PNB eyes three-fold jump in bottomline at ₹ 6,000 cr in FY’22

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Punjab National Bank (PNB), the second largest public sector bank in the country, expects its bottomline in current fiscal to be atleast ₹ 6,000 crore, Ch S.S.Mallikarjuna Rao, MD and CEO has said.

This estimate is nearly three fold increase to the net profit of ₹ 2,022 crore recorded by the bank last fiscal.

“Last fiscal was a year of consolidation for us because of the amalgamation with two other banks. There were also Corona induced lockdown issues. This fiscal our conservative estimate is that bank will record net profit of not lower than ₹ 6,000 crore. This will, however, depend on the economy growing at 9.5 per cent as projected by RBI and Covid second wave impact getting eliminated by June 30”, Rao said at a press conference to announce the financial results for March quarter and entire FY’2020-21.

At the same time, Rao acknowledged that the ongoing first quarter was tough for the banking industry due to the impact of the second wave of the pandemic.

Credit growth

On the issue of credit growth, Rao said that he expects credit in the banking system to grow 8-10 per cent this fiscal and credit growth of PNB to be atleast 8 per cent. He highlighted that credit growth was very muted

Meanwhile, on the issue of PNB role in the proposed National Asset Reconstruction Company — which is expected to begin with take on board nearly ₹ 90,000 crore of stressed assets (NPA) from the banking system—Rao said that PNB has identified stressed assets worth ₹ 8,000 crore in bank’s book to be transferred to this asset reconstruction company. While public sector banks together are expected to pick up 51 per cent stake in the national ARC, Rao said that PNB shareholding will be less than 10 percentage points.

Rao said that he expected the proposed National Asset Reconstruction Company to be operational from July this year. “We are expecting everything to be put in place by June 30 and from July 1 onwards things will start functioning. The Indian Banks Association has already indicated this”, he said.

Capital mobilisation

To a question on capital raising, Rao said that the bank was adequately capitalised now (capital adequacy of 14.62 per cent after May QIP) and an assessment would be made after June quarter. “As of now we are not looking to come to market. There is some headroom in AT-1 bonds. Even there no decision has been made. There is no timeline at our end”, he added.

Last year, PNB had set for itself target of raising ₹ 14,000 crore of capital from the market comprising of ₹ 4,000 crore from Tier II bonds, ₹ 3,000 crore from AT-1 bonds and ₹ 7,000 crore from QIP. Already the bank has raised ₹ 3,994 crore out of ₹ 4,000 crore Tier II bonds, QIP raised in two tranches at ₹ 5,577 crore and AT1 bonds of ₹ 500 crore. In all, about ₹ 10,077 crore out of targeted ₹ 14,000 crore has been raised from the market by the bank.

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Religare Enterprises eyes fundraise to infuse capital into Religare Finvest, other businesses

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Religare Enterprises Ltd (REL) Board will meet on June 8 to consider fund-raising to, among other things, infuse capital into its wholly owned subsidiary Religare Finvest Ltd (RFL) and other businesses, Rashmi Saluja, Chairperson, REL, said on Friday.

Saluja, however, declined to comment on the mode of fundraising and the quantum being looked at by REL. It could be through a rights issue or a preferential allotment to investors or even a combination of both, sources said.

“We are happy about the positive developments of the debt restructuring process of Religare Finvest Ltd ( RFL). Religare Enterprises Ltd, continuing as promoter of RFL, shall be a testament towards the merit of the organisation and win-win for all.

“Religare Enterprise is also looking to raise funds to infuse capital into RFL and our other businesses. These are very exciting times for all of us and we are confident of being on the right growth trajectory and resurrecting Religare group”, Saluja told BusinessLine when contacted.

Board meet agenda

The REL board plans to discuss fund-raising at its June 8 meeting sparked a sharp rally in its stock price, which climbed nearly 20 per cent to close at ₹142.4 on Tuesday, up ₹23.7 over the previous day’s close.

There is now wide speculation that the Tuesday board meeting could see discussions around enabling existing investors such as the Burman family getting a larger stake in the company.

REL bringing an external investor also cannot be ruled out, sources said.

RFL rejig

REL going in for a fund raise comes at a time when there are signs of positive development around the fresh debt restructuring process (DRP) being pursued by RFL, which is still barred by the RBI from undertaking fresh business.

The fact that the revised DRP — with REL continuing as the promoter of RFL — is now under the consideration of the lead banker State Bank of India, has raised hopes of the entire RFL debt restructuring getting over by August this year, sources added.

Between last January and May this year, REL, through RFL, is understood to have repaid debts amounting to ₹6,900 crore and still had an outstanding debt of ₹4,200 crore.

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RBI issues norms on Certificate of Deposit, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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MUMBAI: The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) on Friday said Certificate of Deposit (CD) shall be issued in minimum denomination of Rs 5 lakh and in multiples of Rs 5 lakh thereafter.

CD is a negotiable, unsecured money market instrument issued by a bank as a usance promissory note against funds deposited with it for a maturity period up to one year.

The Master Direction on Reserve Bank of India (Certificate of Deposit) Directions, 2021 further said CDs shall be issued only in dematerialised form and held with a depository registered with the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi).

“CDs may be issued to all persons resident in India,” it said, and added the tenor of the instrument at issuance should not be less than seven days.

Further, banks are not allowed to grant loans against CDs, unless specifically permitted by the Reserve Bank.

As per the RBI, issuing banks are permitted to buy back CDs before maturity, subject to certain conditions.

The central bank had issued draft directions for public comments in December 2020.



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Axis Bank explores MFI stake buy to expand into rural India, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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KOLKATA/MUMBAI: Private sector lender Axis Bank is in talks with a few micro lenders including Arohan Financial Services, Satin Creditcare Network and Spandana Sphoorty Financial as it explores possible stake buy to expand into rural India, following the footsteps of IndusInd Bank and Kotak Mahindra which chose to improve their rural footprint through the acquisition route.

The talks have begun, three people familiar with the matter told ET. There’s no certainty on which of the negotiations would conclude in a transaction.

Axis Bank already has a micro lending vertical and acquisition of a microfinance company may suit well in its strategy to reach out to the deeper pockets of the market, a person familiar with the matter said. Axis already has 1.5 million microfinance borrowers under its belt.

“The bank is exploring early stage talks with a few microfinance lenders. It’s too early to talk about it as nothing has been finalised yet, but the idea is to widen the footprint in the rural and priority sector space,” said an official who was aware of the talks. “The bank also feels that such a buyout would help to increase its presence in eastern and southern India.”

Getting acquired also suits MFIs especially those without strong promoter backing. Micro lending needs regular infusion of capital to keep pace with the lending growth. Bharat Financial Inclusion, which was the largest MFI before being acquired by IndusInd, was stifled for growth as it had to promoter backing.

India’s Rs 2.48 lakh crore microfinance sector grew by 17% year-on-year even in the pandemic ravaged FY21, reflecting the opportunities available in this space. Universal banks control 44% of the market while NBFC-MFIs have 32% share. The balance is with small finance banks, other non-banking finance companies. NGO-MFIs have around 1% of the market share.

“For any possible acquisition, it’s important for Axis Bank to check whether the MFI has a robust IT system. Otherwise, it would be a tedious task for the bank to integrate the IT platforms,” said a person who was part of the IndusInd-Bharat Financial merger process.

Axis Bank did not respond to ET’s mail.

Arohan Financial Services managing director Manoj Nambiar and Satin Creditcare Network chairman HP Singh declined to comment on the matter while Spandana managing director G Padmaja Reddy did not respond to calls and text messages.

Microfinance is a way of unsecured lending to economically weaker populations, especially women, but prospects of higher returns push banks to explore such businesses. The acquisition route helps banks to get rural loan pie on a platter. IndusInd acquired Bharat Financial in 2019, three year after Kotak Mahindra Bank‘s acquisition of BSS Microfinance.



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Digital banking: Guess who could laugh all the way to the bank?

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Banks, in their eagerness to keep pace, ensured they incorporated every facet of digital banking in their ecosystem.

By Indranil Basu Roy

Next to “new normal,” the most overused term could be Digital Banking. What’s the tipping point of technology or service delivery that makes a Bank truly digital? Net Banking? Yes and No, as its entry dates to an earlier era. App-based access? You must be joking. Cashless payments… now we are talking.

Let’s take one step back to understand digital banking. Over time, as fintech progressed from state-of-the-art, to cutting edge, to leading edge, services offered by banks migrated from conventional delivery channels to online.

Banks, in their eagerness to keep pace, ensured they incorporated every facet of digital banking in their ecosystem. Somewhere down the line, the music stopped. After all, customers were not complaining – no branch visits, no staying on hold in the helpline, no relationship manager to deal with – banking was no longer a chore but a breeze.

Not just retail or personal banking, the transformation had encompassed corporate banking as well, and had eased the procedures in document- oriented products such as Trade Finance.

Should we conclude that all is well, and congratulate the fraternity? Can we compliment the far-thinking CTOs and CMDs on their vision for digitisation? Can we name the top 10 digital-driven banks and announce such other lists that make the jury glow and winners feel good?

If we do, we are falling into the trap that others have already got into. Let’s get this straight, digital banking has reached such levels of disruption that the disrupted are unaware of disruptors racing ahead.

As a banking institution, how do you gauge or ensure you are not left behind? Here are three test questions (don’t look for synergy, this is a random round):

  • How equipped are you to compete with a wholly-digital bank that does not have a single brick and mortar branch?
  • To enhance your digital capability, has your Bank partnered with, or invested into non-financial players, such as a fintech enterprise, data analytics firm, mortgage-software start up or any other disruptor?
  • Here are five terminologies which are the latest in fintech applications: If you have to look up any, you are labeled “behind,” if you have implemented one or more you are “ahead.”

Here we go: Social Banking, Digital Queue, Conversational Banking, Peer to Peer Payment Systems, Facial Recognition Banking.

Assuming that banks cannot endlessly invest in technology (tech is not their domain) the answer is cross-industry collaboration with fintech players who focus on agile solutions. If the engagement process gets further delayed, the next wave will be fintechs playing the role of banks in certain product areas (we already have several online lending platforms which are not backed by a Bank). Look closely, lending platforms of today are replicating services that Banks pioneered five years ago by offering instant loans based on a review of credit history.

Looking back, IBM, the one-time mainframe behemoth, proved elephants can dance by making a dramatic turnaround in the mid 1990s. Now is the turn of mammoth banks to appreciate that digital transformation calls for more than online banking. If not, they may as well recall the story of a humble ant that troubled the mighty elephant by entering its trunk (can’t think of a better disruptor-disrupted metaphor).

Beyond folklore and stories of yore, here’s a reality check reflected in a research report on ‘Digital Banking in Asia,’ published by Mckinsey & Company:

“The disruption caused by digitisation can create or destroy significant value for banks, depending on their starting positions and how well they respond to shifting consumer behaviour and other trends. Experience is showing that 30 to 50 percent of net profit is at risk.”

The findings are disquieting. Rather than assuage your anxiety, I end with a call to action. Start with an audit of your bank’s digital platforms and products, benchmark against the best in the industry, get to know where you feature, and get to work on greater transformation.

If the fraternity fails to keep pace, faster adapters, disruptors and other innovators will get ahead. No marks for guessing who could laugh all the way to the Bank.

(The author is the chief business officer of Modefin, a fintech solutions provider. Views expressed are personal and not necessarily that of Financial Express Online)

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Crisil fears large companies will benefit from RBI sops for contact-intensive sectors, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Leading domestic ratings agency Crisil on Friday said feared risk aversion among banks may lead to only the large companies benefitting under the Rs 15,000-crore on-tap liquidity window for contact-intensive sectors announced earlier in the day. The Reserve Bank of India‘s (RBI) aggregate debt-eligibility thresholds for small enterprises to avail loan recasts takes the total number of entities able to access the facility to two-thirds of the rated mid-size portfolio, it said.

Earlier in the day, the RBI relaxed the eligibility criteria for the restructuring window offered under the Resolution Framework 2.0 to Rs 50 crore. Earlier, only half of the rated companies were eligible for the package when the loan eligibility threshold was set at Rs 25 crore. It also launched the Rs 15,000-crore liquidity facility.

The on-tap liquidity window for contact-intensive sectors such as hospitality, travel and tourism, and aviation ancillary services, which have borne the brunt of the second wave of the pandemic, is timely also, the agency said.

“There is a possibility that only large existing borrowers in contact-intensive sectors actually benefit from this on-tap liquidity window as banks may have greater comfort with them,” the agency said.

In the current environment, it is possible that a number of banks could be risk-averse and the benefit of on-tap liquidity facility may not, therefore, reach the smaller and lower-rated companies in these sectors fully, it said.

A clarity will emerge once the banks come out with their updated policies after the RBI announcement. Crisil will monitor the impact of the development on its rated credits on a case-to-case basis, it said.

Crisil said it rates 6,800 mid-size companies, excluding those engaged in the financial sector, and 4,700 of those are small and medium enterprises (SMEs), having bank loan exposure of up to Rs 50 crore and were standard accounts as of March 2021.

“The RBI’s relaxation in overall bank exposure threshold is timely, as it now increases the coverage of stressed companies that typically have weaker credit profiles,” its Chief Rating Officer Subodh Rai said.

Rai added that three out of four companies eligible for restructuring have sub-investment category ratings, indicating their relatively weak ability to manage liquidity shocks, he added.

Rescheduling of loan repayments under the restructuring 2.0 window will provide interim relief to these companies against such liquidity shocks, he said.



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No change in RBI’s view on cryptocurrencies, we have major concerns, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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MUMBAI: The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) governor Shaktikanta Das on Friday made it clear that the central bank‘s view on cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin remains unchanged and it continues to have “major concerns” on the volatile instruments.

“There is no change in RBI’s position (on cryptocurrencies). Our circular clarifies the position very well,” Das told reporters in the customary post-policy press conference, when asked if there has been a change in its view.

The RBI had first come out with a circular on the issue in 2018, cautioning people about investing in cryptocurrencies, which do not have any sovereign character.

It had barred entities regulated by it from dealing in such instruments. However, the Supreme Court in early 2020 struck down the circular.

Das said a revised notification to financial institutions on Monday was necessitated because some banks were still referring to the old circular set aside by the apex court and this was an attempt to set the record straight.

The RBI had on Monday asked banks, NBFCs and payment system providers not to refer to its earlier 2018 circular in their communications to customers.

“With regard to RBI’s position (on cryptocurrencies), I had said earlier, we have major concerns around cryptocurrency which we have conveyed to the government,” Das said.

Following Monday’s circular, some stakeholders in the cryptocurrencies trade had welcomed it more as a vindication.

Some of the cryptocurrencies have seen massive dip in their per unit trading prices lately, leading to erosion of investor wealth. Some investors have been looking at cryptocurrencies as an attractive investment class.

Das on Friday said the central bank is not into investment advice, but added that one should make his own appraisal and do his own due diligence before taking such a call.



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RBI issues norms on Certificate of Deposit, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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MUMBAI: The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) on Friday said Certificate of Deposit (CD) shall be issued in minimum denomination of Rs 5 lakh and in multiples of Rs 5 lakh thereafter.

CD is a negotiable, unsecured money market instrument issued by a bank as a usance promissory note against funds deposited with it for a maturity period up to one year.

The Master Direction on Reserve Bank of India (Certificate of Deposit) Directions, 2021 further said CDs shall be issued only in dematerialised form and held with a depository registered with the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi).

“CDs may be issued to all persons resident in India,” it said, and added the tenor of the instrument at issuance should not be less than seven days.

Further, banks are not allowed to grant loans against CDs, unless specifically permitted by the Reserve Bank.

As per the RBI, issuing banks are permitted to buy back CDs before maturity, subject to certain conditions.

The central bank had issued draft directions for public comments in December 2020.



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RBI incentivises lenders to create Covid loan book for contact-intensive sectors

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SS Mallikarjuna Rao, MD and CEO, Punjab National Bank, said: “The announcement of on tap-liquidity facility of Rs 15,000 crore will ensure credit flow to the contact-intensive sectors and MSMEs, including hotels, tourism, aviation, etc. which have been adversely impacted.”

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) on Friday announced a special liquidity window of Rs 15,000 crore for lenders to incentivise them to create a ‘Covid loan book’ by lending to contact-intensive sectors hit by the pandemic.

Further, banks will be eligible to park their surplus liquidity up to the size of the Covid loan book at 40 basis points (bps) higher than the reverse repo rate. Currently, the repo rate stands at 4% and the reverse repo rate at 3.35% after the regulator kept rates unchanged on Friday. The window encourages banks to provide fresh lending support to hotels, restaurants, tourism, aviation ancillary services, private bus operators and car repair services, among others.

“In order to mitigate the adverse impact of the second wave of the pandemic on certain contact-intensive sectors, a separate liquidity window of Rs 15,000 crore is being opened till March 31, 2022, with tenors of up to three years at the repo rate,” said governor Shaktikanta Das.

The regulator has also specified that banks which do not wish to avail funds from the regulator will also be eligible for the incentives announced by the RBI. This scheme is over and above the liquidity window of Rs 50,000 crore for ramping up Covid-related healthcare infrastructure and services announced in May 2021. Banks need to create a separate Covid loan book for lending to the pandemic-hit sectors specified by the RBI. Bankers believe on-tap liquidity facility will ensure credit flow to the contact-intensive sectors.

SS Mallikarjuna Rao, MD and CEO, Punjab National Bank, said: “The announcement of on tap-liquidity facility of Rs 15,000 crore will ensure credit flow to the contact-intensive sectors and MSMEs, including hotels, tourism, aviation, etc. which have been adversely impacted.”

Experts believe many banks may not avail the liquidity facility provided by the central bank. Karthik Srinivasan, senior vice president and group head, ICRA, said given the surplus liquidity in the banking system, banks are unlikely to directly borrow under the liquidity window from RBI. However, an additional incentive of 40 basis points over the reverse repo rate could provide some incentive to lenders to provide credit to these sectors, he said. The lenders, however, could remain watchful of the underlying stress in these sectors, as the credit risk will continue to be with them, Srinivasan said.

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‘RBI’s Rs 16,000 crore special liquidity facility to Sidbi to help MFIs mitigate Covid-related challenges’

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Alok Misra, CEO of MFIN, the umbrella body of MFIs, expressed hope that small and medium MFIs will be “prominently” covered under on-lending and refinancing facilities by Sidbi as the industry is facing disruptions in collections due to the second wave of Covid-19.

The microfinance industry on Friday said the Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI) decision to provide a special liquidity facility of Rs 16,000 crore to the Small Industries Development Bank of India (Sidbi) for on-lending and refinancing purposes will provide support to microfinance institutions (MFIs) to mitigate challenges arising out of the pandemic.

Alok Misra, CEO of MFIN, the umbrella body of MFIs, expressed hope that small and medium MFIs will be “prominently” covered under on-lending and refinancing facilities by Sidbi as the industry is facing disruptions in collections due to the second wave of Covid-19.

Industry bodies were, however, “slightly disappointed” because the RBI did not announce any measure on including microfinance institutions under the Resolution Framework 2.0.

“Over the last few quarters, large MFIs have been maintaining relatively higher liquidity on the balance sheet as a precautionary measure in a Covid-impacted environment. The special liquidity facility of Sidbi will further provide additional support to MFIs in general, but particular to small MFIs to manage their fixed obligations amidst disruption in collections on account of lockdowns during April and May 2021,” CreditAccess Grameen MD & CEO Udaya Kumar Hebbar told FE.

“Further, it will help the MFIs provide financing support to their customers and resume normalised disbursements once the lockdowns are gradually relaxed and economic activities start functioning in normal manner,” Hebbar said.

P Satish, executive director, Sa-Dhan, said the RBI in April provided a special liquidity facility of Rs 15,000 crore to Sidbi. “Providing a further special liquidity facility of Rs 16,000 crore is more in terms of enabling Sidbi to finance more innovative types of activities. Oveall this will help the principal financial institution increase its liquidity and that way it will be helpful for the microfinance sector,” he said.

According to Satin Creditcare Network chairman & managing director HP Singh, the central bank’s measures, such as the increase in limit of loans from Rs 25 crore to Rs 50 crore to small businesses and individuals under Resolution Framework 2.0, special liquidity facility to Sidbi and a separate liquidity window of Rs 15,000 crore for contact-intensive sectors, among others, will act as instruments spurring a rebound and strengthening India’s momentum towards normalcy.

The RBI, however, has still not included the MFIs under Resolution Framework 2.0. MFIN had earlier urged the RBI to provide a “restructuring window” for MFIs by including them under the Resolution Framework, which would help them mitigate the impact of Covid-19. According to the industry body, in current circumstances, it will become challenging for the small and medium MFIs to continue repayment to their lenders as microfinance clients are unable to pay during lockdown.

“We were expecting that at least some announcement will be there from RBI on providing a moratorium from lenders to MFIs or some kinds of restructuring facility. Without these kind of measures it will become a major problem for MFIs to provide further loans to their clients going forward. But it has not come. So, in a way we are slightly disappointed,” Satish said.

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