Ujjivan Small Finance Bank net loss widens to Rs 274 crore on poor asset quality, higher provisions

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According to a release issued by the bank, its disbursement increased to Rs 3,122 crore in the reporting quarter, higher by 114% on-year and 138% on a sequential basis.

Ujjivan Small Finance Bank (SFB) on Monday reported a net loss of Rs 274 crore for the quarter ended September 30, owing to poor asset quality and higher provisions. The lender had logged a net loss of Rs 233 crore in the previous quarter. It, however, had reported a net profit of Rs 96 crore a year ago.

During the quarter under review, Ujjivan SFB’s gross non-performing asset ratio (NPA) rose sharply to 11.80% from 9.79% as on July-end and 0.98% a year ago. Net non-performing assets rose to 3.29% as on September-end from 2.68% a quarter ago and 0.14% in the corresponding quarter of the previous year.

Owing to deteriorating asset quality, Ujjivan SFB’s provisions rose to Rs 436.88 crore in the reporting quarter, lower than Rs 473.21 crore in the previous quarter.

“We have done major restructuring and taken accelerated credit provisions during the quarter. We believe, subject to potential third wave of Covid, our GNPA has peaked out and will gradually reduce hereon,” said Martin PS, officer on special duty at Ujjivan Small Finance Bank.

In the reporting quarter, the lender has restructured total loans amounting to Rs 962 crore, taking the total quantum of restructured loans to Rs 1,480 crore. It has made Rs 504-crore provision against its restructured book as on September-end, as per its investor presentation.

According to a release issued by the bank, its disbursement increased to Rs 3,122 crore in the reporting quarter, higher by 114% on-year and 138% on a sequential basis. Its gross advances, as on September-end, stood at Rs 14,514 crore, up 5% on year.

“We continue to focus on diversification with non-micro banking book contributing 34% (as against 32% as of June’21) to the total asset portfolio. We have acquired 1.8 lakh new retail customers during the quarter; retail deposits proportion increased to 52% of the total deposits, as against 48% as of June’21,” said Martin P.S.

Net interest income—difference between interest earned and expended—increased 17% on a yearly basis to Rs 391 crore in the reporting quarter, while the net interest margin stood at 8.1%, lower than 10.2% a year ago.

Total deposits rose 31% on-year to Rs 14,090 crore as on September-end, when the capital adequacy ratio stood at 22.2%, lower than 31% a year ago.

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Quarterly Earnings: Karur Vysya Bank net profit jumps 43% in Q2

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Total deposits grew 7% to Rs 65,410 crore, up from Rs 61,122 crore. The growth was aided by sustained improvement in CASA portfolio and retail term deposits, it added.

Karur Vysya Bank (KVB) on Monday reported an increase of 43.5% in its net profit to Rs 165 crore for the second quarter of FY22, as against Rs 115 crore in the corresponding quarter of the previous year. Total income stood flat at Rs 1,561 crore, compared with Rs 1,577 crore.

KVB in a release said the net interest income for the quarter improved by 13.1% to Rs 680 crore, as against Rs 601 crore, while the net interest margin stood at 3.75%. Fee-based income (excluding treasury profit) was at Rs 144 crore, compared to Rs 119 crore during the year-ago period. Treasury profit was lower at Rs 16 crore as compared to Rs 120 crore during the same period last year.

Gross NPA declined by 55 bps to 7.38% (Rs 3,972 crore), compared with 7.93% (Rs 3,998 crore) a year ago. Net NPA stood at Rs 1,538 crore as against Rs 1,428 crore. The provision coverage ratio was at 76.28% (75.19% a year ago). The Basel III CRAR was at 18.82% (with CET1 ratio of 16.79%), up from 18.41%, it said.

The total business stood at Rs 1,19,260 crore, registering a Y-o-Y growth of 7% from Rs 1,11,530 crore. Gross advances grew 7% YoY to Rs 53,850 crore, from Rs 50,408 crore a year ago. Improved credit offtake in the retail and business segments as well as jewel loan portfolio, backed by digital processing and improved sourcing of loans through various channels, aided the credit growth, the release said. The jewel loan portfolio registered a Y-o-Y growth of Rs 2,319 crore (21%) and stood at Rs 13,460 crore.

Total deposits grew 7% to Rs 65,410 crore, up from Rs 61,122 crore. The growth was aided by sustained improvement in CASA portfolio and retail term deposits, it added.

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FPIs can buy debt securities issued by InvITs, REITs: RBI

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The Reserve Bank of India on Monday said foreign portfolio investors can acquire debt securities issued by Infrastructure Investment Trusts and Real Estate Investment Trusts.

Within the limits

Such investments shall be reckoned within the limits and subject to the terms and conditions for investments by FPIs in debt securities under the respective regulations of Medium Term Framework and Voluntary Retention Route, said an RBI circular.

The RBI, on March 31, had left the limits for FPI investment in corporate bonds unchanged at 15 per cent of outstanding stock of securities for FY22, with the limit for the second half (October 2021 till March 2022) pegged at ₹6,07,039 crore against ₹5,74,263 crore for the first half (April-September 2021).

An announcement was made in the Union Budget 2021-22 that debt financing of InvITs and REITs by FPIs will be enabled by making suitable amendments in the relevant legislations. The decision is in line with the announcement, it said.

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Govt mulling levy of I-T, GST on cryptos; Bill in Winter Session

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Cryptos are likely to attract both income tax and GST.

A comprehensive Bill on crypto will detail the taxation. The Bill is expected to be introduced in the the Winter Session of Parliament, starting later this month. Meanwhile, the Standing Committee on Finance will initiate detailed discussions on crypto assets at its November 15 meeting.

A top government source told BusinessLine that the groundwork for legislation on cryptos is getting readied.

“One of the key issues is taxation. If there is gain or income from crypto, it should be taxed per capital gains rules. Similarly, if there is service involved in the transaction, then GST needs to be levied,” he said.

This means the intent to tax is expected to be mentioned in the legislation, and then provisions will be added in the Finance Bill to facilitate imposition of direct tax. For tax on transaction service, the Goods and Services Tax Council will take a final call.

On whether cryptos are to be treated as a currency or an investment asset, there is no clarity. It is highly unlikely to get the status of a currency. “That is unlikely… There is a system of fiat currency where currency notes and coins are backed by statute and regulated by the RBI in consultation with the government and that will continue,” the source said, suggesting investment asset category for cryptos.

While currency and banking products are regulated by the RBI, investment assets such as equity and commodity, are overseen by the Securities and Exchange Board of India.

RBI’s reservations

The RBI has repeatedly conveyed its reservation on cryptocurrencies. RBI Governor Shaktikanta Das is on record that: “We have major concerns around cryptocurrencies,which we have conveyed to the government.”

“But within the government, the feeling is that the RBI’s objections are too stringent and centred around a ban as in China. There are examples of moderate regulations by European countries. The effort is to find a middle path,” said the source. This could mean no complete ban, as earlier proposed.

Just before the Budget Session earlier this year, the government had released a list of Bills including one titled ‘The Cryptocurrency and Regulation of Official Digital Currency Bill, 2021’. Its purpose was to “create a facilitative framework for creation of the official digital currency to be issued by the Reserve Bank of India. The Bill also seeks to prohibit all private cryptocurrencies in India. However, it allows for certain exceptions to promote the underlying technology of crytptocurrency and its uses.”

The Bill appeared to be based on the recommendations of the SC Garg Committee formed by the Centre. The Committee had recommended banning cryptocurrencies but instead creating an official digital currency.

A joint advertisement by Indian crypto exchanges and industry bodies said that crypto investments by Indians have crossed ₹6-lakh crore. There are reports, quoting research firm CREBACO, that the user base has crossed 10 crore.

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Ujjivan SFB posts Q2 net loss of ₹274 crore

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Ujjivan Small Finance Bank reported a net loss of ₹273.79 crore for the second quarter of this fiscal due to higher provisions and lower income. The bank had a net profit of ₹96 crore in the same period last fiscal.

For the quarter ended September 30, its net interest income declined by 16.7 per cent to ₹391.36 crore compared to ₹470.14 crore a year ago. Net interest margin was at 8.1 per cent against 10.2 per cent a year ago. Other income declined by 24.1 per cent to ₹46.89 crore from ₹61.79 crore.

Also see: IndusInd Bank’s ‘technical glitch’: RBI examining portfolio as part of an ongoing audit

Provisions shot up to ₹436.88 crore in the July-September quarter of this fiscal from ₹97.91 crore a year ago.

NPAs surge

Asset quality deteriorated significantly.

Gross non performing assets surged to ₹1,712.65 crore or 11.8 per cent of gross advances as on September 30 from 9.79 per cent as on June 30 and 0.98 per cent as on September 30, 2020.

Net NPAs were at 3.29 per cent of net advances as on September 30 compared to 0.14 per cent a year ago.

Collections improve

Ujjivan SFB said collections have been improving with the removal of lockdowns and collection efficiency was at 95 per cent in September 2021.

Also see: Ujjivan Financial Service okays amalgamation with Ujjivan SFB

Martin PS, Officer on Special Duty, Ujjivan SFB, said, “The second quarter of FY22 has shown significant traction in business momentum over the previous quarter with improvement in both disbursements and collections. In the second quarter, we disbursed ₹3,122 crore as local-level lockdowns eased.”

100-day plan

He further said the bank has prepared a 100-day plan focusing on improving business volumes and asset quality as well as retaining talent. Performance against the plan is being closely monitored by the bank Board and corrective actions are put in place if required.

The bank believes that subject to potential third wave of Covid, its GNPA has peaked and will gradually reduce hereon, he added.

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IndusInd Bank’s ‘technical glitch’: RBI examining portfolio as part of an ongoing audit

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The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) is already examining issues around the technical glitch at IndusInd Bank’s subsidiary that led to 84,000 loans being disbursed without the customers’ consent. The lender will also undertake an external audit of the issue if required.

This was informed by IndusInd Bank’s Managing Director and CEO, Sumant Kathpalia, at an analyst call on November 6. He also denied allegations of evergreening of loans and stressed that there is strong risk management and a control framework in place – both within the bank and its microfinance subsidiary Bharat Financial Inclusion Ltd (BFIL).

“Yes, it is part of the annual review process which happens and it is already going on and they (RBI) are reviewing this portfolio,” Kathpalia said in response to a query on whether this issue would be a part of the risk-based supervision audit that is conducted by the RBI. “The whistleblower complaint was marked to the RBI also and the bank has kept the regulator abreast on its internal review process,” he further said.

Internal review

Meanwhile, responding to another query, Kathpalia said the bank will appoint an external auditor to validate the results of the internal review.

Also read: IndusInd Bank shares slump 11 per cent following loan evergreening issue

“We will have the review process completed. We will have a committee which will include external participants and an external auditor validating the results, and will have an independent process to give comfort to the investors that everything is right in BFIL. We will not be happy only with the internal audit,” he said.

In the call, Kathpalia also said the bank has a strong succession plan for BFIL in place in case its top management leaves. Non-executive Vice Chairman of BFIL, MR Rao, had stepped down in September but Kathpalia said he continues to work as an advisor with IndusInd Bank.

‘Unlisted company’

While analysts expressed surprise that this was not informed to the stock exchanges, Kathpalia maintained that BFIL is an unlisted company. “There was an agreement that he will retire in March 2021 and we had honoured that… he was also very upset on the 84,000 loans. We have taken action against certain persons,” he said.

Also read: Under fire, IndusInd Bank begins review of microfinance subsidiary

Trying to assuage concerns, he also said that the bank has been following a conservative provisioning approach.

“IndusInd Bank could have done better in terms of communicating about the management changes in BFIL and a technical glitch in the microfinance book, which led to allegations of evergreening in the MFI book (which otherwise has always been an area of suspicion). We believe that the bank’s turnaround story remains intact but it needs to work more on strengthening credit underwriting/risk management, and communication with the stakeholders to sustain the long-term rerating,” said Emkay Global Financial Services in a note on Monday.

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Karur Vysya Bank posts ₹165-cr net in Sept quarter, highest in last 17 quarters

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Old private sector lender Karur Vysya Bank has reported a 43.5 per cent rise in its net profit at ₹165 crore for the quarter ended September 30, 2021 when compared with ₹115 crore in the same period previous fiscal

“The net profit of ₹165 crore is the highest in the last 17 quarters,” B Ramesh Babu, Managing Director & CEO of KVB, told BusinessLine.

He said the KVB’s posted net profit on account of a well-crafted strategy amid some challenges. “With deeper focus, recoveries were higher than slippages during this September quarter. So interest reversals have come down, thereby improving our net interest margin at 3.75 per cent for the quarter,” he added.

Net interest income grew by 13 per cent at ₹680 crore (₹601 crore in the year-ago quarter). Fee based income for the September 2021 quarter (i.e. excluding treasury profit) was at ₹144 crore (₹119 crore). Treasury profit was lower at ₹16 crore (₹120 crore in the same period last year).

Operating expenses were higher at ₹470 crore (₹424 crore), while total expenses were lower at ₹1,187 crore as compared to ₹1,217 crore.

Operating profit of the bank increased to ₹374 crore from ₹360 crore in a year-ago period.

“Despite providing 1/3rd for family pension and lower treasury profit during the quarter, we could achieve this performance, ‘’ said Babu.

As on September 30, 2021, Gross NPA declined to 7.38 per cent as compared to 7.93 per cent a year ago, while net NPA was maintained at 2.99 per cent

“We were able to contain our restructuring portfolio to less than 3 per cent and NPA percentage has been coming down continuously. NPA was maintained without any write off and sale of any asset to ARC during the quarter,” he added.

Total deposits grew by 7 per cent at ₹65,410 crore as compared to ₹61,122 crore a year ago. Growth was aided through sustained improvement in CASA portfolio and retail term deposits.

Gross advances grew by 7 per cent at ₹53,850 crore (₹ 50,408 crore). Improved credit off take in the retail and business segment as well as jewel loan portfolio, backed by digital processing and improved sourcing of loans through various channels, aided the credit growth.

“The disbursement level in last one month has been much higher than the levels of last two years,” said Babu

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Amazon Pay (India) reduces net losses by 19% in FY21

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Amazon Pay (India) Private Limited, an online payment arm of Amazon India, has reduced its net losses by 19 per cent to ₹1,516 crore in FY21. Its revenues for the financial year was ₹1,769 crore, a 29 per cent jump from the last financial year.

According to financial data accessed by business intelligence platformTofler and reviewed by BusinessLine, the company’s total expenses for the fiscal were reported as ₹3,285 crore, a marginal increase from ₹3,234 at the same time last year.

Also see: Amazon Pay, MakeMyTrip partner to offer travel services

Interestingly, according to its financial results, one customer — codenamed as ‘customer A’ — contributed to 94.3 per cent of the entity’s revenue at ₹1,620 crore in FY21 compared to ₹1,197 crore from the same customer in FY20.

Net worth falls

The company — a competitor of Walmart-owned PhonePe, Alibaba-backed Paytm, and Google Pay — saw its net worth eroding to ₹1,683.3 crore in FY21 compared to ₹2,014.9 crore in FY20.

For the same fiscal, Google Payment reported revenues as ₹14.8 crore. The company further reported a net profit of ₹1.4 crore during the same fiscal, a 210 per cent increase from the last financial year.

Investment in NPCI

In FY21, Amazon Pay (India) had made an investment by way of acquisition of 61,320 equity shares of National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI) at a price of ₹1, 256 per share.

Also see: Do e-comm sites squeeze SME vendors?

According to a recent report, Amazon Pay UPI recently added 5 crore customers in India. Over 75 per cent of its customers come from Tier-2 and -3 cities.

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Junio ties up with RuPay for debit card for pre-teens, teenagers

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Children-focussed fintech, Junio, has launched a smart multipurpose card for pre-teens and teenagers on the RuPay platform.

The Junio RuPay Card is designed for kids and can function as a debit card for both their online and offline purchases, it said in a statement on Monday.

Kids and parents can sign up on the Junio app, and use virtual Junio smart cards with zero annual charges. In addition, children can enjoy up to seven per cent cashback and other reward benefits on Junio payments.

“The newly launched Junio Smart Card powered by RuPay will allow youngsters to make online and offline payments with ease. We are already seeing increased acceptance of the card across the merchant network given the robustness of the RuPay platform,” said Ankit Gera, Co-Founder, Junio.

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PhonePe on-boards Liberty General Insurance to offer motor insurance

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Liberty General Insurance Ltd on Monday announced that it has partnered with PhonePe to offer motor insurance digitally and provide easy accessibility. In 2020, PhonePe ventured into the distribution of insurance and has become one of India’s fastest-growing digital distributors, with the sale of over 5 lakh policies in five months.

Roopam Asthana, CEO & Whole Time Director, Liberty General Insurance said, “With this partnership, Liberty General Insurance strengthens its tie-up with PhonePe to empower their customers with the best protection cover in today’s digital era. Liberty General Insurance has a comprehensive bouquet of insurance products that distinguishes itself from the existing gamut of motor insurance products in the market.

Gunjan Ghai, VP & Head of Insurance, PhonePe added, “We are delighted to partner with Liberty General Insurance to provide motor insurance products to our 32+ crore users. PhonePe users can choose from multiple motor insurance products on our platform and purchase seamlessly in a few clicks. We are committed to build PhonePe as a one-stop destination for all insurance needs and this partnership is another step in that direction.”

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