PNB Bank scam: ED attaches assets worth ₹14.45 crore of Mehul Choksi

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


The Enforcement Directorate (ED) has issued a provisional order attaching assets worth ₹14.45 croreof Gitanjali Group of companies and its director Mehul Choksi in the PNB bank fraud case. The attached assets are in the form of immovable properties comprising a flat measuring 1,460 sq.ft at O2 Tower, located at Goregaon, Mumbai, and movable assets in the form of gold, platinum jewellary, diamond stones, pearl-silver necklaces, watches, and Mercedes Benz car held in the name of Gitanjali Group of Companies and its director Mehul Choksi.

The ED had initiated investigation into the PNB scam against Mehul Choksi, Gitanjali Gems, and others under the provisions of PMLA, 2002 on the basis of FIR registered by Central Bureau of Investigation. It was alleged that Mehul Choksi, Gitanjali Gems, and others have committed the offence of cheating Punjab National Bank, in connivance with certain bank officials by fraudulently getting LoUs issued and got the FLCs (foreign letter of credit) enhanced without following the prescribed procedure and caused a wrongful loss to the bank.

During investigation under PMLA, it was revealed that PNB bank officials, in connivance with Mehul Choksi, Gitanjali Gems and others, originally issued FLCs for smaller amount within the sanctioned limit and, once the FLC number was generated, the same number was used for amendment by way of enhancement of FLC by way of increase in the amount. Such enhancement of amount was done at 4-5 times higher value of the original FLC amount and were done outside the CBS system and, hence, it was not captured in the books of bank. Further, it was also found that the branch was holding documents of original FLC amount and no import documents of such increased amount were found in the branch, and much of the fraudulent FLCs payments have gone to liquidate the overseas exporter’s liability arising out of earlier FLCs/discounting of bills

Earlier, the ED has already attached properties worth more than ₹2,550 crore, and now it has attached assets worth ₹14.45 crore of Gitanjali Group of Companies and its director Mehul Choksi.

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

PhonePe launches ESOPs worth $200 m for its employees

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


 

PhonePe to launch ESOPs for its 2,200 employees. The $200 million Stock Option Plan gives every PhonePe employee the chance to own a part of the company and benefit from its success. Mobile Premier League, Wakefit, ShareChat and Licious are some of the other start-ups which have recently announced ESOPs.

Manmeet Sandhu, Chief People Officer, PhonePe said, “The PhonePe Stock Option Plan is a core component of our compensation philosophy crafted to encourage collaboration, long-term focus and organisation-first thinking. PhonePe is on a mission to use technology as a transformational force that is making financial inclusion real for every Indian. We believe when money and services flow freely, everyone progresses.”

“By having ESOPs at a minimum of $5000 for all levels, we enable every employee in the organisation to participate in the wealth generation opportunity they have helped create — Karte Ja, Badhte Ja. As roles become more senior, ESOPs are a part of the annual compensation for employees, translating into a larger component of their compensation being tied to the organisation’s success. This encourages everyone to put the organisation first. The organisation’s success is their success,” Sandhu said.

PhonePe had just under 500 employees who were under the ESOPs plan as of December 2020. In an interaction with BusinessLine in December 2020, Sameer Nigam, founder and CEO of PhonePe said, back in the day, all employees were shareholders. My father worked at Larsen & Toubro and a significant part of the company was owned by the employees. In the start-up sector, young people have done really well for themselves but its been concentrated on the tech and business side of the functions. I think by ensuring that all our customer service agents and all our sales force last-mile employees will also get to participate in the wealth creation is a bit of a paradigm change in a good way as it is more participative. I’m excited about somebody in my sales team in Bhopal who has 3.5-4 lakhs worth of equity see it double in the next few years – that’s a game changer. With this, I hope attrition will go down on those functions.

 

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

FM nudges industry to invest in India’s growth story

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, on Thursday, urged India Inc to invest as the government alone cannot do this

“I hope the industry will understand the spirit with which the Budget is placed before you and therefore also come forward to participate in this inevitable exercise. Industry, having cleared all its debts and finances, should now be in a position to invest money to expand and grow and clearly show signs that it is now ready to receive any joint ventures for the sake of technology that it prefers to have,” she emphasised.

Her remarks come three days after the presentation of the Budget, which proposed over ₹5-lakh crore of capital expenditure during the current fiscal. She was addressing a meeting of industry chamber, the first after the Budget presentation.

Further, she stated that for providing immediate stimulus to the economy, the government will be spending in a big way in public infrastructure, and the three large areas where big-ticket expenditure will happen include infrastructure, health and agriculture. “Government alone, even if it brings bags full of money, cannot just meet the demand of the growing and aspirational India,” she said.

Speaking on the setting up of Development Financial Institutions (DFI), Sitharaman said that the government will enable one DFI and that the entire financing of long-term infrastructure will happen in a very market driven way. That itself will bring in efficiency, she added.

According to her, the government has taken a confident, trustworthy and transparent accounting statement in the Budget. “There is no patching up or white-washing. It has an honest attempt to give honest statement of the government’s finances and with the reforms announced along with the stimulus. It is clear that this government is not sitting cautiously, and it is coming forward with faith in Indian industry and business leaders,” added the Finance Minister.

She mentioned that the Budget mark a clear directional change for the Indian economy, and that directional change is not what the government has offered as a sudden response, but it was something that was preoccupying Indian minds for over 30 years.

She said that this Budget is trying to raise resources that are non-tax resources at a time when we need a lot of money to spend. “It’s a Budget which raises resources, but not on the back of increased taxation. There is a directional change in the Budget which is so distinct that it will fuel the entrepreneurial spirit which the Indians show given the right opportunities,” she added.

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Razorpay registered three-fold growth in payment volume in 2020

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Fintech Unicorn Razorpay, on Thursday, announced that it registered 3 times growth in payment volumes over the past 12 months, thanks to the thousands of SMBs, especially from Tier 2 & 3 cities, who chose the payment gateway as they went online for the first time.

This led to large-scale adoption of digital payments across the country, as Razorpay witnessed over 54 per cent of digital transaction volume coming from SMBs in Tier 2 & 3 cities alone. Online transactions in cities like Ahmedabad and Jaipur grew by about 50 per cent within a week’s time.

The full-stack financial services company aims to enable 5 million new Indian SMBs to adopt digital payments in the next 12 months. Currently the company serves over 5 million businesses, including Facebook, Airtel, BookMyShow, Ola, Zomato, Swiggy, Cred and ICICI Prudential ,among others. Plans are on to invest heavily in strengthening the security and fraud analytics infrastructure, along with building hyperlocal solutions to provide a seamless and safe payment experience for all. In the last six months, Razorpay has witnessed 40 per cent month-on-month growth.

Razorpay also provided access to credit to thousands of SMBs through its neo-banking platform, RazorpayX, disbursing credit of upwards of ₹250 crore per month, helping Entrepreneurs get access to working capital. The company aims to scale this up to ₹500 crore per month.

Commenting on what led to increased digital payment adoption, Harshil Mathur, CEO and Co-founder of Razorpay, said: “One of the significant overnight changes we saw in how people were approaching the initial lockdown period of isolation and uncertainty in 2020 was in their digital spending behaviors, especially people from Tier 2 & 3 cities. Online shopping became the new normal but it left the offline businesses grappling with fear of losing their business. Even some of the online businesses in the essentials category, bill payments, education etc were struggling to keep up with demand and ensure business continuity. We wanted to do our bit with building customised solutions to help struggling businesses adapt to the new normal by providing flexible easy-to-integrate payment and banking solutions.”

Some of these products included Same Day settlements allowing businesses to receive funds in just a few hours instead of the usual 3-5 working days settlement period. Other products launched to help businesses improve their cash flows and manage operational expenses better included Working Capital loans, Instant Refunds, UPI AutoPay and partnerships with stalwarts like Visa & PayPal, he said.

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Dhotre, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Over 2.9 lakh cyber security incidents related to digital banking were reported in 2020, Parliament was informed on Thursday. As per the information reported to and tracked by Indian Computer Emergency Response Team (CERT-In), a total number of 1,59,761; 2,46,514 and 2,90,445 cyber security incidents pertaining to digital banking were reported during 2018, 2019 and 2020, respectively, Minister of State for Electronics and IT Sanjay Dhotre said in a written reply to the Rajya Sabha.

These incidents included phishing attacks, network scanning and probing, viruses and website hacking, he added.

The Minister noted that the rising popularity of non-banking financial companies (NBFCs) along with e-commerce has also expanded the scope of digital payments.

“The percentage rise in digital transactions is 46 per cent in 2020 in comparison to 2018-19,” he said.

The numbers of digital transactions have increased from 3,134 crore in the financial year (FY) 2018-19 to 4,572 crore in FY 2019-20, Dhotre added.

Responding to a separate query, the minister said the number of websites/webpages/accounts blocked stood at 9,849 in 2020.

This was 2,799 in 2018 and 3,635 in the year 2019.

He said Section 69A of the IT Act empowers the government to block any information generated, transmitted, received, stored or hosted in any computer resource in the interest of sovereignty and integrity of India, defence of India, security of the State, friendly relations with foreign states or public order.

In response to another question, Dhotre said 6,233 cases were registered in 2019 under fraud and cheating (involving communication devices as medium/ target as per Information Technology Act 2000), as per National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB) data.

“As per NCRB, number of cases registered under fraud and cheating (involving communication devices as medium/ target as per IT Act 2000) for cyber crimes are 3,466, 3,353, 6,233 during the year 2017, 2018 and 2019, respectively,” he added.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

V Vaidyanathan, IDFC First Bank, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


V Vaidyanathan, MD & CEO, IDFC First Bank, says Morgan Stanley has always talked about the bank’s low ROE but he is confident that it will touch 18% soon.

The Budget has surprised us, growth is back from the throes of pandemic and things are indeed looking up. What’s your view?
No doubt about it! All indicators that are coming across all sectors, be it FMCG or sales of tractors and vehicles, everything is looking up now.

Things are looking up for IDFC Bank as well but there is a historical challenge in the MSE and SME books. While the retail book is growing, how to address the other aspect?
There is no challenge in the MSE and SME book. The challenge was in the large corporate and infrastructure exposures. Our infrastructure exposure at the time of the merger was Rs 22,000 crore. We are very aware that infrastructure has to come down because it has its own challenges. We have brought down the infrastructure book down to Rs 11,000 crore. Our game plan is to bring it down to almost nil over the next two or three years. MSME and consumer are our staple business and that is doing fantastically well.

I want to understand the CASA side of your business. You are offering the best rates and the industry has helped you to get a lot of low cost deposits. What happens next? Obviously you cannot pay such high rates for savings?
Two things. First off all, we had a historical borrowing rate because IDFC Ltd. was a DFI and had borrowed at about 8.5% and even Capital First and NBFC had borrowed around that rate. So, we had a large borrowing at that rate. So we keep it at 7%, which is a good rate compared to 8.5% and we kept swapping that money. But that was then.

The important thing is that our incremental flow from the customers on CASA has been phenomenal and our CASA rate has not touched 48% and we are feeling very comfortable. The liquidity in the bank is Rs 17,000 crore. Obviously, we do not need to pay 7% anymore and we have brought down rates to 6%. But frankly, we are a very customer-first organisation and even at 6%, we have one of most attractive rates in the market today. Change to 6% will also increase the net interest margins.

The Morgan Stanley report dated 31st of December is calling you one of the most expensive banks looking at the underlying growth. Your take?
They have always called us the most expensive, overvalued bank. In this report, they made a mistake which I think is an honest one. I do not think there is malice behind it but they made a mistake whereby they added the bonds exposure and non-funded exposure on the numerator but the denominator they forgot to add. So the net of its numbers are much lesser than what they have represented. It is a general mistake and they openly fixed that.

But stepping away from that, they have always been wrong about us. Let me just say one more thing, they are just being very mathematical about us. But how do you value a phenomenal intellectual property the bank is building? How do you value the fact that this bank is showing the capability of growing from Rs 100 crore to Rs 30,000 crore, from Rs 30,000 crore to Rs 60,000 crore and now we are projected to be Rs 1 lakh crore. They have not given any valuation for that kind of growth on the retail side. They cannot see the fact that NIM has grown by 1.5%-1.6% to 4.6%; they cannot see PPOP has moved from Rs 30 crore pre-merger to Rs 500 crore even without treasury. They are just going on and on one issue — that ROE is low.

Fine our ROE will come, it will come because we are building a good bank. It will be in mid teens and it will be a 18% ROE in my opinion.

When do you think ROA and ROE will be around industry averages?
Definitely we are getting there. Let us just get back to the core. The core is the ability to lend in a safe, risk-adjusted manner and we have demonstrated that capability quite a number of times, In Capital First, the NIM was 9%; in this bank our NIM has already touched 4.6%. On the retail side, now we are able to borrow money at 6% incrementally because the saving rates are 6% at the peak. We are going to borrow money at 6%, our lending is on an average at around 15% but we lend anywhere between 9% and 20% odd depending on the product segment. If we borrow at 6% and lend at 15%, we have to make money, it has to become ROE accretive.

Overtime, infrastructure problems will go away, overtime some of the corporate loan issues will all go away. It is a matter of time, they have already started going away. By the way, our credit loss is only 2% because our credit quality is improving. So if you lend at 15-16% and you have a 2% credit loss, there is a 14% risk adjusted money. You are borrowing money at 6%. It is pretty plain that the bank has to make money and it has to be ROE positive. So my sense is that ROE will come, it is only a matter of time.

Is it a right way to look at a bank purely based on price to book or should one look at PE multiples because ultimately it is about growth? In your case, I can slice your book in many ways depending on my assumption rather than focusing on absolute growth?
Well, banks raise equity from time to time and hence the price to book becomes a benchmark but even in terms of price to book, people normally factor return on equity in the equation and that is one of the reasons Morgan Stanley goes after us every time saying our ROE is low.

But anyway, coming back to the ROE point, they are looking at us at a 2% ROE today but they should not forget that in our previous company, we moved the ROE from negative to 15%, in fact, heading towards 20%. So even here, ROE will come. I have explained to you the reason why price to book is used as a benchmark.

By the way consumer companies are valued at price to earnings. We are not a consumer company. We are 60% retail and in the next two, three years, we will probably be 80% retail and can be considered a consumer company.

Ultimately banks are a play on economy and consumers. Why should we look at historical benchmarks? But we will keep that conversation for some other time…
No, it is also because of the corporate loans. If you take a consumer company and think of it like a consumer company, you can value it like a consumer company.

The government is committed to spend a lot on the infrastructure sector. Once the bad bank and other factors come into play, things would dramatically change there. Could the legacy problem be a future growth driver? Are we looking at that kind of a scenario?
No, no, we are not going there at all. First of all, what the government has done on infrastructure is fantastic and as an Indian, as a resident of this country, we obviously feel proud that someone is going after infrastructure the way this government is doing. It is not just the bad bank and not just that Rs 20,000 crore and DFI, it is also the kind of investment that the government is putting out in infrastructure.

The amount seems crazy but we will have a derived advantage of all that investment. Derived advantage meaning when money goes into roads, ports, infrastructure etc, it goes to the vendors; vendors have contractors, contractors have employees and there’s a whole chain. Once cement and steel and everything starts moving, consumption moves. We will have a derived play of consumption. Infrastructure has its own challenges and everybody recognises that. We are not going there, short answer. We just want to be a fantastic consumer bank, a well growing, good risk management, good corporate governance, consumer bank.

In today’s world, everything is going digital and fintech disruptions are happening in the consumer banking and the consumer retail space, how will you differentiate yourself?
We are really at the forefront of that. We love it first of all because we know that game. We had played that game for 10 years. Basically these games can be very unnerving for those who do not know the game. But that is where we were born. We were born a fintech. For example, we have the ability to give out consumer loans after doing all kinds of algorithms of fraud, analytics, credit view, everything in a matter of seconds. We know we give out three to four million loans through the use of technology.

Even on the liability side we use technology to create effect. The kind of CASA we have got is also because of our technology capability and not just because of pricing. The short answer is that we are very good in that space and we will lead yield on the front. There are new apps coming up which are very advanced, you can have a look at that.

A very basic yardstick which markets and investors use is what is the promoter’s commitment to its business, that is ownership patterns. Your ownership has been gliding down. Has that been done consciously and if you have sold, why?
Actually it had a sequence. I know what you are referring to. When it was Capital First, I gave away stock to some people because I thought they all helped with the company and it was about 20 odd percent of my holding. When Corona happened, I had to sell a significant holding because I am not a generational wealthy guy. I borrowed money to buy the stock and did leverage to buy out of the prior company. So I had leverage and in Corona, I got stuck. So I sold. Then later I gifted some stock to some people whom I thought were very valuable in my life in the past. Wealth is good only when it rotates and when it keeps moving on rather than getting accumulated to one demat account. It has got nothing to do with commitment. My commitment is 100%. The bank is 100% mine. I work like that. So no investor needs to worry about that.

Is there leverage which you took when you committed to this transactions? Is that leverage still there on your balance sheet or is it over?
It is over. I had to square it at the depth of corona at Rs 20 rupees or something. But such was the moment. But I do not have any leverage on account of those matters anymore.

On one side, there are some investors who are asking why is Mr Vaidyanathan reducing stake? The other set of investors especially on social media said Mr Vaidyanathan is running this bank and this bank is going to be a turnaround one and a big one looking at his past experiences. For the worried investors, you have addressed the concerns, For those who are excited about what you can do, should you temper it down?
I am very aware that a lot of people believe that they should put all the money in this bank because it has a good future. My honest answer would be that you should diversify. No matter how much you trust a bank on the equity front, equity has its own ups and downs. There may be other banks who are ahead of the curve than us, who started may be 20 years before us or 15 years and are ahead of the curve in ROA and ROE. But are catching up.

In the long run, we will be a fantastic bank but you should diversify. But on the deposit side, you can be 100% assured, this is a fantastic bank. Your money is like 1000% safe. Just sleep well.

So the saving rates which you are offering, where do you think that will settle?
First of all, when we started paying 7%, we were paying it across pockets; then we paid 7% only up to Rs 10 crore; then we paid 7% only on savings up to Rs 1 crore. Now we are paying 6% only and that is the peak rate. Basically the strength of the bank, the liquidity is strong and so we reduced it.

Going forward, if you ask whether we are going to reduce it further, my view is not in the near future. Near future means the next five or six months. Beyond that, who knows?

The big picture is that in the banking sector, consolidation is evident. How do you see the landscape of the Indian banking sector changing? Will the number of banks become less and will the relevance of small banks be completely gone?
Not at all. Small and medium banks are catering to specific needs and therefore everyone has a space. No one bank, not State Bank of India, not any of the big four, can meet all the needs of this country. Everybody has their own criteria and like we say product programmes of respective banks by themselves are not inclusive. They are exclusive. There will be space for lots of small finance banks. In fact, I would personally wish that India comes out with a lot more small finance banks which can cater to these needs. India also needs a lot more universal banks. In fact, consolidation of banks is not a good solution. Privatisation is a good idea.

For any consumer bank like yours, where there is a very large fee-based component. But in today’s zero broking environment where fintech has disrupted everything, would fee-based income spreads come under pressure?
It depends on how you look at it because if your book is growing and the businesses operations are increasing, fee-based income can keep increasing. But we are very clear that we do not want to see any fee-based income which is made at the cost of trying to pinch the customer’s pocket in an incorrect sort of way.

But generally speaking, I feel that fee income will continue to grow because you offer more service and collect your fee. We are also launching credit cards and that again is a line of business for us.

Yes, that is a disruptive launch. Isn’t it? The kind of fee you are charging has set cat among the pigeons!
Well the intension was not to set any cat among any pigeons, but I always think of expanding markets. In India, for 30 years, interest rates have been 38-40% on credit cards. Cash withdrawal is even more expensive. So we just thought that we could price customers individually, based on certain algorithms and logics and even on cash advance, the fee structure in India has been very high. I think customers are beginning to like it.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

SBI net profit drops 7% to ₹5,196 crore

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


State Bank of India (SBI) reported a 7 per cent decline in standalone net profit at ₹5,196 crore in the third quarter ended December 31, 2020, as against ₹5,583 crore in the year ago quarter.

Though bad loan provisions came down 72 per cent year-on-year to ₹2,290 crore, the bottomline was weighed down by increase in overall provisions, including additional provisioning towards the Covid-19 related impact, and rise in employee expenses arising out of 11th bipartite wage settlement.

Net interest income (difference between interest earned and interest expended) nudged up 4 per cent to ₹28,820 crore.

Other income comprising total fee income, dividend income, trading gains, recovery from technically written-off accounts, edged up about 1.5 per cent yoy to ₹9,246 crore.

Bad loans decline

GNPAs declined to 4.77 per cent of gross advances as at December-end 2020 against 6.94 per cent as at December-end 2020.

Net NPAs declined to 1.23 per cent of net advances as at December-end 2020 against 2.65 per cent as at December-end 2020.

With proforma slippages (adjusted for the Supreme Court’s interim order), Gross and Net NPA ratio would have been 5.44 per cent and 1.81 per cent, respectively.

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

SBI Q3 standalone net falls 7 pc to Rs 5,196 cr, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Country’s largest lender State Bank of India (SBI) on Thursday posted nearly 7 per cent fall in its standalone net profit at Rs 5,196.22 crore for the third quarter ended December. The bank had posted net profit of Rs 5,583.36 crore in the October-December period of the previous fiscal.

Total income (standalone) also fell marginally to Rs 75,980.65 crore during Q3FY21, as against Rs 76,797.91 crore in the same period of 2019-20, SBI said in a regulatory filing.

On a consolidated basis, the bank posted a 5.8 fall in net profit at Rs 6,402.16 crore during the quarter under review, as against Rs 6,797.25 crore in the year-ago period.

The bank’s asset quality improved substantially as the gross non-performing assets fell to 4.77 per cent of the gross advances as of December 31, 2020 from 6.94 per cent in the corresponding period a year ago.

In value terms, the gross NPAs or bad loans stood at Rs 1,17,244.23 crore, as against Rs 1,59,661.19 crore.

Likewise, the net NPAs were down 1.23 per cent at Rs 29,031.72 crore, as against 2.65 per cent (at Rs 58,248.61 crore).

Provisions for bad loans and contingencies for the quarter spiked to Rs 10,342.39 crore, from Rs 7,252.90 crore a year earlier.

The shares of SBI were trading 2.02 per cent up at Rs 342.65 apiece on BSE.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Balance transfer: HFCs want prepayment penalty re-introduced

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Mid-sized and small housing finance companies (HFCs) want the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) to allow them to impose prepayment penalty on the home loans that get transferred to banks within two years of disbursement.

Low interest rates quoted by banks vis-a-vis the aforementioned HFCs is triggering balance transfer of home loans from the latter to the former.

Moreover, direct sales agents (DSAs), in their eagerness to earn commission, are also encouraging HFC customers to shift their loans.

Kotak Mahindra Bank trims home loan interest rates to 6.75%

So, these HFCs have become a favourite hunting ground for banks to expand their home loan portfolio. HFC customers are seen as low hanging fruit by banks.

Balance transfer, a genuine issue

Subramanian Jambunathan, MD & CEO, Shriram Housing Finance, emphasised that balance transfer is a genuine issue, which has become bigger than what it used be six months back.

“SBI to offer home loans starting from 6.80% against 6.90% earlier”

“And, I think, somewhere the regulator must realise that we bring in the customers into the financial system. So, we take the risk. We give the customer his first loan at a time when none of the other lenders are willing to give him a loan…and then somebody like a nationalised bank comes and offers the customer loan at much lower rate of interest and takes him away,” he said.

Jambunathan observed that transfer of home loans within two years of disbursement is not good for the HFC segment because good customers keep going away and the risky ones continue on the books.

So, not only is HFCs’ risk increasing because the good customers go away, it is also unfair to them that other lenders (banks) are allowed to take over their customers.

“I think the only solution to this is to re-introduce the prepayment penalty, in case a borrower exits an HFC before a certain period of time (say, two years),” Jambunathan said.

The issue of prepayment penalty has been discussed at various HFC fora, he added.

The prepayment penalty should cover HFCs costs on the customer as they spend a lot of time and effort in doing credit assessment of the first-time home loan borrowers.

Banks turn aggressive on home loans

Motilal Oswal Financial Services Ltd (MOFSL), in its research report “A Home Run!”, noted that over the past two years, large banks like State Bank of India, ICICI Bank, and Axis Bank have been aggressive in home loans. It was of the opinion that given the lack of growth in corporate lending, these banks are likely to remain aggressive in the foreseeable future.

However, HFCs with strong parentage are able to compete effectively with banks given the sharp decline in their incremental cost of funds (three-year borrowing at about 5 per cent). Given the huge scope of the market, these players have enough opportunity to grow despite the intensifying competition.

“While HFCs are expected to lose market share to banks on the whole, the top two HFCs (HDFC and LIC Housing Finance) should maintain or gain market share,” the report said.

In a report last month, ICRA said the overall on-book housing loan portfolio of HFCs and non-banking financial companies (NBFCs) declined marginally in H1 (April-September) FY2021 owing to the Covid-induced disruptions in the market. Although the pace of growth of banks also declined in H1 FY2021, it remained higher than HFCs, partly supported by portfolio buyouts.

The credit rating agency has estimated the total housing credit at ₹21.3 lakh crore as on September 30, 2020.

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

1 486 487 488 489 490 540