to answer a question on the reasons why other banks who carry out similar transactions have not reported similar incidents.

Concerns rise

Addressing analysts last month, the bank’s Managing Director and Chief Executive Shashidhar Jagdishan had called the incidents and the regulatory action as a “blot” on the reputation of the lender.

“In the case of HDFC Bank, there were earlier episodes also. HDFC Bank has an overwhelming presence in the digital payment segment, in the internet banking segment.

“We have some concerns about certain deficiencies etc. It is necessary that HDFC Bank strengthens its IT (information technology) systems before expanding further,” RBI Governor Shaktikanta Das said earlier this year.

“.we cannot have thousands and lakhs of customers who are using digital banking to be in any kind of difficulty for hours together and especially when we are ourselves giving so much emphasis on digital banking.

“Public confidence on digital banking has to be maintained,” Das said.

Jagdishan had said it has taken the right lessons from the regulatory interventions.

“The fundamental part where we could probably have done better is resiliency and how do you recover faster when an outage happens,” he told analysts last month.

Lakshminarayanan on Thursday admitted that HDFC Bank has not been the “gold standard” company and added that the benchmark which is now being chased is to see happy customers.



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Indostar Capital to reduce corporate loan book to less than 10% of AUM

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Indostar Capital Finance Ltd is planning to reduce its corporate loan book to less than 10 per cent of Assets Under Management (AUM) by March 2022 from 22 per cent as at March-end 2021.

As part of its plan to build a 100 per cent retail company, the non-banking finance company (NBFC) increased the share of retail finance (commercial vehicle/CV finance, SME finance and housing finance) in AUM to 78 per cent as at March-end 2021 against 71 per cent as at March-end 2020.

Total AUM came down about 13 per cent year-on-year (yoy) to stand at ₹8,398 crore as at March-end 2021 from ₹9,690 crore as at March-end 2020, as per the NBFC’s investor presentation.

Also read: IndoStar Capital Finance plans to focus exclusively on retail lending

Of the disbursement of ₹863.50 crore in Q4FY21 (up 18 per cent yoy), 98 per cent was to the retail segment and only 2 per cent was to the corporate segment, it added.

In its outlook for FY22, Indostar Capital,whose promoter and promoter group include BCP V Multiple Holdings Pte Ltd (52.06 per cent stake) and Indostar Capital (38.47 per cent), said it has substantial growth capital to pursue calibrated growth. It will focus on high yield used CV & affordable housing.

“Brought Brookfield (BCP V Multiple Holdings Pte. Ltd) as partner with ₹1,225 crore primary capital (in May 2020) and strengthened capital adequacy and liquidity. Robust equity, comfortable liquidity…form the foundation for future growth ahead,” the presentation said.

Meanwhile, the standalone net loss of Indostar Capital Finance narrowed to ₹312 crore in the fourth quarter of FY21 against ₹420 crore in the year ago period.

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Does Siva settlement signal banks’ disillusionment with IBC?, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Lenders of Siva Industries and Holdings have approved a one-time settlement proposal from the promoter under which they will take a 93.% haircut and just Rs 5 crore upfront cash.

Of the company’s total dues of Rs 4,863 crore, the IDBI Bank-led lenders will get Rs 313, excluding upfront payment, within 180 day of receiving NCLT nod.

They will recover Rs 318 crore, with Rs 5 crore as upfront cash, out of the company’s total dues of Rs 4,863 crore. This amounts to a haircut of 93.5 per cent.

The holding company owes financial and other creditors about Rs 5,000 crore. Tata Sons had filed a claim of Rs 863 crore against the Sivasankaran group company but that was rejected by the latter’s interim resolution professional.

The creditors received an offer from Mauritius-based Royal Partner for the company but that was rejected on the grounds that the investor had been unable to demonstrate its seriousness in completing the deal.

Unusual settlement

Bankruptcy experts have termed the development unusual, citing the rejection of such offers by promoters in the past.

The acceptance of Sivasankaran’s offer differs from the usual pattern of rejection by creditors of such deals proposed by promoters seeking to withdraw their companies from bankruptcy proceedings.

Atul Punj of Punj Lloyd, Videocon’s Venugopal Dhoot, Sanjay Singal of Bhushan Power and Steel, and the Ruias of Essar Steel had all made offers to creditors to persuade them to drop bankruptcy proceedings. All were rejected.

In DHFL’s case, the promoter Kapil Wadhawan had offered to repay the debt in full, but the lenders ruled in favour of Piramal.

Experts say while banks may be getting the most out of such settlement in absence of any serious bid, but such a move weakens the IBC, especially Section 29A that bars promoters from bidding for their assets in a bankruptcy court. The Siva deal, if it goes through, could set a precedent of promoters striking settlement deals with banks when there are no bidders.

Other controversies

Sivasankaran, who was the founder of Aircel before he sold it to Malaysia’s Maxis Communications, is no stranger to controversy.

The South India-based businessman has been at the centre of a probe by the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) over alleged irregularities in loans obtained from IDBI Bank. Sivasankaran was accused of obtaining loans from IDBI Bank’s overseas branches and using the proceeds to repay loans obtained from the bank in India which had turned non-performing.

He was also accused by Cyrus Mistry of receiving favours from Ratan Tata such as the grant of a loan to buy a stake in Tata Teleservices. But these allegations were rejected by the Supreme Court in its verdict on the Tata-Mistry dispute delivered on March 26.

Siva Industries was admitted for bankruptcy proceedings on July 4, 2019, as per a public announcement uploaded on the website of the IBBI.



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HDFC Bank says working with RBI for restarting banned services, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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MUMBAI: HDFC Bank on Thursday said network outages that led to a regulatory ban on new credit card sales were not due to transaction volumes and affirmed that it continues to stay in touch with the RBI for restarting the services but giving a timeline for it will be difficult.

The bank said it is on its way to creating a new technology architecture for the future as part of the “digital factory” and “enterprise factory” initiatives. But, it conceded that outages will continue under the older system though it will be working to minimise the time taken to bring the service back.

In December 2020, the RBI took the unprecedented step of stopping the largest private sector lender from selling any new credit cards and also launching new digital services, because of a series of network outages.

The outages, however, continued even after the action, the last of which was witnessed on Tuesday when the mobile banking app stopped working for 90 minutes.

In a specially arranged interaction to address concerns around technology, its Chief Information Officer, Ramesh Lakshminarayanan said there have been a series of actions, including the visit of an external audit team, to assess its capabilities and also submission of the audit report.

“We are awaiting further directions from the regulator in this matter. We are fully prepared, we have shared all of the required information.

“We are awaiting further guidance from the regulator in terms of seeing how this will pan out now. I don’t have the timelines now, I can’t second guess,” he said.

The bank is also working very closely with the regulator and the industry in terms of ensuring that “some of the outages we saw, we continue to address them in a fruitful way”.

It had embarked on an initiative to upgrade its technology over 15 months ago, even before the RBI action came in, he said adding that it is carrying out the job of making the existing systems work seamlessly and building new systems simultaneously at present.

He said two years from end-2021 will witness a series of new services launches and improvisations, but declined to give an exact timeline by which the work on the newer technology platform will be finished.

“I don’t think we will be able to stop all the outages from the existing side, we will try and minimise.

“There will be incidents and should an incident come up, we will react to it faster and keep alternative channels open, communicate effectively,” he said.

The bank has increased the hiring of talent and aims to add up to 500 new employees to the technology team over the next two years.

Lakshminarayanan, who joined the bank seven months ago, said it is hiring from across the spectrum like financial technology players and large technology companies, and not just from banks.

As part of the transformation, it is working with big cloud services providers, entrenched fintech, and also niche start-ups, he said declining to name any of the vendors.

He made it clear that the bank has always been at par with peers when it comes to spends on technology but declined to share the investments which are now going in. The bank’s spends on technology will be at par with global benchmarks now, he said.

Going into the reasons for the past failures, Lakshminarayanan said none of the troubles were due to high volumes and hinted that the large and complex legacy technology systems may have some issues.

“The existing technology landscape is complex, large and we process a record number of transaction volumes.

“None of these issues that came out have been on account of capacity. We have had issues like a hardware failure, sometimes some components would not have worked effectively,” he said.

He added that none of the outages have been repeating ones, pointing out that some newer challenge has come up every time. The top officer for IT systems also declined to answer a question on the reasons why other banks that carry out similar transactions have not reported similar incidents.

Addressing analysts last month, the bank’s Managing Director and Chief Executive Shashidhar Jagdishan had called the incidents and the regulatory action as a “blot” on the reputation of the lender.

“In the case of HDFC Bank, there were earlier episodes also. HDFC Bank has an overwhelming presence in the digital payment segment, in the internet banking segment.

“We have some concerns about certain deficiencies etc. It is necessary that HDFC Bank strengthens its IT (information technology) systems before expanding further,” RBI Governor Shaktikanta Das said earlier this year.

“We cannot have thousands and lakhs of customers who are using digital banking to be in any kind of difficulty for hours together and especially when we are ourselves giving so much emphasis on digital banking.

“Public confidence in digital banking has to be maintained,” Das said.

Jagdishan had said it has taken the right lessons from the regulatory interventions.

“The fundamental part where we could probably have done better is resiliency and how do you recover faster when an outage happens,” he told analysts last month.

Lakshminarayanan on Thursday admitted that HDFC Bank has not been the “gold standard” company and added that the benchmark which is now being chased is to see happy customers.



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HDFC Bank to refund GPS device commission to auto loan customers

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The irregularities in the auto loan portfolio pertains to the charges that some executives of the bank had forced borrowers to buy GPS devices bundled with auto loans.

The country’s largest private sector lender, HDFC Bank, will refund the GPS device commission to customers who had availed of such device as part of auto loans between FY14 and FY20. In a public notice that appeared on the newspaper on Thursday, the lender said the refund will be credited to the customer’s bank account as registered with lender.

FE has learnt that HDFC Bank is refunding the amount to customers according to directions received from the Reserve Bank of India (RBI). The total refund amount as GPS commission could be to the tune of Rs 40 crore, sources said.

“The notice is hereby given that HDFC Bank Limited (Bank) will be refunding the GPS device commission to auto loan customers who availed of such device as a part of the auto loan funding during the period FY 2013-14 to FY 2019-20,” the lender said in the public notice.

“The refund will be credited to the customer’s repayment bank account as registered with the bank. In case of any queries or in case such bank account is closed, such customers are requested to contact the bank from their registered email ID or call on the below given toll free number with the details of the auto loan account number within the next 30 days,” the notice further read.

Last Month, the RBI had slapped a penalty of Rs 10 crore on HDFC Bank due to deficiencies in regulatory compliance in the GPS device commission case. The regulator, however, said the penalty was based on deficiencies in regulatory compliance and was not intended to pronounce upon the validity of any transaction or agreement entered into by the bank with its customers. The regulator has imposed the penalty after considering the bank’s reply to the show-cause notice.

The irregularities in the auto loan portfolio pertains to the charges that some executives of the bank had forced borrowers to buy GPS devices bundled with auto loans. The misconduct by bank officials was acknowledged by former MD and CEO Aditya Puri in the bank’s AGM when he had said an internal probe was conducted against a few erring employees and appropriate action was taken.

“We had received some whistle-blowing complaints, internal enquiries carried out in the matter on the complaints received has not brought out any conflict-of-interest issue, nor does it have any bearing on our loan portfolio,” Puri said at the company’s annual general meeting on July 18, 2020.

Email queries sent to HDFC Bank did not elicit any response till the time of filing this copy.

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Banks’ microfinance gross loan portfolio grows, SFBs see de-growth: Report

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The portfolio outstanding of microfinance sector stood at Rs 2.54 lakh crore as of March 2021, with 10% quarter-on-quarter growth and 8.4% year-on-year growth.

The gross loan portfolio (GLP) of banks in the microfinance sector grew 15.5% year-on-year to Rs 1.06 lakh crore at the end of the previous fiscal while that of small finance banks (SFBs) de-grew 6.6% y-o-y to Rs 41,708 crore, according to a report published by credit bureau CRIF High Mark.

The 15th edition of CRIF MicroLend, released on Thursday, showed that banks continued to dominate the microfinance market with a portfolio share of 42% at the end of FY21, up from 39.4% in FY20. Significantly, SFB’s market share in the last fiscal declined to 16.4% from 19.1%.

During the third quarter of FY21, the market share of banks and SFBs stood at 41.7% and 16.9%, respectively, in the microfinance space. Between Q4FY20 and Q3FY21, NBFC-MFIs’ market share stood almost the same at around 30%, while it grew to 30.6% at the end of Q4FY21.

Interestingly, earlier this month, P N Vasudevan, managing director and CEO of Equitas Small Finance Bank, said its conscious plan to grow the unsecured micro finance book at a “slower pace’ compared to the rest helped mitigate the overall credit cost impact. “As of March 31, 2021, the unsecured microfinance advances were 18% while the remaining 81% were secured loans. The least impacted product, small business loans secured by house property, constitutes 45% of the total advances,” Vasudevan said.

“Microfinance industry demonstrated strong resilience and recovered in Q2 after muted business in Q1FY20-21. Loan disbursements in Q3 and Q4 of FY21 were similar to previous year’s respective quarters,” said Vipul Jain, head of products, CRIF High Mark, while releasing the report.

The portfolio outstanding of microfinance sector stood at Rs 2.54 lakh crore as of March 2021, with 10% quarter-on-quarter growth and 8.4% year-on-year growth.

“Delinquency was higher in Q3 and Q4 of FY20-21 compared to pre-Covid levels. We hope to see these numbers move back to their historic levels in coming quarters,” Jain said.

The report said early delinquency (1- 30 days) reduced by 3.6% in March 2021 compared to December 2020 from 8.7% to 5.1%. Microfinance loans with repayment delays of over 30 days (30+% delinquency) remained high for West Bengal, Assam and Maharashtra.

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RBI pays higher-than-expected price to buy 10-year G-Sec

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The Reserve Bank of India paid about 38 paise more to purchase the 10-year Government Security (G-Sec) under the third tranche of the G-Sec Acquisition Programme 1.0 in a bid to keep bond yields on a tight leash.

The central bank bought this G-Sec (coupon rate: 5.85 per cent) at ₹98.99 (yield: 5.991 per cent) against the previous close of ₹98.6075 (6.045 per cent).

The move to buy the aforementioned security at a higher price had the desired effect as it closed about 18 paise higher at ₹98.79 than the previous close, with the yield declining about 3 basis points to 6.0192 per cent.

Bond yield and price are inversely related and move in opposite directions.

Under G-SAP 1.0, the central has committed upfront to 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.

Of the six G-Secs and State development loans of 12 States the central bank intended to buy aggregating ₹40,000 crore, it invested about 67 per cent of the amount (or ₹26,779 crore) in buying the 10-year paper.

Marzban Irani, CIO-Fixed Income, LIC Mutual Fund, said: “the 10-year G-Sec is the most widely-traded security. It is the signalling rate. Most of the borrowing is in the belly (10-year to 15-year) of the curve.

“In the last two days, prices had fallen based on the upcoming Fed event and profit booking. So probably it was bought 38 paise up.”

He underscored that most of the float is with RBI in 10-year benchmark paper.

“Probably RBI gave an exit to investors holding this paper so that those they can participate in auctions going ahead and support the borrowing,” Irani said.

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CCI approves combination involving Magma HDI General Insurance

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The Competition Commission of India (CCI) has approved a combination transaction involving India Advantage Fund S4 I (IAF) and Dynamic India Fund S4 US I (DIF) together, picking less than 25 per cent and NHPEA Trisul Holding B.V (NTH) picking up less than 10 per cent combined interest in Magma HDI General Insurance, a non life insurance company.

The IAF/DIF transaction and the NTH transaction are collectively referred to as the “proposed combination”.

NTH is an investment holding company that ultimately belongs to a fund managed or controlled by an affiliate of Morgan Stanley.

The CCI has concluded that the proposed combination will not lead to any change in the competitive landscape or cause any appreciable adverse effect on competition in India irrespective of the manner in which the relevant markets are defined. The relevant market has been broadly defined as “the market for general insurance in India”.

Magma HDI was established in 2012 and had 133 branches as of December 30, 2020.

This General insurer offers 62 products across various categories including motor, health, personal accident, home, fire, engineering to secure all major risks in general insurance sphere.

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How savings were impacted by Covid second wave

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Faced with the surge of Covid-19 infections in recent months combined with lockdowns that led to job losses and drop in income, many households are understood to have started using their accumulated savings to fund expenditure.

This, in turn, has led to concerns over a decline in the savings rate that could hamper further recovery.

According to the Reserve Bank of India’s monthly bulletin for March, household net financial savings rose to 21 per cent of GDP in the first quarter of 2020-21 and fell to 10.4 per cent in the second quarter. A report by Motilal Oswal in April had said household net financial savings had likely fallen to 8.4 per cent of GDP in the third quarter last fiscal.

Anecdotal data as well as the slowdown in bank deposits indicate that household savings have been impacted by the second surge of Covid-19 infections.

Bank deposits

Deposits of commercial scheduled banks grew 9.7 per cent on an annual basis to ₹1,51,66,808.18 crore for the fortnight ended May 21, 2021 as against a 9.9 per cent growth in the fortnight ended May 7, 2021.

“Growth in deposits with scheduled commercial banks (a proxy for household saving, having about 50 per cent share in households’ overall savings portfolio), has declined starting April 2021. Last year, in contrast, deposit growth had moved up. This could be indicative of pressure on incomes and a simultaneous rise in medical expenditure given the heightened ferocity of the second wave,” said a recent report by Crisil.

People also seem to be withdrawing funds from retirement savings. By May 31, 2021, the EPFO had settled over 76.31 lakh claims under the Covid-19 advance scheme amounting to over ₹18,698.15 crore. The government has now allowed a second round of such withdrawals from the Employees’ Provident Fund.

Gold auction

Gold loan NBFCs are auctioning more gold in recent months indicating higher distress amongst borrowers. For instance, Manappuram Finance said it auctioned gold worth ₹404 crore in the fourth quarter of 2020-21 compared to ₹8 crore in the nine month period ended December 2020.

Sale of life insurance policies has also declined in recent months but there are expectations that it may revive in coming months.

“Equity markets have been performing well. It is expected that products such as mutual funds and ULIPs will continue to do well this fiscal as bank deposits have lost their sheen,” said an executive with a private insurer.

 

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SBI to sell two NPA accounts next month to recover dues of Rs 60 cr, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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SBI has invited bids for two NPA accounts with outstanding dues of nearly Rs 60 crore. “In terms of the bank’s policy on sale of financial assets, in line with the regulatory guidelines, we place these accounts for sale to ARCs/ banks/ NBFCs/ FIs, on the terms and conditions indicated there against,” SBI said in a sale notice.

The bank has put up for sale the accounts of N S Engineering Projects, with loan outstanding of Rs 36.98 crore, and Chinteshwar Steels Pvt Ltd, which owes Rs 22.72 crore to SBI.

The reserve price for these non-performing assets (NPAs) for the purpose of sale has been fixed at Rs 17.19 crore and Rs 10.50 crore, respectively.

The e-auction for these two accounts will take place on July 7, 2021.

The interested asset reconstruction companies (ARCs)/ banks/ non-banking financial companies (NBFCs) / financial institutions (FIs) can conduct due diligence of these assets with immediate effect, after submitting expression of interest and executing a non-disclosure agreement (NDA) with the bank, SBI said.

“We reserve the right not to go ahead with the proposed sale at any stage, without assigning any reason. The decision of the bank in this regard shall be final and binding,” it added.



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