Bank of Baroda reports ₹1,061 cr profit in Q3

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Bank of Baroda (BoB) reported a standalone net profit of ₹1,061 crore in the third quarter against a net loss of ₹1,407 crore in the year-ago quarter.

A 69 per cent decline in provision towards bad loans and diminution value of all restructured accounts and a 55 per cent increase in trading gains helped boost the bottom line.

Provision towards bad loans and diminution value of all restructured accounts was at ₹2,080 crore, and trading gains were at ₹925 crore.

However, the net profit in the reporting quarter was down 37 per cent compared with the preceding quarter’s ₹1679 crore.

Net interest income (the difference between interest earned and interest expended) was up 9 per cent year-on-year (YoY) to ₹7749 crore (₹7,132 crore in the year-ago quarter).

Other income, comprising brokerage, commission, fees, income from foreign exchange fluctuation. Profit/ loss on the sale of investments, recovery from written-off accounts etc., increased 6 per cent YoY to ₹2,896 crore (₹2,738 crore).

Decline in NPAs

Gross non-performing assets (GNPAs) declined ₹2,516 crore during the reporting quarter.

GNPAs declined to 8.48 per cent of gross advances as at December-end 2020 against 9.14 per cent at September-end 2020.

Net NPAs declined to 2.39 per cent of net advances as at December-end 2020 against 2.51 per cent at September-end 2020.

With proforma slippages, Gross and Net NPA ratio would have been 9.63 per cent and 3.36 per cent, respectively.

Net interest margin improved to 3.07 per cent as at December-end 2020 against 2.96 per cent as at September-end 2020.

Global advances increased by 6.30 per cent YoY to ₹7,45,420 crore. Global deposits rose 6.52 per cent YoY to ₹9,54,561 core.

 

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ICRA: Negative rating actions in Mar-Dec ’20 exceeded historical 5-year average

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Rating agency ICRA on Wednesday said negative rating actions undertaken by it in the March to December 2020 period exceeded the historical five-year average.

About 13 per cent of the portfolio experienced a rating downgrade compared to the previous five-year average of 9 per cent, it said. Further, as many as 15 sectors, including aviation, hospitality, residential real estate, retail, and commercial vehicles, have a negative outlook in the near to medium term.

“The credit quality of India Inc has experienced rapid changes since the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic and the imposition of the nationwide lockdown in March 2020. Business health has been bruised in general and some entities in select sectors have been badly hurt, even though the effects have not been apocalyptic, and the worst-case scenarios have not played out,” ICRA said in a statement.

Also read: PSBs may require up to ₹43,000 cr in FY22: ICRA

According to K Ravichandran, Deputy Chief Rating Officer, ICRA, another 9 per cent of the rated entities witnessed a change in outlook — from Stable to Negative or from Positive to Stable.

“Without the various fiscal and monetary interventions which provided a liquidity relief to the borrowers, the negative rating actions could have been higher,” he said, adding that textiles, real estate and construction were the top three sectors in terms of the count of downgrades.

Besides, aviation and hospitality sectors too witnessed a number of negative rating actions.

In terms of upgrades, only 3 per cent of the rated entities were upgraded in the past 10-month period, compared to the previous five-year average of 9 per cent.

The outlook on sectors including ferrous and non-ferrous metals and textiles has been revised from Negative to Stable following the uptrend in prices and expectations of healthy revenue and profit over the medium term, it said, adding that the outlook on cement, passenger vehicles and auto ancillaries has been revised from Negative to Stable.

“ICRA expects the credit quality pressures to remain elevated in general over the near to medium term; however, the intensity is likely to remain quite varied across sectors,” said Ravichandran.

Also read: ICRA Ratings expects pressure on logistics sector in near term

The instances of defaults have been much lower in the past 10 months due to the benefit of the loan moratorium, the agency said, adding that there were only 30 defaults across the rating spectrum compared with 81 in the corresponding previous period.

It also noted that compared to its earlier expectations of about 6-8 per cent of the borrowers at the system-level to get their loans restructured, only a handful of entities in ICRA’s portfolio had applied for loan restructuring.

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Canara Bank Q3 profits up 88 per cent at Rs 750 cr

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Canara Bank has posted an 88.54 per cent increase in profits for the third-quarter (Q3) of 2020-21 on a consolidated basis at Rs 749.73 crore as against Rs 397.65 crore posted in the same period last year.

In Q3, the bank’s total income grew by 57.68 per cent to Rs 24,490.63 crore as against Rs 15,531.80 crore recorded last year. EPS for the quarter stood at Rs 5.01 as against Rs 5.09 posted last year.

Segment revenues: treasury operations Rs 6,309.09 (last year Rs 3,290.33 crore), retail banking operations Rs 8,486.75 crore (Rs 5,468.90 crore), wholesale banking operations Rs 6,691.49 crore (Rs 5,196.02 crore) and life insurance operations Rs 3,003.30 crore (Rs 1,477.84 crore).

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RBI’s norms will enhance stability of NBFC sector: Fitch Ratings

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The proposed changes to India’s regulatory framework for non-bank financial institutions (NBFIs) recently unveiled in the Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI) discussion paper are likely to enhance the sector’s stability, according to Fitch Ratings.

The credit rating agency believes that the reforms would preserve NBFIs’ niche business models, and could improve the funding environment for some entities by strengthening investor confidence in the sector.

”For the sector as a whole, the proposed measures should strengthen governance and risk management, although we do not view these areas as major credit weaknesses for Fitch-rated Indian NBFIs. The longer-term impact of such reform would also depend on its implementation, and robust regulatory and market scrutiny will be key in holding entities to higher standards,” the agency said in a note.

Scale-based regulations

ICRA observed that larger entities face enhanced disclosure requirements, and tighter risk and capital management requirements, which would likely be credit positive, it added.

It opined that the scale-based regulations reflect calls for closer supervision of large NBFIs that have grown more systemically significant.

“We believe the moves to strengthen risk controls and frameworks should be manageable for Fitch-rated NBFIs. For example, they should already comfortably meet the suggested requirement for “Upper Layer” NBFIs, expected to include 25-30 of the largest entities including Fitch-rated names, to maintain a minimum common equity Tier 1 ratio of 9 per cent,” the agency said.

Fitch views proposals to appoint auditors by rotation, as well as requirements to disclose information such as the incidence of covenant breaches and asset quality divergence as credit positive.

Unlike banks, many NBFIs have appointed the same auditors for many years. In addition, lending to directors and senior employees would be restricted, reducing governance risks.

Core banking solution

Requirements to implement a core banking solution (credited for improving efficiency and reducing operational risks in banks) and introduce an internal capital adequacy assessment process (ICAAP) could further strengthen the framework for monitoring and managing risks.

Most large NBFIs’ systems are already integrated with banks and payment portals, and Fitch believes additional costs to meet the core banking solution requirement would be manageable. However, the measure could pose a more significant expense for mid-sized NBFIs.

For NBFIs in the Upper Layer, listing may be made mandatory. The agency opined that this would affect only a few corporate-backed NBFIs, and should not present a challenge given their parents’ experience in capital markets.

 

Real estate lending

In general, business models should not be significantly affected, but some lending activities could be curtailed by the suggested changes, especially in real estate, ICRA said.

The agency observed that the RBI is looking to restrain lending to early-stage development projects that have not yet received regulatory approval, and has proposed added internal controls for lending against land acquisition.

“Some entities have built up exposures to these risky areas in recent years, which have become a point of vulnerability for the sector. The suggested new rules could curb a further run-up in such exposures in the longer term,” the agency said.

Provisioning

Fitch is of the view that the suggested reform would also raise NBFIs’ standard provisioning requirements on commercial real estate lending, to be in line with those for banks.

Fitch-rated Indian NBFIs do not engage in real estate lending, other than IIFL Finance. However, if IIFL is placed in the Upper Layer, any added provisioning from this proposal is unlikely to be significant relative to the firm’s broader provisioning needs in light of the pandemic, the agency said.

Fitch noted that NBFIs with assets below ₹1,000 crore (around $130 million) would continue to operate under current frameworks, but additional rules aligning non-performing loan recognition and a new leverage cap of seven times would add to regulatory robustness.

The central bank further highlighted the need for a resolution framework for failing NBFIs. This would be another important element in the regulator’s financial stability toolkit.

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Banks review services policy for WhatsApp, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Banks, which were looking to integrate WhatsApp as a key channel for customers to transact on, are reviewing their policies in respect of the use of the messaging platform. This comes after general concerns among the public that have arisen over Facebook sharing user data among its group companies.

HDFC Bank, which was earlier offering customers the option to obtain bank account balances through WhatsApp banking, has discontinued the facility. Customers seeking balance inquiry are asked to use the bank’s mobile banking app, net banking or other offline methods. Others — ICICI Bank, IDBI Bank, Kotak Mahindra Bank and IndusInd Bank — continue to allow customers to check their balance.

According to an industry source, earlier the idea was to have deep integration with the bank’s systems and artificial intelligence chatbots so that customers can get their servicing requests and even transactions done in a straight-through manner. The idea was to facilitate the entire banking experience through the social media platform, where customers spend most of their time, without having to log into net banking.

Now there appears to be some caution in using WhatsApp banking as a channel. It is not clear whether HDFC Bank’s change in WhatsApp services is part of its ongoing back office overhaul or review of the WhatsApp policy.

Incidentally, all Whatsapp banking chats come with a label stating that while these are encrypted, the bank may use a service to store, read and respond to messages and calls. According to Rajshekhar Rajaharia, a researcher on internet security who pointed out the policy change, businesses and solution providers will use WhatsApp’s parent company, Facebook, to securely store messages and respond to customers.

While Facebook will not automatically use messages to determine the ads that you see, businesses will be able to use chats they receive for their own marketing purposes, which may include advertising on Facebook.An ICICI Bank spokesperson, responding to a query from TOI, said, “Messages to the ICICI Bank WhatsApp Banking service are secured with end-to-end encryption. This means that WhatsApp or third parties cannot read them. Further, the delivered chats are neither shared with Facebook nor saved in the servers of Facebook. Facebook has meanwhile integrated a Whatsapp button on the homepage of banks. Customers will have the option to chat with the bank clicking on the button. The button is also available on some advertisements.”According to WhatsApp’s privacy policy, “Facebook may use the way you interact with these ads to personalise the ads you see on Facebook.”

Experts say that WhatsApp messages, being encrypted, are more secure than SMSs, which are viewable to telecom companies and government agencies and can also be intercepted by hackers. However, the concerns are not about hacking but privacy with organisations using customer data to sell third-party products.



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Aadhaar Enabled Payments: Taking banking services to the doorsteps of the underserved

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K. Srinivasan, global chief revenue officer, FSS Technologies

New banking service delivery models are helping to create a populace ready to adopt new-age financial products. Doorstep banking services using Aadhaar Enabled Payment System Solution (AEPS) is a new technological advancement that has helped India Post Payments Bank (IPPB) to bridge the digital divide. The total transaction value processed by the AePS system has crossed the Rs 8,000-crore mark, indicative of IPPB’s scale and its ability to successfully tap into latent demand for financial products amongst hitherto underserved segments.

IPPB was set up by the government with a motive to take banking services to the unbanked section of the society. In rural and peri-urban areas, the average time to reach a banking access point is 1.5 to 5 hours, compared to the average of 30 minutes in urban areas. FSS Technologies has partnered with the IPPB to offer financial services at the last mile through interoperable, affordable services. This partnership aims to bring millions of unbank-ed customers into the financial mainstream. Currently, there are nearly 410 million Jan Dhan accounts in India and since launching AEPS services, the bank has become the single largest platform in the country for providing interoperable banking services to customers of any bank.

IPPB has deployed FSS Integrated Payment Stack to deliver digital payments products to its customers. This includes FSS Payments-in-a-Box, Aadhaar-enabled payments (AePS and Aadhaar Pay for merchants), bill payments, UPI payments, card payments, merchant payments (PoS and online).

“The current financial services delivery infrastructure created by India Post Payments Bank spans 1160,000 villages and 400,000 digital points and addresses the accessibility challenges faced by customers in the traditional banking ecosystem,” says K. Srinivasan, global chief revenue officer, FSS Technologies. “However, a combination of simple-to-use technology, along-with the ability to leverage the existing postal network and the inherent interoperability offered by the AePS payments infrastructure has helped us deliver services to customers at their doorstep,” he adds.

The operation of FSS’ AePS solution is very simple and requires zero investment on part of the customer. The service is based on agents performing transactions on behalf of customers using a tablet, a micro-ATM or a POS device. Customers of any bank can access their Aadhaar-linked bank account by simply using their fingerprint for cash withdrawal, balance enquiry and transfer of funds into an operating IPPB account, right at their doorstep.
“Building an Atmanirbhar, digitally inclusive India is the fundamental tenet guiding the IPPB-FSS partnership.

The Covid-19 health emergency is propelling a massive shift toward digital markets and digital finance The transaction account and basic banking services offered via AePS has helped address institutional supply side constraints. The basic transaction account functions as a gateway and potentially opens an entirely new market for a range of asset-based and liability-based financial products – micro-insurance, micro-investments, micro-loans,” Srinivasan concludes.

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Franklin e-vote: Scrutiniser’s report raises more doubts on the process

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Raising further doubts over the ‘fairness’ of the e-voting process at Franklin Templeton Mutual Fund (FTMF), Mumbai law firm J Sagar Associates (JSA), which was appointed the ‘scrutiniser’, said it cannot vouch for the accuracy of the entire process.

JSA said in its report, seen by BusinessLine, that it relied on the voting data provided by KFin Tech, the company that provided the voting platform, and has not conducted any investigation or examination on its own into the data or the voting process.

“We have not investigated or verified the accuracy of the facts available and have not made any searches or any other independent investigation with any third party… we have not verified any information provided to us from any information which is either available in public domain or based on any other document,” JSA said in its disclosure.

Debt schemes

The e-voting was conducted during the last week of December after the Supreme Court asked FTMF to seek investor consent to wind-up the six debt schemes. While Franklin said that over 90 per cent of the votes was in favour of shutting down the schemes, several questions have been raised by the SEBI-appointed observer. Now, the disclosures by JSA have raised more doubts over the e-voting process.

On the question of possible duplication in the e-voting, the JSA report said, “The process was conducted by KFin online and J Sagar had no access to the details of the voting prior to the unlocking of the results. We will, therefore, be unable to make such a representation in the report.”

‘No technical error’

On the question of whether the e-voting was conducted without any technical glitches, JSA said, “We are not qualified to opine on the technical glitches. We understand from KFin that to the best of ‘their knowledge’ there was no technical error in the e-voting.”

KFin Tech provided the platform for e-voting and its role is already under scanner. On January 24, BusinessLine had reported that a forensic audit by the Central Forensic and Science Laboratory, which functions under the Home Ministry, disclosed that multiple votes were cast from the IP belonging to the servers of KFin Tech.

According to the Companies Act and guidelines of the Ministry of Corporate Affairs, a scrutiniser should ensure ‘fairness’ in the e-voting process.

JSA said in its report that its role was limited to the counting of votes after they were downloaded from KFin online portal.

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Insurers to offer standard pension plan with two annuity options

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Soon, life insurance companies will offer a standard pension plan with two annuity options.

Continuing its drive to ensure standardisation across all product segments, the Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority of India (IRDAI) has directed life insurers to offer ‘Saral’, a standard individual immediate annuity product from April 1.

In view of the many immediate annuity products in the market, it was necessary to introduce a standard individual immediate annuity product with simple features and standard terms and conditions suitable to an average customer, said the IRDAI.

As per the guidelines issued by the regulator, Saral Pension will offer two annuity options – life annuity with 100 per cent return of purchase price and joint life annuity with a provision of 100 per cent annuity to the secondary annuitant on the death of the primary annuitant, and return of 100 per cent purchase price on death of the last survivor.

No maturity benefit

The minimum annuity will be ₹1,000 per month, ₹3,000 per quarter, ₹6,000 per half-year and ₹12,000 per annum. There will be a limit for maximum annuity. There will be no maturity benefit under the product.

Industry players feel the proposed Saral Pension will auger well for post-retirement plans. According to Tarun Chugh, MD and CEO, Bajaj Allianz Life, post-retirement income is an important customer need that is mostly unplanned for in India.

“Annuities from life insurers meet the need of a life-long guaranteed income, and offering a standard product with simplified features is a great step in that direction from the IRDAI,” he said.

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HSBC inaugurates IBU at GIFT City

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The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation (HSBC) on Tuesday inaugurated its International Banking Unit (IBU) branch at Gujarat International Finance Tec-City (GIFT City).

“HSBC’s IBU branch at GIFT City will be operational for customer transactions with effect from January 27, 2021,” it said in a statement.

HSBC is one of the earliest global financial institutions to set up a GIFT City branch and is the first bank to get a license from the newly set up International Financial Services Centres Authority.

“Our IBU branch at GIFT IFSC complements our domestic business in India and flows with our global financial centres. This would help expand the options available to our customers to seamlessly conduct international business transactions, in particular financing, trade and global markets,” said Surendra Rosha, Group General Manager and CEO, HSBC India, adding that the move reiterates HSBC’s commitment to India as a core top five global contributors, and its second-largest employment base globally.

“The Government of India has envisaged the IFSC as a hub to bring offshore financial transactions onshore and the presence of HSBC has further strengthened the IFSC ecosystem of India,” said Srinivas Injeti, Chairman IFSCA.

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Need to make lenders a party to concession agreements, says IIFCL chief

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Lenders to infrastructure projects should be brought in as parties to the concession agreements, and any such move would help bolster their confidence in lending, PR Jaishankar, Managing Director, India Infrastructure Finance Company Ltd (IIFCL), has said.

India should also take steps to set up a secondary market at scale for infrastructure loans so that lenders can, when required, offload their exposures to institutional investors such as pension funds and life insurance companies, he told BusinessLine in an interview.

On the issue of bringing in lenders as a party in concession agreements, Jaishankar noted that any such move would ensure equitable allocation and distribution of risks.

“Today, a bilateral arrangement is between the concessioning authority and the concessionaire. This leaves out lenders, and lot of issues remain to be addressed. If we can have tripartite arrangements including lenders, problems such as termination payments (pertaining to lenders) will get resolved. Most lenders have large (nearly 70 per cent) exposure to a project, and they must have a skin in the game. The kind of risks perceived by lenders will get addressed if this kind of tripartite arrangements are introduced; this will help build confidence of lenders also,” he said.

If India has to get more private investments in infrastructure, this kind of confidence-building measures are more important, he said, adding that confidence begets investments. “If lenders form part of concession agreement, sizeable issues on finance and lending can be addressed.”

Jaishankar’s remarks are significant as it comes days before the Budget on February 1. The upcoming Budget — which is expected to give a healthy dose of impetus to public-private partnerships, especially in the health sector — could also be a platform where the Centre throws more light on the financing of ₹110-lakh-crore National Infrastructure Pipeline projects for next five years.

Reforms

The IIFCL chief felt more structural reforms are needed on the concessioning front and for certain bottlenecks like de-logging the payments system of the concessioning authorities.

He also stressed the need dedicated redress institution mechanisms (for arbitration, etc) to solve sectoral issues. At the same time, more teeth need to be provided for existing mechanisms as well.

Jaishankar also expressed hope that a conducive regulatory regime for Infrastructure Investment Trusts (InVITs) — which he believes have great potential in India — would get evolved in days to come, and players like State-owned IIFCL would be allowed to invest in such structures. Currently, RBI regulations do not permit NBFC-IFCs such as IIFCL to invest in InVITs, while scheduled commercial banks can do so, he pointed out.

The IIFCL chief has been advocating a “relay race” type system for infrastructure financing where the baton keeps passing from a set of banks to another set of lenders for long-term financing of infrastructure projects.

Meanwhile, speculation is rife that the Budget will see the announcement of a new development finance institution to take care of the long-term infrastructure financing needs of the country and provide an alternative to banks, which are already stretched. Such as proposal could go along with the much-talked-about investment holding company for public sector banks besides the introduction of a ‘bad bank’ to address the NPA worries of banks.

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