ED issues show cause notice to WazirX, directors under FEMA

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In a move that further raises concerns over the functioning of crypto-currency exchanges, the Enforcement Directorate has issued a show-cause notice to one of the largest domestic crypto-exchange, WazirX, and its Directors Nischal Shetty and Sameer Hanuman Mhatre for alleged violation of the Foreign Exchange Management Act on transactions involving crypto-currencies worth ₹2,790 crore.

WazirX was bought out by Chinese crypto-currency firm Binance in 2019.

WazirX launches NFT marketplace for Indian artists

In a statement on Friday, the ED said it has initiated a probe on the basis of its ongoing money-laundering investigation into Chinese-owned illegal betting applications. In September, the agency had searched 15 locations in Delhi, Gurugram, Mumbai and Pune and busted a worth ₹1,268-crore online betting racket involving Chinese companies. In December, the ED said a large amount of money was inexplicably transferred using crypto-currency.

On Friday, the ED said the investigations had revealed some Chinese nationals had laundered proceeds of crime amounting to about ₹57 crore, by converting Indian rupee deposits into crypto-currency Tether and then transferring it to Binance (the exchange is registered in Cayman Islands) Wallets on instructions from abroad.

Range of transactions

“WazirX allows wide range of transactions with crypto-currencies, including exchange into Indian rupees and vice-versa; exchange of crypto-currencies; and even transfer/receipt of crypto-currency held in its pool accounts to wallets of other exchanges which could be held by foreigners in foreign locations,” the ED said.

Crypto exchanges bet big on India

WazirX does not collect documents, in clear violation of the mandatory Anti-Money Laundering (AML) and Combating of Financing of Terrorism (CFT) norms and FEMA guidelines, it said.

In the period under investigation, users of WazirX have, through its pool account, received crypto-currency worth ₹880 crore from Binance accounts and moved out crypto-currency worth ₹1,400 crore to Binance accounts.

No audit trail

The main concern for the investigative agency is that none of these transactions is available on blockchain for any audit/investigation. Also, It was found that WazirX customers could transfer ‘valuable’ crypto-currencies to any person irrespective of his/her location and nationality without any documentation, making it a safe haven for those looking to launder money or for other illegitimate activities.

Nischal Shetty, CEO and Founder, WazirX, however, said the company is yet to receive any show-cause notice from the ED.

“WazirX is in compliance with all applicable laws. We go beyond our legal obligations by following Know Your Customer (KYC) and AML processes and have always provided information to law enforcement authorities. We are able to trace all users on our platform with official identity information. Should we receive a formal communication or notice from the ED, we will fully cooperate in the investigation,” he said in a statement. The cryptocurrency exchange also tried to ease investor concerns. “Your funds are absolutely safe,” it said in a tweet. While last week, the RBI said it has major concerns around crypto-currencies, most crypto exchanges in the country say the concerns are unfounded as all transactions are based on proper AML and KYC processes.

 

 

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Covid-19: SC refuses to pass direction on plea to redress borrower hardship

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The Supreme Court on Friday refused to pass direction on a plea seeking measures to redress the financial hardship faced by borrowers during the second wave of Covid-19 pandemic, saying it is in the realm of policy decision.

“The government has many things to do. They have to spend money on vaccine, on migrant labourers,” the apex court said, adding that it is for the Centre and the RBI to consider the issue.

“These are issues having financial implications and we are not the experts,” a bench of Justices Ashok Bhushan and MR Shah told advocate Vishal Tiwari, who has filed the petition.

The top court was hearing the plea which sought directions to the Centre and the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) to take remedial measures to redress the financial stress faced by borrowers during the second wave of the Covid-19 pandemic.

During the hearing, Tiwari referred to the reports on how the second wave of the pandemic has affected the economy.

“The petitioner submits that the circular does not address the hardship of the borrowers. Be that as it may, the financial relief and other measures are in the domain of the government,” the bench said in its order.

“We are of the view that no direction be passed. We observe that all the issues which are raised are policy matters and it is for the Union of India and the Reserve Bank of India to take appropriate decision,” the apex court said.

The bench said it had dealt with similar aspects in a writ petition which was filed last year.

The plea had sought directions to the Centre and the RBI to permit the lending institutions to grant interest free moratorium period for term loan and defer the payment of loan instalments for a period of six months or till the situation from Covid-19 normalises.

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About 45% fintech lenders see no impact of Covid-19 second wave on loan disbursements: FACE Survey

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About 45 per cent of fintech and digital lenders did not witness any significant impact on business during the second wave of the Covid-19 pandemic, according to a new survey.

In fact, they continued to disburse loans at the same or higher levels as they did in the fourth quarter of 2021, it revealed.

The survey by Fintech Association for Consumer Empowerment (FACE) of over 100 members revealed that 56.3 per cent of respondents continued to disburse loans in the second wave of the pandemic but did so cautiously and selectively.

Also read: Fintech start-up Boxop ties up with Mahindra Insurance for Covid treatment

About 31.3 per cent of the respondents disbursed loans at the same rate as that of pre- Covid levels while 12.5 per cent were disbursing loans at higher levels that the January-to-March 2021 quarter.

“Members with large customer-base have observed lesser impact on disbursement business continued to provide support,” the survey revealed, adding that members involved in lending to self-employed customers have seen some impact on lending linked to business closures for significant period.

Loan restructuring

“The study was conducted to understand the impact of Covid-19 second wave on digital lending business and fintech industry. The report highlights that how the Covid-19 outbreak and moratorium announcement by RBI has led to uncertainties in the lending business; however, the impact of pandemic on the digital lending business was less severe than compared to the last wave,” said a statement on Friday.

The survey also revealed that about 56 per cent of the members expect to provide loan restructuring to 10 per cent or less of the customers.

In terms of collections, about 69 per cent of the respondents said they see 10 per cent to 20 per cent less collections in the 31-60 day overdue bucket and 61-90 day overdue bucket.

The respondents had retrained their underwriting models after the initial wave of Covid-19 since these models continued to perform well during the second wave. The survey claims that 57.1 per cent of the respondents prefer using the underwriting model that was used during the first wave.

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10-year G-Sec auction sees devolvement

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Government securities (G-Secs) prices rose on Friday despite the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) devolving the 10-year benchmark G-Sec on primary dealers (PDs) at the weekly auction.

Market participants attributed this to the aforementioned security being among the six G-Secs RBI will be buying under the third tranche of open market purchase of G-Secs under the G-Sec Acquisition Programme (G-SAP 1.0).

Though the cut-off price at the auction of the 10-year G-Sec came in at ₹98.97 — about 19 paise higher than previous closing price (of ₹98.7850) — bond dealers say many of the bids would have been below Thursday’s closing price, leading to devolvement of the paper PDs.

PDs, who underwrite G-Sec auctions, had to pick up ₹9975.763 crore worth of this paper out of the total notified amount of ₹14,000 crore.

Marzban Irani, CIO-Fixed Income, LIC Mutual Fund, said the central bank has kept the yield on the 10-year on a tight leash in view of the large Government borrowing programme amid the Covid-19 pandemic, while the market players want it to leave the yields to market forces.

Keeping yields in check

Irani observed that G-Sec prices did not fall despite devolvement of the 10-year G-Sec on PDs as market participants know that RBI will buy this security through G-SAP.

In the secondary market, the benchmark 10-year G-Sec coupon rate: 5.85 per cent) rose 9 paise to close at ₹98.875 (previous close ₹98.785), with the yield declining about a basis point to 6.0072 per cent (6.0199 per cent).

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

The auction of the other two G-Secs — 4.26 per cent GS 2023 and 6.76 per cent GS 2061 — sailed through.

Under G-SAP, RBI commits upfront to a specific amount of open market purchases of G-Secs with a view to enabling a stable and orderly evolution of the yield curve amidst comfortable liquidity conditions. According to State Bank of India’s economic research report “Ecowrap”, the G-SAP programme of the RBI has been largely successful in keeping the bond yields in check.

However, to make the impact more meaningful, RBI may consider shifting the focus on 7-8 year papers while announcing Open Market Operation/ G-SAP, etc., it added.

“This will smoothen the curve and also reduce upward pressure on benchmark yield. Additionally, RBI can also come up with a prior calendar of bucket-wise maturity for GSAP-2.0,” Soumya Kanti Ghosh, Group Chief Economic Adviser, SBI, said.

Furthermore, more purchases might be done in illiquid securities compared to liquid securities in each bucket. Accordingly, banks will be able to offload their HTM (held-to-maturity) stocks and buy liquid ones.

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Bank of Maharashtra tops PSU banks in terms of loan, deposit growth

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State-owned Bank of Maharashtra (BoM) has emerged as the top performer among public sector lenders in terms of loan and deposit growth during financial year 2020-21.

The lender recorded 13.45 per cent increase in gross advances at ₹1.07 lakh crore in 2020-21, as per the published data of BoM.

It was followed by Punjab & Sind Bank which posted 8.39 per cent growth in advances with aggregate loans at ₹67,811 crore at the end of March 2021.

When it came to deposit mobilisation, BoM with nearly 16 per cent growth was ahead of even the country’s largest lender State Bank of India, which recorded 13.56 per cent rise.

However, in absolute terms SBI’s deposit base was 21 times higher at ₹36.81 lakh crore as against ₹1.74 lakh crore of BoM.

Current Account Savings Account (CASA) for BoM saw 24.47 per cent rise, the highest among the public sector lenders, during the year.

As a result, CASA was 54 per cent or ₹93,945 crore of the total liability of the bank.

According to the announced quarterly numbers, Central Bank of India achieved second spot by recording 11.46 per cent growth in CASA at ₹1.61 lakh crore.

Total business of BoM increased 14.98 per cent to ₹2.81 lakh crore.

For the full year 2020-21, BoM’s standalone net profit jumped nearly 42 per cent to ₹550.25 crore. In the previous year, the profit was ₹388.58 crore.

The bank’s asset quality improved significantly as the gross bad loans or gross Non-Performing Assets (NPAs) dipped to 7.23 per cent of gross advances by the end of March 2021 as against 12.81 per cent by the same period of 2020.

In absolute terms, gross bad loans stood at ₹7,779.68 crore at the end of March 2021, lower than ₹12,152.15 crore recorded in the year-ago period.

Net NPAs came down to 2.48 per cent (₹2,544.32 crore) from 4.77 per cent (₹4,145.38 crore).

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Policybazaar gets insurance broking licence from IRDAI

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Web-aggregator Policybazaar on Friday said it has got approval from regulator IRDAI to undertake insurance broking, a development that will help the company augment business and expand bouquet of services.

With this development, the company will surrender its web-aggregator licence to Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority of India (IRDAI) and undertake business including insurance aggregation under the broking umbrella.

“We received our licence to be a broker for which we have been in touch with the regulator for the last three years,” PolicyBazaar.com CEO Yashish Dahiya told PTI.

Venturing into new segments

The broking licence will allow the company to venture into segments which it could not do in the past like claims assistance, offline services, and establish Points of Presence network.

From a revenue perspective, he said, “as a web aggregator we were not paid for life insurance renewals.” As a broker, he said, the company will be entitled for commission as well as fee for web aggregation.

Also read: Serum Institute of India picks up stake in PolicyBazaar

With the help of broking licence, he said, “we will be able to do claims settlement and many other things and we will use this opportunity very wisely.” Policybazaar has a market share of 25 per cent in the life insurance segment while 10 per cent in health insurance.

The parent company PB Fintech also promotes Paisabazaar.com, which is an online credit comparison portal.

PB Fintech had attained the status of a unicorn in 2018 when it raised $200 million in a Series-F round led by Japan’s SoftBank. A company valued at over $1 billion is called a unicorn.

Other investors include the likes of Info Edge, Premji Invest, Temasek, Ribbit Capital, Chiratae, Inventus Capital Partners, True North, Tiger Global, Wellington and Steadview.

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Bank of Maharashtra tops PSU banks in terms of loan, deposit growth, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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State-owned Bank of Maharashtra (BoM) has emerged as the top performer among public sector lenders in terms of loan and deposit growth during financial year 2020-21. The lender recorded 13.45 per cent increase in gross advances at Rs 1.07 lakh crore in 2020-21, as per the published data of BoM.

It was followed by Punjab & Sind Bank which posted 8.39 per cent growth in advances with aggregate loans at Rs 67,811 crore at the end of March 2021.

When it came to deposit mobilisation, BoM with nearly 16 per cent growth was ahead of even the country’s largest lender State Bank of India, which recorded 13.56 per cent rise.

However, in absolute terms SBI’s deposit base was 21 times higher at Rs 36.81 lakh crore as against Rs 1.74 lakh crore of BoM.

Current Account Savings Account (CASA) for BoM saw 24.47 per cent rise, the highest among the public sector lenders, during the year.

As a result, CASA was 54 per cent or Rs 93,945 crore of the total liability of the bank.

According to the announced quarterly numbers, Central Bank of India achieved second spot by recording 11.46 per cent growth in CASA at Rs 1.61 lakh crore.

Total business of BoM increased 14.98 per cent to Rs 2.81 lakh crore.

For the full year 2020-21, BoM’s standalone net profit jumped nearly 42 per cent to Rs 550.25 crore. In the previous year, the profit was Rs 388.58 crore.

The bank’s asset quality improved significantly as the gross bad loans or gross Non-Performing Assets (NPAs) dipped to 7.23 per cent of gross advances by the end of March 2021 as against 12.81 per cent by the same period of 2020.

In absolute terms, gross bad loans stood at Rs 7,779.68 crore at the end of March 2021, lower than Rs 12,152.15 crore recorded in the year-ago period.

Net NPAs came down to 2.48 per cent (Rs 2,544.32 crore) from 4.77 per cent (Rs 4,145.38 crore).



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NBFC-MFIs: Risk of protracted delinquencies remains, says CRISIL

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A hit to the collection efficiency of microfinance institutions (NBFC-MFIs) owing to protracted Covid-19 curbs will increase asset-quality pressures in the sector, with loans in arrears for over 30 days likely to cross the surge in the aftermath of demonetisation (DeMon), cautioned CRISIL Ratings.

With loans in arrears for over 30 days – or the 30+ portfolio at risk (PAR) mounting, the MFI sector is expected to resort to restructuring of loans to a larger extent than last fiscal as this is perhaps the only practical option to support borrowers and not let accounts slip into the non-performing bucket, the credit rating agency said in a note.

CRISIL Rating assessed that the 30+ PAR could rise to 14-16 per cent of portfolio this month from a recent low of 6-7 per cent in March. This number had surged to 11.7 per cent in March 2017, in the aftermath of demonetisation.

“But unlike last fiscal, when loan moratorium helped keep delinquency increases at bay, more MFIs are likely to opt for permitting restructuring under the Reserve Bank of India (RBI)’s Resolution Framework 2.0 announced last month, and continue with higher provisioning,” CRISIL Ratings said.

Ground level challenges

Krishnan Sitaraman, Senior Director and Deputy Chief Ratings Officer, CRISIL Ratings, observed that the medical impact of the second wave of the pandemic has been much worse than the first wave, and afflictions have percolated to the rural areas too.

“Ground-level infrastructural and operational challenges, as well as restrictions on movement of people, have impinged on the MFI sector’s collection efficiency.

“Though overall collection efficiency is expected at 75-80 per cent in May, compared to 90-95 per cent in March, pressure on asset quality would be higher as borrowers do not have a blanket moratorium this time, while their cash flows have been impacted by the second wave,” opined Sitaraman.

Considering the current ground-level challenges, the note emphasised that encouraging collections through the digital mode is imperative for MFIs – the way they have transitioned to cashless disbursements.

Restructuring, Delinquencies & Provisioning

With 30+ PAR mounting, CRISIL Ratings is of the view that the demand under restructuring 2.0 could be in high-single digits compared to 1-2 per cent seen during restructuring 1.0 for the overall sector.

“Yet, the risk of protracted delinquencies eventually leading to credit costs staying elevated, remains.

“For one, borrowers’ track record of repayment ability is yet to be established for already restructured portfolios. Two, lack of prudence is also a possibility,” the note said.

CRISIL estimates that close to half of the total assets under management (AUM) of NBFC-MFIs of about ₹80,000 crore as on March 2021, were generated from December 2020 onwards.

Given the relatively vulnerable credit profiles of borrowers and the fact that local economic activity is yet to normalise, sustainability of collections, especially for the recent disbursements, will be the key monitorable in the coming quarters, it added.

Ajit Velonie, Director, CRISIL Ratings, said: “To be sure, NBFC-MFIs have created provisions (including a special Covid-19 provision in the fourth quarter last fiscal) estimated at 3-5 per cent of the AUM as on March 2021.

“Considering the likely rise in delinquencies and restructuring, higher-than-normal provisioning is warranted even in the first half of this fiscal to absorb the shocks.”

NBFC-MFIs with adequate liquidity, lower leverage, or those backed by strong parentage, will be better placed to withstand the current situation, he added.

According to CRISIL Ratings, large MFIs rated by it are either backed by strong parentage with access to capital, or have comfortable capitalisation with gearing at about 3-3.5 times, which should allow them to withstand the stress.

They also have the liquidity to cover over two months of debt repayments – even after assuming nil collections – because disbursements have been low, too, which has helped conserve cash.

Nevertheless, the trajectory of recovery, access to incremental funding and capital position will bear watching, especially of the smaller MFIs, the agency said.

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IFSC codes of erstwhile Syndicate bank branches to change from July 1

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Canara Bank said on Friday the IFSC codes of the erstwhile Syndicate bank branches will change with effect from July 1, 2021.

Customers have to use the new CANARA IFSC for receiving funds through NEFT/RTGS/IMPS, it said in a statement.

Also read: Canara Bank donates 50 oxygen concentrators

The new IFSC can be obtained through URL canarabank.com/IFSC.html or accessing the website of Canara Bank or by visiting any Canara Bank Branch.

New cheque books

Customers of the erstwhile (e)-Syndicate Bank will have to get new cheque books with changed IFSC & MICR codes, it said.

Swift code of erstwhile Syndicate Bank (SYNBINBBXXX) which is used for sending or receiving SWIFT messages for Foreign Exchange transactions shall be discontinued with effect from July 1, 2021.

“All our customers are advised to use the swift code (CNRBINBBFD) for any of their Foreign Exchange needs,” the statement added.

Canara Bank is the fourth-largest public sector bank in the country after its amalgamation with Syndicate Bank in April 2020, it was noted.

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‘Phone pe loan’ bringing credit revolution to hinterland India, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Banks and NBFCs have struck gold in digital lending, which is driving huge volumes through small loans.

Loans of below Rs 25,000 have grown 23 times since 2017, according to a joint report by Transunion CIBIL and Google.

The report identifies the significance of small ticket less than or equal to Rs 25,000 loans, characterized by searches for “phone on loan”, “laptop on EMI“, and “mahila loan 30,000”.

The share of these loan disbursals amongst all personal loans has gone up from 10 per cent in 2017 to 60 per cent in 2020.

With disbursal speed and convenience being the hallmarks of these loans, the digital-first sellers have the largest share in this category with 97 per cent of all personal loans disbursed by them being under Rs 25,000.

According to TU Cibil in 2020, 38% of loans disbursed to the ‘prime’ credit tier was through fintech NBFCs (non-banking financial companies).

The data shows that those who avail small loans are not less creditworthy.

Additionally, these fintech NBFCs no longer have only ‘urban youth’ as their primary audience — 70% of disbursals are outside tier-1, with 78% of customers being millennials (between 25-45 years of age).

The shift is set to accelerate as reflected by online trends which show that searches outside cities are growing 2.5 times faster as compared to cities.

Searches for loans grew the most in tier-3 cities at 47%, followed by tier-2 (32%) and tier-4 (28%). Indian credit industry stood at $613 billion (Rs 44 lakh crore), which reflects an 18% compounded annual growth rate (CAGR) since 2017. While home loans at $290 billion (Rs 21 lakh crore) form the largest chunk, loan against property and business loans are growing the fastest.

Who is the new borrower?

In 2020, 49 per cent of first-time borrowers were less than 30 years old and 71 per cent were based in non-metro locations, while 24 per cent were women, according to a joint report by Transunion CIBIL and Google titled “Credit Distributed”.

Further, these profiles vary when analyzed at credit product level based on credit appetite, credit experience, credit discipline, and channel of consumption, and have made segmentation increasingly nuanced and complex.

Overall, growth in searches for car loans between the two halves of 2020 grew the fastest at 55 per cent with home loans following with 22 per cent growth.

Loyalty factor pays for fintech NBFCs

Small loan borrowers demonstrate higher loyalty with 42X growth in repeat customer base amongst lenders in CY 2020 versus CY 2017. Moreover, this growth is as high as 64X for digital-first lenders i.e FinTech NBFCs indicating higher stickiness driven by convenience, over the same time period.

Ticket sizes on loan products like personal loans, auto loans and consumer durable loans are geo-agnostic.

In line with the geographical expansion of new digital users in tier 2/3/4 locations and rural India, and a preference for the mother tongue, local language searches for credit showed an exponential increase. Searches in local languages and for translations of terms such as ‘Credit’, ‘Term loan’, and ‘Moratorium‘ have also witnessed an uptick.

Customers rate trust in the brand higher than other traditional parameters like low interest rates, which came second, before recommendations, disbursal time, and online process, all considered to drive value perception with customers.

Sixty-four per cent of credit buyers say that brand is a major factor in choosing their loan provider. Considerable time and effort goes into choosing the lender brand with 76 per cent of borrowers taking a minimum of two weeks between exploration and finally choosing the lender.

Almost a third (32 per cent) of borrowers consider over five providers before proceeding to apply.



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