Kotak Mahindra Bank board nod for dividend on Non-Convertible PNCPS

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Kotak Mahindra Bank on Friday said its Board of Directors has approved the payment of dividend on 1,00,00,00,000 Nos. 8.10 per cent Non-Convertible Perpetual Non-Cumulative Preference Shares for the period from April 1, 2020 till March 31, 2021, as per their terms of issue.

The record date fixed for the purpose of dividend payment would be Friday, March 19, 2021, it said in a regulatory filing.

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Ittira Davis resigns as MD and CEO of Ujjivan SFB

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Ittira Davis, Managing Director and CEO of Ujjivan Small Finance Bank Limited, has resigned to take up a director’s role on the board of the company.

In a regulatory filing to exchanges, the company said: “With the resignation of Davis, company has appointed Samit Ghosh, the existing Non-Executive Chairman as MD and CEO of the company, with effect from May 1,and his appointment is to be effective only on receipt of prior approval of the shareholders by way of special resolution since he is over 70 years of age.”

The company has given the following reason for resignation of Davis: “Having regard to a few recent board-level changes in Ujjivan Small Finance Bank Limited, the NRC and the board of the company, unanimously were of the view that Ittira Davis, the existing MD and CEO, who is a veteran banker with over 40 years of banking experience and having been associated with Ujjivan since 2015, wherein he was instrumental in the formation and transition of the bank, will add further value, if appointed to the board of the bank. He meets all the criteria of our various stakeholders and is held in high esteem by the employees, investors, partners and regulators and will be able to provide guidance to the bank board and its management.”

“To facilitate the whole process and to avoid any probable conflict, Ittira Davishas decided to relinquish his existing position of the MD and CEO of UFSL to take up the Non-Executive Directorship role at the bank for which a separate disclosure will be made by the bank in due course, once his appointment is considered in its ensuing board meeting. Accordingly, the board at its meeting held today has accepted the resignation of Ittira Davis from the post of MD and CEO of the company w.e.f. today March 12(close of business hours). He has confirmed that there are no other material reasons for his resignation from the board of our company,” company’s note added.

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S Srimathy takes over as ED at IOB

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S Srimathy has assumed charge as the Executive Director of Indian Overseas Bank. Prior to this, she served as Chief General Manager at Canara Bank. She had been deputed to NABARD as Chief Vigilance Officer immediately before her appointment to Indian Overseas Bank.

Srimathy joined Canara Bank as a Probationary Officer in November 1986. She has 34+ years of banking experience across categories of branches from rural to metro, and is well exposed to various verticals such as branch operations, mid & large credits, human resources and risk management.

She headed Canara Bank’s prime corporate branch at Cuffe Parade, Mumbai, for over three years. She also headed the corporate credit wing and international operations at Canara Bank’s head office before becoming head of Chennai Circle.

She holds a post-graduate degree in commerce, along with a masters in business administration. She is also a Certified Associate of the Indian Institute of Banking & Finance (CAIIB).

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BNP Paribas Cardif sells 4.99% stake in SBI Life

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BNP Paribas Cardif has sold 4.99 per cent stake in SBI Life Insurance amounting to a little over 5 crore shares.

The French insurer now holds 0.2 per cent stake in the private sector life insurer. The share sale was in the open market, SBI Life Insurance said in a regulatory filing on Friday. Prior to the share sale, BNP Paribas Cardif held 5.2 per cent stake in the life insurer.

Previously, in June 2019, BNP Paribas Cardif had sold 2.5 crore shares in the insurer, amounting to 2.5 per cent stake through an offer for sale that fetched ₹1,702 crore.

On Friday, SBI Life scrip closed 2.78 per cent lower at ₹913.9 apiece on the BSE.

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Suryoday Small Finance Bank wants to raise Rs. 582 via IPO, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The Reserve Bank of India had made it mandatory for the Small Finance Banks to hit the capital market within three years of operations. Pandemic slowdown the process for many of the SFBs, Just after Utkarsh Small Finance Bank filed for an IPO, Suryodaya too disclosed its plans.

Suryoday has decided to launch their initial public offer of equity shares of face value of ₹10 each on 17th March 2021. The Issue will close on 19th March 2021. The price band of the Offer has been fixed at ₹303 to ₹305 per Equity Share.

The Issue comprises of a fresh issue of up to 8,150,000 Equity Shares and an offer for sale of up to 10,943,070 Equity Shares. The Issue includes a reservation of up to 500,000 Equity Shares for subscription by eligible employees under the “Employee Reservation Portion” which is hereinafter referred to as “Net Issue”.

The Bank and the Selling Shareholders in consultation with the Book Running Lead Managers, may offer a discount of up to 10% (equivalent of ₹ 30 per equity share) of the issue price to eligible employees bidding in the Employee Reservation Portion (“Employee Discount”).

Suryoday Small Finance Bank said in a statement, “The bank has undertaken a Pre-IPO placement of 5,208,226 Equity Shares comprising (i) a private placement of 3,084,833 Equity Shares to SBI Life Insurance Company Ltd, 1,713,795 Equity Shares to Axis Flexi Cap Fund, 342,760 Equity Shares to Axis Equity Hybrid Fund, 66,838 Equity Shares to Kiran Vyapar Ltd.”

The Issue is being made through the Book Building Process, wherein not more than 50% of the Net Issue shall be allocated on a proportionate basis to Qualified Institutional Buyers, provided that the Bank and the Selling Shareholders may, in consultation with the Book Running Lead Managers, allocate up to 60% of the QIB Portion to Anchor Investors on a discretionary basis in accordance with the SEBI ICDR Regulations.

In the event of under-subscription, or non-allocation in the Anchor Investor Portion, the balance Equity Shares shall be added to the Net QIB Portion. Further, 5% of the Net QIB Portion shall be available for allocation on a proportionate basis only to Mutual Funds, and the remainder of the Net QIB Portion shall be available for allocation on a proportionate basis to all QIBs.

Further, not less than 15% of the Net Issue shall be available for allocation on a proportionate basis to Non-Institutional Bidders and not less than 35% of the Net Issue shall be available for allocation to Retail Individual Bidders in accordance with the SEBI ICDR Regulations, subject to valid Bids being received at or above the Issue Price.

All potential Bidders (except Anchor Investors) are required to mandatorily utilise the Application Supported by Blocked Amount (“ASBA”) process providing details of their respective ASBA accounts, and UPI ID in case of RIBs using the UPI Mechanism, if applicable, in which the corresponding Bid Amounts will be blocked by the SCSBs or under the UPI Mechanism.

Axis Capital Limited, ICICI Securities Limited, IIFL Securities Limited and SBI Capital Markets Limited are the Book Running Lead Managers to the Issue



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PFRDA in talks with IRDAI forintroducing variable annuities

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Pension regulator PFRDA is in talks with insurance regulator IRDAI to explore if variable annuities could be introduced.

The need for variable annuities – where the returns vary according to the market-related benchmark – has all the more increased, given that annuity rates have fallen in line with sharp fall in interest rates in system, said Supratim Bandyopadhyay, Chairman, PFRDA, at the Virtual Actuarial Conclave, organised by the Institute of Actuaries of India (IAI).

“Currently annuity rates are going down and down. There is lot of despondency on prevailing annuity rates among the older generation. I believe the kind of annuities we have, it will not give the kind of benefit that we are thinking about for the superannuated generation in the long run. So, definitely, we have to think about it,” said Bandyopadhyay.

Besides variable annuities, the Pension Fund Regulatory and Development Authority (PFRDA) is also contemplating the introduction of other modes of payout such as systematic withdrawal plan to offset the low rates of annuities, he said.

Currently. the regulatory norms require a person on retirement to invest at least 40 per cent of the retirement funds in annuities.

The PFRDA will soon launch a product that gives minimum assured return.

“We propose to have innovative products to attract more and more customers. Their your (actuaries) inputs will be welcome. The first product we will be targeting is minimum assured return,” he said.

The moment one gives a guarantee, it impinges on the capital adequacy structure, and that is where some skills are required in the design of the product, said Bandyopadhyay.

Pension projection

Similar to the practice in developed countries, the pension regulator now wants to provide pension projection to an NPS subscriber.

He felt that actuaries can play a critical role in the proposed effort of the pension regulator. Meanwhile, Bandyopadhyay also said that in the next few months PFRDA plans to recruit “would-be actuaries” (those who have cleared a certain number of papers in actuarial professional course) to strengthen the functioning of the regulator.

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India likely to be included in the global bond index by October

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India is confident of getting included in a global bond index by October but it will not be able to raise funds in the coming financial year as the actual listing could take around 12 months after its inclusion, said two senior sources aware of the discussions.

Since 2019, India has been working toward getting included in global bond indexes as rising government borrowing has necessitated opening the largely domestic bond market to a broader investor base.

India was hopeful of completing the listing in the upcoming financial year, starting on April 1, as it would help bring down borrowing costs, which have been rising in recent weeks due to a lack of appetite amid high supply, one of the sources said.

Review in September

The government plans to issue bonds worth $165.24 billion to fund its spending programme in the upcoming fiscal year to revive the pandemic-hit economy from a slump.

Also read: Lending, G-Sec rates not moving in tandem: CARE Ratings

“The indices will be reviewed in September. We have dealt with most of their concerns, we should be able to resolve the other issues too,” said one of the sources, referring to an index provider.

“We expect to be included in at least one of the two major indexes in September or October,” he said.

However, he said the actual listing could take longer and would not be concluded before the end of the fiscal year.

The finance ministry and the central bank, the Reserve Bank of India, did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Last September, J.P. Morgan opted not to include India’s government bonds in one of its flagship emerging market indexes after investors cited problems with capital controls, custody and settlement and other operational snags.

Also read: G-Sec auction falters yet again

Two other senior officials said India was in the final stages of negotiating with Euroclear for settlement of Indian bonds and that could likely be a precursor for a bond listing as it would allay most investor concerns.

‘Open up more’

India expects to get approval from major index operators like J.P. Morgan and Bloomberg Barclays in September as it is planning to move fast on resolving taxation concerns of investors in these passive funds and bond settlement issues by August, the first source said.

Bloomberg and J.P Morgan did not respond to requests for comment.

Several bonds are now part of the “Fully Accessible Route” (FAR) and as of January, the outstanding FAR bonds were over $145 billion. The government sets a limit on foreign institutional investors’ government securities purchases, but the FAR category introduced in 2020 is free from such limits.

“We have already opened investments through the fully accessible route and securities across the curve are available from five to 30 years. We will definitely open up more securities on a need basis,” a second source said requesting anonymity.

There have been concerns about outflows if the bond market is fully opened to foreign investors and what is largely thought of as “hot money” flows that flood in to chase high yields but can exit just as quickly during times of distress.

Longer-term investors

Over the last couple of years, however, there has been a shift in the attitude of regulators and the government towards the global bond indexes, which largely have passive fund houses among their investor base, which are known to be longer-term investors.

The government is expecting to be given a 3-4 per cent weightage initially for the first 2-3 years after listing, which is expected to be raised gradually to 10 per cent over five years, the first official said.

India has one of the largest bond markets among emerging-market economies with more than $800 billion in debt stock. Long-held restrictions on foreign buying of its bonds have kept it out of the top benchmarks used by global money managers and an inclusion could be a landmark change.

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Suryoday SFB IPO to open on March 17

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Suryoday Small Finance Bank is set to launch its initial public offering on March 17 and looks to raise about Rs 580 crore. The issue will close on March 19.

“The IPO will help the bank comply with the regulatory guidelines of the Reserve Bank of India for the listing of small finance banks within three years of their net worth reaching ₹500 crore, and also help raise enough primary capital to further enhance our capital base,” said R Baskar Babu, Managing Director and CEO, Suryoday SFB on Friday.

“The price band of the offer has been fixed at ₹303 to ₹305 per equity share,” the bank said in a statement, adding that it proposes to use the net proceeds from the fresh issue towards augmenting Tier – 1 capital base to meet its future capital requirements.

The issue comprises a fresh issue of up to 81.5 lakh equity shares and an offer for sale of up to 1.09 crore equity shares.

The bank has undertaken a pre-IPO placement of 52.08 lakh equity shares.

The offer for sale includes up to 43.87 lakh shares by International Finance Corporation, up to 20.21 lakh shares by Gaja Capital Fund II, up to 18.89 lakh shares by DWM (International) Mauritius, up to 7.5 lakh shares by HDFC Holdings, up to 15 lakh shares by IDFC First Bank, up to 1 lakh shares by Americorp Ventures, up to 1.86 lakh shares by Kotak Mahindra Life Insurance and up to 1.06 lakh shares by Gaja Capital India AIF Trust (represented by its trustee, Gaja Trustee Company).

The issue includes a reservation of up to five lakh shares (constituting up to 0.47 per cent of the post-Issue paid-up equity share capital), for subscription by eligible employees, who may be given a discount of up to 10 per cent of the issue price.

“Bids can be made for a minimum of 49 equity shares and in multiples of 49 equity shares thereafter,” the statement said.

Axis Capital, ICICI Securities, IIFL Securities and SBI Capital Markets are the Book Running Lead Managers to the issue

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IOB, Central Bank on privatisation shortlist, may exit PCA, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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After IDBI Bank’s exit from Reserve Bank of India‘s prompt corrective action, chances of the other three lenders — Indian Overseas Bank (IOB), UCO Bank and Central Bank of India — to exit the stringent RBI norms have brightened.

According to reports, Indian Overseas Bank and Central Bank of India are among the four banks shortlisted by the government for privatisation. Bringing the banks out of PCA could boost their valuations in the event of privatisation.

The PCA status

All three banks under PCA Indian Overseas Bank, UCO Bank and Central Bank have reported net non-performing assets (NPAs) below levels that trigger PCA. However, on the proforma net NPA front, Central Bank falls short as its NNPA is 6.58% against the 6% required to be out of PCA.

Even after PCA exit, these banks may still be under RBI watch. In the case of IDBI Bank, which has committed to comply with the norms of minimum regulatory capital, net NPA and leverage ratio on an ongoing basis, RBI has said the lender would be under continuous monitoring. “It has been decided that IDBI Bank be taken out of PCA framework, subject to certain conditions and continuous monitoring,” RBI had said.

Privatisation bid

Reuters had earlier reported quoting officials that the four banks on the shortlist are Bank of Maharashtra, Bank of India, Indian Overseas Bank and the Central Bank of India.

Two public sector banks and one general insurance company are expected to be disinvested this year in addition to the divestment of IDBI Bank, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman had announced during Budget presentation last month.

IDBI Bank

IDBI Bank, which met the Reserve Bank of India’s parameters, was brought out of PCA. The government wants to sell its about 48% stake in IDBI Bank to strategic investors while the current promoter Life Insurance Corporation is also slated to pare its holding. LIC is planning to come out with an IPO and This will give the strategic investor a controlling stake in the bank

As on December 30, 2020, LIC held a 49.24 per cent stake in IDBI Bank while 45.48 per cent was with the central government.

How does PCA work?

PCA is based on the trigger points of CRAR (a metric to measure balance sheet strength), NPA and ROA, with three risk threshold levels (1 being the lowest and 3 the highest). Banks with capital to risk-weighted assets ratio (CRAR) of less than 10.25% but more than 7.75% fall under threshold 1. Those with CRAR of more than 6.25% but less than 7.75% fall in the second threshold. In case a bank’s common equity Tier 1 (the bare minimum capital under CRAR) falls below 3.625%, it comes under the third threshold level. Banks having a net NPA of 6% or more but less than 9% fall under threshold 1, and those with 12% or more fall under the third threshold level. On return on assets, banks with a negative return on assets for two, three and four consecutive years fall under threshold 1, threshold 2 and threshold 3, respectively.



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To capitalise on India, you must be entrenched, says Piyush Gupta of DBS Bank, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Many managers of Indian origin occupy the corner rooms of global companies but few match the leadership style of Piyush Gupta, CEO of Singapore’s DBS Bank. How did he manage to shake up a government-owned bank? What are the key principles of his management strategy? Why did DBS choose to take over Lakshmi Vilas Bank? What did he learn from the streets of Delhi where he grew up? Gupta shares his value systems and strategies in an interview with ET. Edited excerpts:

The ET jury has chosen you, the CEO of DBS, as the Global Indian of the year. Twenty-six years ago you decided not to join HDFC Bank and instead pursue your own goals. How do you feel when you juxtapose the two?
I have thought about it often. I continue to be very close to Aditya Puri, so we have compared notes and the journey. With the kind of franchise he built, I sometimes wonder whether it was a smart decision at that time and it would have been interesting to be part of that great building journey. On the other hand, given that he stayed in his job for 26 years, what it would mean is that I would have been number two and never the number one. The reality is that at some stage it is always helpful to execute your own strategies. On balance I can’t complain. Not taking that step at that time actually helped me through a different journey, which was quite fulfilling in its own way–multiple countries, roles, including a failed entrepreneurial stint which I would not have seen either.Last year was extraordinary for you – the acquisition of Lakshmi Vilas Bank. You dared to do what no international bank has. Why?
When we raised our hands to subsidiarise in India, a lot of people asked how come you want to subsidiarise when nobody has done. And, I have maintained all along that we want to subsidiarise because we are genuinely bullish about the future of India and to capitalise on that you must be entrenched. You cannot be a niche player that operates in the top 10% of the market–you got to go down deep. If you see all the growth in India in the last 20 years, it is the consumer financing space, SME space and if you really want to benefit from it you have to be in that part of the market, and for us the only way was to subsidiarise. We were already thinking about these opportunities –what would make sense and had a strategic road map. We were mentally prepared and had done some homework around a range of possibilities and that allowed us to respond very quickly.

Does the role of white knight remain valid?
One of our basic things in doing inorganic deals is we must have the bandwidth. It’s got to be strategically aligned with what we want to do, it has to make economic sense and you must have the management bandwidth to go ahead. And therefore, if it’s a much bigger deal, we may not have the management bandwidth to do justice to it. If it was a much bigger challenge, I don’t think we would have been able to handle. For the next couple of years we have our hands full in integrating LVB. We are going to focus on aligning the culture, technology and build on what they have for now.

Cryptocurrencies are being called the 21st century gold or tulip depending on whom you talk to. Where are you in this debate?
We launched the first bank-sponsored digital exchange in December, which lets you tokenise assets and securities. It also helps you custodise digital services. It also helps us buy and sell cryptocurrency. So by our action we are creating capabilities for crypto, digital currencies and tokenisation for the future. But Bitcoin as a replacement for money is still challenging. Money is a medium of exchange, a unit of account and store of value.

Bitcoin seems to be all the rage…
Bitcoin is not a good medium of exchange because even though Elon Musk says he will take it for Tesla, it is very hard to do transactions because you can only do nine transactions per second while Visa and Mastercard can do hundreds of thousands. It’s also difficult to make it a unit of account because it is so volatile. When the value changes 60% to 70% every two three days, how do you take it as a unit of account? However, as a store of value it can work because if you think of gold, which has no intrinsic value, but we collectively as humanity have decided it is a good for jewels and a good asset. So we can collectively build a story that this limited supply asset is a store of value and that might happen. You could get to a stage when Bitcoins serve the nature of digital gold as opposed to digital money.

You have had a leadership role for decades. What did it mean when you started and what is it now?
A couple of things about leadership don’t change — to set a true norm, a sense of direction, build a culture in a company, to create a team — these things don’t change. Hallmarks of leadership are willingness to take accountability, to come up with ideas and have initiative, to question the status quo and most importantly to inspire people to go down a path they don’t even know exists. What does happen is the ways you express leadership tend to change over time. In the three and half decades I have been there, it’s quite clear, as generations and technology change, the manner and method you lead needs to evolve. You move from more top-down vertical leadership to horizontal leadership and learning to lead people through influence and being participative in your leadership format and ideas. But the fundamental is having a clear sense of purpose, focusing on building culture and getting the right empowered team , which don’t change very much.

You talk about culture and change. Aren’t they conflicting – isn’t one stationary while the other is not?
I am a big believer in shaping culture by design. Often you will find that there is a culture of a country and then you go to a company, which has completely different culture. Why is it that the company culture trumps the country culture? It happens because you can shape culture in a way. In DBS for example there is a sense of camaraderie, a family spirit and Asian values, which I kept. But there was another part of the culture which I shook up and that was (being an) offshoot of the government. A lot of decision making was quite bureaucratic. We went through committee structures. People were scared to take decisions. It was quite sarkari in many ways. I had come from an orientation where entrepreneurship, risk taking, individual accountability were important. So to me the big question was—how do I marry the culture of individual enterprise with the culture of harmony and collective operations that DBS has?

While institutions require change, there is resistance. How do you handle it?
In our case we stumbled on it. It was not a well-thought-through thing. We drafted a programme of change which had three basic pillars — becoming customer centric, changing the technology architecture and the culture change. As I reflect back, the first pillar of putting customer at the centre liberated everything else. We hired people for customer design, we taught people customer journey but underlying that was the belief that if it makes sense for the customer the bank will support the activity with what needs to be done. The main thing that changed the culture and overcame resistance was the people’s belief that they had a simple rubric—“If it makes sense for the customer, it’s okay to do.”

But there are various stakeholders pulling in different directions…
But if you want to drive change like this, it has to come right from the top, the board. I was quite blessed because my board and the chairman right at the top bought into this culture change and driving a transformation of DBS very early. So much so, that they were willing to take short-term pain for long-term gain. Early in our journey, I remember they gave me an X amount and said you spend it to drive the change I wanted and they will deal with the shareholders and the market because it was the right thing to do. So I think you need to make the investments for the long-term and for that you need the commitment not only from the senior management but all the way to the board. Once you see that the message goes down to the troops, that helps overcome resistance. As adults we are also anchored by the way we do things, so you’ve got to create an atmosphere for people to experiment and learn by doing and you’ve got to reduce the premium on risk so it’s okay to make mistakes. Because if people are scared of making mistakes, they won’t take a chance.

Where did you learn the lessons of management?
Most of the things I learnt about banking come from Citibank. I spent more than 25 years there and many of these things — getting your hands dirty, entrepreneurship, leadership — I learnt at Citibank. But a large part of leadership skills I learnt fundamentally do go back to being in India. I grew up in India in the 70s and many of the traits that I have acquired come from high school and college — the capacity to have a world view, to put things together coherently, to be able to communicate, and taking people along, to look for solutions. All these predate Citibank.



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