RBI approves re-appointment of Vishakha Mulye as ICICI Bank ED

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


The Reserve Bank of India has approved the re-appointment of Vishakha Mulye as an Executive Director of the ICICI Bank for a three-year period.

The re-appointment is effective January 19, ICICI Bank said in a regulatory filing.

“…Shareholders at the Annual General Meeting held on August 14, 2020 had already approved the re-appointment of Ms Mulye for a period of five years effective January 19, 2021,” it further said.

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

RBI weighs trade credit insurance for financiers on TReDS

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


The Reserve Bank of India is weighing the possibility of allowing financiers on the Trade Receivables Discounting System (TReDS) to take trade credit insurance (TCI).

This insurance cover can protect financiers– Banks, Non-Banking Finance Companies- Factors, and other financial institutions — on TReDS platform against the risk of default when they finance/discount trade receivables of Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (MSMEs).

TCI, if allowed, can help financiers on TReDs to minimise bad debts and reduce provisions, thereby supporting their bottomline.

The current regulations do not allow financiers to take TCI as the expectation is that their financing activity should be solely based on their credit appraisal and not on insurance.

TCI is currently offered by general insurers to suppliers of goods and services against delay in payment or non-payment of trade credit.

TReDS is an electronic platform for facilitating the financing/discounting of trade receivables of MSMEs drawn against buyers (large corporates, public sector undertaking companies, and government departments) are financed by multiple financiers through a competitive auction process.

Three entities — Receivables Exchange of India Ltd., A.TReDS, and Mynd Solutions — have been operating TReDS for more than three years.

A senior public sector bank official said Banks’ have requested RBI to allow them TCI cover on TReDS platform initially in view of the rising stress in the MSME segment.

Moreover, this can buoy MSME financing activity, which is one of the priority areas for the Government as part of its Atmanirbhar Bharat Abhiyan (Self-Reliant India campaign), on the platform.

If the central bank allows TCI coverage to financiers on TReDS platform initially and it proves successful, this could be extended to other financing activities at a later stage, the Banker quoted opined.

According to RBI’s Report on Trend and Progress of Banking in India 2019-20, the number of MSMEs customers availing Covid-19 related moratorium increased to 78 per cent in August 2020, reflecting the stress in the sector.

As per RBI data on “Progress in MSME Financing through TReDS”, in FY2020, the number of invoices uploaded on TReDS platforms jumped 111 per cent year-on-year (yoy) to 5,30,077, with the amount involved rising 95 per cent yoy to ₹13,088.27 crore.

The number of invoices financed in the reporting year rose 106 per cent yoy to 4,77,969, with the amount involved rising 91 per cent yoy to ₹11,165.86 crore.

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Life insurance business down 1.69% till December

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


The first-year premium of life insurers in the first three quarters of the current fiscal ended December 31, 2020, declined 1.69 per cent at ₹1,91,046 crore as against ₹1,94, 331 crore in the corresponding period of the previous fiscal.

The first year premium of Life Insurance Corporation of India (LIC) decreased 5.13 per cent at ₹1,30, 004 crore as against ₹1,37,034 crore in the same period last year, according to business figures released by the Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority of India.

For the state insurer, there was a dip in individual and group non-single premium and group yearly renewable premium while individual single and group premiums went up.

For private insurers, however, the first year premium went up by 6.54 per cent at ₹61,042 crore compared with ₹57,269 crore in the previous year.

There was growth in all segments except individual non-single premium for private insurers.

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Deutsche Bank to pay $100 million to avoid bribery charge, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Deutsche Bank has agreed to pay a fine of more than $100 million to avoid a criminal prosecution on charges it participated in a foreign bribery scheme. Lawyers for the bank waived its right to face an indictment on conspiracy charges Friday during a teleconference with a federal judge in New York City.

Federal prosecutors in Brooklyn didn’t reveal at the hearing which nations were involved. Previously, the bank has agreed to a Securities and Exchange Commission fine of $16 million to resolve separate allegations of corrupt dealings in Russia and China.

Deutsche Bank said it would have no immediate comment. The bank’s agreement to avoid prosecution comes in the waning days of the administration of President Donald Trump, who had a longtime personal business association with the bank.

Follow and connect with us on , Facebook, Linkedin



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Bose, pioneer of investment banking in India, dies at 71, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Veteran dealmaker Udayan Bose, who brought modern investment banking and venture capital to India in the ’80s and set up the second private Indian mutual fund, passed away on Friday. Bose (71) was suffering from heart and kidney-related issues.

Bose straddled the world of pinstriped bankers of London’s Lombard Street and the earthy stock markets of Mumbai and Kolkata. He threw away an opportunity to head Deutsche Bank’s Australia operations to turn entrepreneur by acquiring a vintage broking firm, which then he used to partner Lazard (a global investment bank) and create India’s first multinational investment bank.

A young achiever from Kolkata’s Presidency College, Bose started his career with Grindlays Bank where he rose to be a director of Asia-Pacific before moving on to European Asian Bank (which became Deutsche Bank). As a merchant banker (as investment bankers were known then), he helped movers and shakers of the ’80s and ’90s strike deals, like R P Goenka’s acquisition of HMV.

Uday Kotak, who has been part of the city’s capital market scene from the ’80s, says he has great memories of Bose. “I met him in the European Asian Bank, which later became Deutsche Bank. After Deutsche, he bought over a broking firm — Merwanji Bomanji and Dalal — and partnered with Lazard. An original merchant banker, and a professional-turnedentrepreneur… Time flies. Will miss him,” said Kotak.

Ravi Rangachari, former director (finance & corporate affairs) at Lazard India, said, “Bose was ahead of his time… he had great vision.” Another one of Bose’s Indian ventures was the British Tech Group, which pioneered the concept of licensing and adoption of foreign technologies for Indian companies.

In 1984, after he was appointed head of Deutsche Bank’s operations in Australia, he was swept by a “feeling of belonging to the soil” and gave up the prestigious assignment and decided to start investment bank Credit Capital in India. His connections and knowledge brought him several board positions, prominent among them being the chairmanship of travel firm Thomas Cook.

Other companies where he was on the board included HMV, Reliance Capital, and JK Paper. A big believer in the India story, Bose took over as chairman of the Kolkata Stock Exchange in the hope of modernising it and bringing foreign investors.

An anglicised banker with a baritone, Bose would at times appear incongruous among desi stockbrokers, whether in Mumbai or Kolkata. But deep inside, he still had middle-class family values. Once when talking to a reporter on a major assignment that he was taking, he requested that his picture be carried in the Kolkata edition as that would make his mother happy. An epicure, he enjoyed cooking for, and feeding, people. And he loved a good adda.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

HDFC Bank | Aditya Puri: Former HDFC Bank MD Aditya Puri joins global pharma major Strides Group as advisor, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Former HDFC Bank managing director Aditya Puri has joined global pharma major Strides Group as an advisor and will also serve as a director of its associate company Stelis Biopharma. “Eminent corporate doyen Aditya Puri joins the Strides Group as an advisor and also will be a director of its associate company, Stelis Biopharma,” Strides Pharma Science said in a regulatory filing.

Strides Pharma Science said Puri’s appointment to the Stelis board comes at an exciting juncture for the company as it transitions from its incubation phase to a consolidation and growth phase to establish itself as a partner of choice globally with the aim of bringing world-class treatments at affordable costs to patients in both emerging and developed markets.

On his appointment, Puri said the Stride Group’s established parentage, global success and headstart in terms of basic infrastructure gives him the opportunity to be involved in and guide Stelis and other Group endeavours in their exciting growth story.

Arun Kumar, Founder and Chairman of the Board of Strides, said: “I am delighted to welcome Aditya as our advisor and to the Stelis board. This a huge vote of confidence in the potential of Stelis. Aditya’s illustrious legacy is well-known. Having nurtured HDFC Bank since inception, his deep experience will be extremely valuable for the Strides Group and Stelis in particular.

“With Stelis poised for its next leg of growth, this is the right time to expand the board, and ensure robust guidance and governance by the best possible industry minds. I look forward to working with Aditya and leveraging his expertise to take Stelis to new heights”.

Puri, who led HDFC Bank since its inception over 25 years ago, retired in October 2020, after a highly successful career which has made the bank the largest among private sector lenders.

While heading a foreign bank’s operations in Malaysia in the early 1990s, Puri got an offer from Deepak Parekh of mortgage major HDFC to come back to India to start a bank in an economy which had shifted gears with liberalisation moves.

In November 2020, Puri was roped in by US-based global investment firm Carlyle Group as a senior advisor.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

RBI returns to revised liquidity management framework

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


“On a review of evolving liquidity and financial conditions, it has been decided to restore normal liquidity management operations in a phased manner,” the RBI said in a statement.

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) on Friday announced resumption of operations under the revised liquidity management framework, in a sign that it is set to unwind the Covid-related relief measures announced in March 2020. The return to the revised framework will be done in a phased manner and the central bank will conduct a Rs 2-lakh-crore variable rate reverse repo auction on January 15 under the revised liquidity management framework.

“On a review of evolving liquidity and financial conditions, it has been decided to restore normal liquidity management operations in a phased manner,” the RBI said in a statement. On February 6, 2020, the RBI had announced a revised liquidity management framework that communicated the objectives and toolkit for liquidity management. The framework was suspended in the wake of the outbreak of Covid-19. The central bank had decided to make the window for fixed rate reverse repo and marginal standing facility operations available throughout the day. This was intended to provide eligible market participants with greater flexibility in their liquidity management.

In view of operational dislocations and the elevated level of health risks posed by the pandemic, the RBI had also truncated trading hours for various market segments with effect from April 7, 2020. Later, with the graded rollback of the lockdown and easing of restrictions on movement of people and functioning of offices, it restored trading hours for markets in a phased manner with effect from November 9, 2020.

Earlier, RBI executives have signalled their intent to roll back Covid-specific policies in the light of a gradual normalisation in economic activity. In the minutes of the December monetary policy committee meeting, RBI executive director Mridul Saggar had said liquidity, credit and monetary aggregates will need to be closely monitored with an eye on macro-financial stability, which could weaken when short-term borrowing costs fall below the operational policy rate. “If this results in persistence of negative real rates for too long, it can adversely affect savings, lend support to mispricing of financial asset prices and encourage excessive leveraging. As such, other policies outside the flexible inflation targeting framework, such as macroprudential and strengthening the instruments of sterilisation in view of surge in capital inflows in recent months may be needed to mitigate these risks,” he had written.

Some market participants have read these comments as a hint that there may be no more rate cuts anytime soon.

An RBI working paper also made a case for retaining the inflation target at 4% into the medium term, suggesting that exceptional measures to keep money cheap may be on their way out.

Get live Stock Prices from BSE, NSE, US Market and latest NAV, portfolio of Mutual Funds, Check out latest IPO News, Best Performing IPOs, calculate your tax by Income Tax Calculator, know market’s Top Gainers, Top Losers & Best Equity Funds. Like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter.

Financial Express is now on Telegram. Click here to join our channel and stay updated with the latest Biz news and updates.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

‘Doubled disbursement in Q3 sequentially, momentum sustainable’: YS Chakravarti, MD & CEO, Shriram City Union Finance

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


YS Chakravarti, MD & CEO, Shriram City Union Finance

Shriram City Union Finance, a deposit-accepting NBFC and part of the over Rs 1-lakh-crore Shriram Group, has done well in the third quarter of FY21 as it doubled its disbursements quarter-on-quarter. In an interview with Sajan C Kumar, YS Chakravarti, MD & CEO, says the company is planning to enter the loan against property segment in Q4. Excerpts:

How did the company perform in Q3?

We have doubled our disbursements in the December quarter on a QoQ basis, from Rs 3,000 crore to Rs 6,000 crore. If you look at the YoY figure, we also surpassed the Q3FY20 figure of Rs 5,822 crore. Out of Rs 6,000 crore, we have done about Rs 2,000 crore of two-wheeler loans. In the SME sector, we have done close to Rs 1,000 crore and the rest of the disbursements went into verticals such as used vehicles and gold loans. The demand for two-wheeler loans in Q3 came from across the country, except South as Dussehra and Diwali are not big-sales season there. Robust demand came from rural and semi urban areas. Increased awareness about the pandemic and people’s aspiration for owning personal vehicles also triggered the demand for two-wheeler loans.

What was your collection efficiency in Q3? What kind of loan restructuring are you anticipating?

In December, we touched the pre-Covid level, and November was also okay. Overall, for the third quarter, I would say the collection efficiency was close to the pre-Covid levels. We normally do 96-97%. I am in fact surprised with the resilience of customers; honestly I did not expect them to bounce back so strongly. What is heartening that it is sustaining. It is much better than what we have anticipated. On the asset quality, as of now, we have not seen much of a demand for restructuring. Less than 1% of the portfolio has come up for restructuring. The businesses which have come up for restructuring are typically from the hospitality sector and those who are involved in the tourism sector.

Do you think the disbursement momentum is sustainable, going forward?

I think disbursements are sustainable, both in the two-wheeler and SME segments. On the two-wheeler side, demand will be there as the economy opens up further. Majority of the two-wheeler loans, about 70%, normally goes to the self-employed and small business segments. Most importantly, the company caters to rural and semi-urban areas. On the SMEs front, customers are approaching for working capital needs. Most of our SME loan customers are involved in trading and services and their activities have bounced back strongly. We anticipate a robust demand for working capital requirement from these two lines of businesses.

What is your expectation on the disbursement growth by the end of FY 21?

Disbursements during the last two quarters (second and third) were around Rs 9,000 crore. The first quarter was a complete washout. So, we will seal the current fiscal with Rs 16,000-crore disbursements. Normally, we do about Rs 6,000-crore disbursements every quarter, taking the total yearly disbursements to Rs 24,000 crore. However, the de-growth in AUM that we had seen in the first half of FY21 will be reversed starting Q3, and we may end the year with a slight positive growth. If everything goes well, we would be looking at achieving 12-15% AUM growth in the next fiscal.

Any new product in the offing?

We have been getting a lot of enquiries about the loan against property (LAP) segment since the last one year. As we are seeing demand, we did a pilot and found that it will be one category we would like to enter. We will unveil the product in the fourth quarter of FY21.

Get live Stock Prices from BSE, NSE, US Market and latest NAV, portfolio of Mutual Funds, Check out latest IPO News, Best Performing IPOs, calculate your tax by Income Tax Calculator, know market’s Top Gainers, Top Losers & Best Equity Funds. Like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter.

Financial Express is now on Telegram. Click here to join our channel and stay updated with the latest Biz news and updates.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

SEBI begins probe into credit rating for Oaktree’s DHFL resolution plan

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Market regulator SEBI has begun investigations into allegations against certain credit rating agencies for rating Oaktree Capital’s resolution plan for debt-ridden Dewan Housing Finance Corporation Ltd.

In letters to the DHFL Administrator and the Committee of Creditors, Oaktree Capital has often underlined the efficacy of its resolution plan and unconditionality as well as its AAA credit rating with no contagion risk. SEBI has asked the DHFL Administrator for details on the basis of which Oaktree Capital has made such claims.

According to sources close to the development, the probe relates to unnamed credit rating agencies offering views to Oaktree Capital on a future rating of its DHFL resolution plan and instruments. “Offering such views is in violation of SEBI regulations for credit rating agencies,” said the sources.

SEBI wrote to DHFL Administrator R Subramaniakumar on the issue on January 5 and sought available documents, and the names of the credit rating agencies.

Indicative rating

Under SEBI regulations, credit rating agencies cannot offer an indicative rating of an instrument as it has the potential to mislead investors. An email query by BusinessLine to the DHFL Administrator did not elicit a response.

Oaktree Capital declined to comment on a similar email query from this paper. While it is unclear if the complaint will have an impact on Oaktree’s bid, it has come at a time when the voting process for DHFL is on. Creditors are expected to complete voting by January 14 and the winning bid is likely to be announced later this month.

Oaktree Capital and Piramal Capital and Housing Finance Ltd are the two top suitors for DHFL with both contending that their bids, at a little over ₹38,000 crore, are the highest.

Other contenders include the Adani Group and SC Lowy.

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

SBI home-loan rates now start at 6.8%

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


State Bank of India (SBI) has cut the minimum interest rate at which it will offer home loans up to ₹30 lakh to 6.80 per cent from 6.90 per cent. Further, for home loans above ₹30 lakh, the minimum interest rate has been pared to 6.95 per cent from 7 per cent.

Processing fees

India’s largest bank said it now provides higher interest concession based on loan amount, creditworthiness of the borrowers, and the location of the property. The bank also announced 100 per cent waiver on processing fees.

SBI, in a statement, said 5 bps interest rate concession each is available on home loans to women borrowers and those opting for balance transfer. Further, customers applying for home loans via YONO App / https://homeloans.sbi / www.sbiloansin59minutes.com will get additional interest concession of 5 bps. “Home loan interest rates are linked to CIBIL score and start from 6.80 per cent for loans up to ₹30 lakh and 6.95 per cent for loans above ₹30 lakh.

“Interest concessions up to 30 bps is also available in 8 metro cities for loans up to ₹5 crore,” India’s largest bank said in a statement. Concessions to prospective home loan customers are available up to March 2021, it added.

CS Setty, MD (Retail and Digital Banking), SBI, said: “With the nation all geared up to move ahead post pandemic, SBI would continue to support the home buyers and real estate sector. “Further, our eligible existing home loan borrowers can also avail a paperless, pre-approved top-up home loan through the YONO App in just a few clicks. “

Meanwhile, Saraswat Co-operative Bank, India’s largest urban co-operative bank, in a statement, said it is offering retail loans such as home loans (at 7 per cent interest, no processing fee); car loan (at 8 per cent, with 100 per cent finance and free FASTag); and gold loan (at 8.50 per cent, no processing fee) at lower rates up to March-end 2021.

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

1 520 521 522 523 524 540