Banks attract more home loan customers during this festival season

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Banks seem to be showing a distinct preference for growing their home loans within retail loans during the ongoing festive season, going by the recent interest rate cuts effected by them.

Most of the banks have announced reduction in home loans interest rates, which are now at an all time low, but interest rates on other loans such as vehicle loans and unsecured personal loans have been left more or less unchanged.

Among the banks that have announced home loan rate cuts during the ongoing festive season include Kotak Mahindra Bank (from 6.65 per cent to 6.50 per cent), State Bank of India (from 6.80 per cent to 6.70 per cent), Bank of Baroda (from 6.75 per cent to 6.50 per cent), Punjab National Bank (from 7.10 per cent to 6.60 per cent on home loans above ₹50 lakh), and Union Bank of India (from 6.80 per cent to 6.40 per cent).

Depending on a prospective borrower’s credit score, the banks would add credit spread to the aforementioned rates.

This cut in home loan rates comes even as industry experts believe there could be a dampening effect on the demand for cars (and in turn for loans to buy them) due to manufacturers passing on increase in raw material prices to customers in the last few months and rising fuel prices.

Also read: Healthy growth in home loans, may consider extending festive offer: Kotak Mahindra Bank

Bankers are also wary of the possibility of stress building up in the unsecured personal loans portfolio.

Further, banks no longer enjoy the advantage they had over gold loan companies (GLCs) last year (between August 6, 2020 and March-end 2021), when the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) allowed the former to offer loans for up to 90 per cent of the value of gold ornaments and jewellery to mitigate the economic impact of the Covid-19 pandemic on households, entrepreneurs and small businesses.

Now, with a level playing field having been created (both banks and GLCs can offer loans up to 75 per cent of the value of gold ornaments and jewellery), nifty GLCs can attract the customers they lost to banks during the aforementioned period.

Low risks

Banks consider housing loans as the best bet to grow their retail loan portfolio due to the relatively low risk of default, lower risk weights (whereby the minimum capital that needs to be set aside to mitigate default risk has been brought down up to March 31, 2022) and availability of strong collateral, according to banking expert V Viswanathan.

As per the monetary policy report, in respect of fresh rupee loans linked to the policy repo rate, the spread – weighted average lending rate (WALR) over the repo rate – charged by domestic banks during August 2021 was the lowest in the case of housing loans and the highest in the case of other personal loans, in line with their risk profiles.

In the case of home loans linked to external benchmark, the spread of WALR over the repo rate during August 2021 was 3.19 per cent for domestic banks. The aforementioned spread in the case of vehicle loans and other personal loans was at 3.60 per cent and 4.98 per cent, respectively.

Repo rate is the interest rate at which banks draw funds from RBI to overcome short-term liquidity mismatches. Currently, this rate is at 4 per cent.

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HDFC Q2 net profit up 32%

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Housing Development Finance Corporation (HDFC) Ltd reported a 31.7 per cent jump in its standalone net profit for the second quarter of the fiscal at ₹3,780.5. Its net profit was ₹2,870.12 crore in the corresponding quarter last fiscal.

The net interest income for the half year ended September 30, 2021 stood at ₹8,255 crore compared to ₹7,039 crore in the previous year, representing a growth of 17 per cent.

The reported Net Interest Margin was 3.6 per cent.

“The demand for home loans continues to remain strong. Growth in home loans was seen in both the affordable housing segment as well as in high end properties. The increasing sales momentum and new project launches augurs well for the housing sector,” HDFC said in a statement on Monday.

During the half-year ended September 30, 2021, individual approvals and disbursements grew by 67 per cent and 80 per cent respectively compared to the corresponding period in the previous yea

Individual disbursements in the month of October 21 were the highest ever in a non-quarter end month, it further said.

The collection efficiency for individual loans on a cumulative basis improved to stand at over 98 per cent during the quarter ended September 30, 2021.

The provisions as at September 30, 2021 stood at ₹13,340 crore

As per regulatory norms, the gross non-performing loans as at September 30, 2021 stood at ₹10,341 crore. This is equivalent to 2 per cent of the loan portfolio compared to 2.24 per cent as on June 30, 2021.

As at September 30, 2021, loans restructured under the RBI’s Resolution Framework for Covid-19 Related Stress (OTR 1 & 2.0) was equivalent to 1.4 per cent of the loan book (as at June 30, 2021: 0.9 per cent of the loan book). Of the loans restructured, 63 per cent are individual loans and 37 per cent are non-individual loans. Of the total restructured loans, 35% is in respect of just one account.

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Capital Small Finance Bank files DRHP papers with SEBI, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Capital Small Finance Bankhas filed its Draft Red Herring Prospectus with market regulator Securities and Exchange Board of India. Edelweiss Financial Services Limited, Axis Capital Limited and SBI Capital Markets Limited will be the book running lead managers of the issue.

The company plans to raise its initial public offering via a fresh issue of equity shares aggregating up to Rs. 450 crores and an offer for sale of up to 3,840,087 equity shares.

The offer for sale comprises up to 337,396 equity shares by PI Ventures LLP, 604,614 equity shares by Amicus Capital Private Equity I LLP, 70,178 equity shares by Amicus Capital Partners India Fund I and 836,728 equity shares by Oman India Joint Investment Fund II and up to 1,991,171 equity shares by certain person listed in DRHP.

The company has a good asset quality, with a GNPA of 2.08% and NNPA of 1.13%, lowest among its peers. They propose to utilise net proceeds from the fresh issue towards augmentation of the bank’s tier-I capital base to meet future capital requirements.



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UPI hits new record with ₹7.71-lakh crore worth of transactions in October

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Amidst festival season sales and opening up of the economy, UPI transactions touched a record high at ₹7.71 lakh crore in value terms in October.

This was a new record for UPI, which is fast becoming the most popular choice for digital payments. It was a 56 per cent jump from ₹6.54 lakh crore in transaction value recorded in September.

According to data released by National Payments Corporation of India on Monday, the number of transactions on the Unified Payments Interface platform amounted to 421 crore in October, compared to 365 crore in September.

Daily payments through UPI were averaging between ₹25,000 crore to ₹30,000 crore in October.

Also read: Mobile payments growing faster than card payments

The Immediate Payment Service (IMPS) also scaled a new high in October and processed 43.06 crore transactions worth ₹3.7 lakh crore. It had processed 38.48 crore transactions amounting to ₹3.24 lakh crore in September.

Meanwhile, there were 21.42 crore transactions via the NETC FASTags totalling ₹3,356.74 crore in October compared to 19.36 crore transactions worth ₹3,009.3 crore in September.

Mobile payments are now growing faster than card payments and are clocking over $1 trillion in annualised value in 2021, the 2021 India Mobile Payments Market Report by S&P Global Market Intelligence’s Financial Institutions Research team had said.

Also read: Strong growth in digital payments indicates a lasting shift in consumer payment behaviour

According to the report, payments made via apps that bypass credit card rails rose 67 per cent to $478 billion in 2020.

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Bank of Baroda to raise up to Rs 3,000cr via Basel III bonds, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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State-owned Bank of Baroda on Monday said it will raise up to Rs 3,000 crore by issuing Basel III compliant bonds in one or more tranches. The capital raising committee of the bank in a meeting on November 1, 2021 approved the issuance of Basel III compliant additional tier I/II bonds.

The bonds are to be issued for aggregate total issue size of Rs 3,000 crore in single or multiple tranches, the bank said in a regulatory filing.

To comply with Basel-III capital regulations, banks globally need to improve and strengthen their capital planning processes.

These norms are being implemented to mitigate concerns on potential stresses on asset quality and consequential impact on performance and profitability of banks.

Shares of Bank of Baroda were trading at Rs 99.30 apiece on BSE, up 1.85 per cent from previous close. PTI KPM DRR DRR

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Why analysts see no upside in PNB stock despite 78% jump in Q2 net, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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NEW DELHI: Punjab National Bank (PNB) reported a 78 per cent surge in September quarter profit, in addition to a three-fold jump in June quarter profits. Analysts, however, see no further upside for the stock that has underperformed the market this year with a 21 per cent return.

Analysts said the surge in earnings was mainly led by a reversal in tax and noted that operating performance for the quarter was fairly weak, with pre-provision operating profit falling 27 per cent YoY due to a 25 per cent decline in net interest income (NII).

Slippages were elevated at about Rs 9,080 crore, which were 5.4 per cent of loans, even as higher recoveries and upgrades helped the bank report a 70 basis points fall in gross NPA at 13.6 per cent.

Motilal Oswal Securities noted that the bank’s domestic margins also fell 36 basis points sequentially to 2.45 per cent due to an interest reversal of Rs 620 crore and few corporate loans being repriced at lower rates. Fee income fell 21 per cent sequentially. “PNB’s asset quality remained largely stable despite elevated slippages, supported by higher recoveries and upgrades. However, the bank’s restructured portfolio increased to 3.1 per cent of loans, for which it is carrying mere 10 per cent provisions. Also, SMA overdue stood at 3.7 per cent of loans, making us watchful of PNB over the near term,” Motilal Oswal said.

Emkay Global has retained its sell call on the stock due to slower growth, ongoing concerns around asset quality and subpar return ratios when compared with other public sector banks. It has valued the stock at Rs 35. “Credit growth was weak at 3 per cent YoY but PNB expects the growth run rate to improve to 6-8 per cent YoY by the end of FY22, aided by healthy growth in retail and some back-end support from corporates as well. That said, we believe overall NIMs are likely to remain under pressure due to slower growth and interest reversals on NPAs,” Emkay said.

Edelweiss shared similar concerns. It said asset quality shows persistent challenges, with slippages in excess of 5 per cent (annualised) and SMA-2 + restructuring at 2 per cent level. Soft business momentum reflected in a 30 per cent YoY dip in core profitability. “Still evolving stress and low provision stock forebodes elevated credit costs going forward, keeping us on guard. High stress, lower buffer, challenges on business and risk of subsequent Covid waves indicate that transition will be arduous and normalisation is still awaited,” said the brokerage. It has a hold rating on the stock with a target of Rs 42.

PNB closed at Rs 42.10 a piece on Friday, suggesting no upside.



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Capri Global Capital Q2 standalone net dips 21% to ₹41 crore

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Capri Global Capital Ltd (CGCL) reported a 21 per cent year-on-year (yoy) drop in second quarter standalone net profit at ₹41 crore against ₹52 crore in the year ago period as growth in total expenses outstripped growth in total income.

While total income was up 16 per cent yoy at ₹171 crore (₹147 crore in the year ago quarter), total expenses rose 48 per cent yoy at ₹114 crore (₹77 crore).

The non-banking finance company’s loan portfolio (standalone) increased 21 per cent to ₹3,797 crore and investment portfolio was up 33 per cent to ₹553 crore.

During the reporting quarter, the company implemented resolution plans in the case of 571 accounts aggregating ₹180 crore under the RBI’s August 6, 2020, circular on “Resolution Framework for Covid-19-related Stress”.

CGCL’s consolidated net profit ( including results of Capri Global Housing Finance and Capri Global Resource) declined 14 per cent to ₹52.5 crore (₹61 crore).

Disbursals (consolidated: MSME, construction finance and housing finance) jumped over three times to ₹585 crore during the quarter against ₹190 crore in the year ago quarter.

Assets under management (consolidated) was up 27 per cent at ₹5,271 crore (₹4,147 crore).

Also read: Capri Global launches ‘Prime’ affordable housing loans

Net interest margin (NIM) declined to 9.6 per cent from 10.6 per cent in the year ago quarter. However, NIM in the reporting quarter was up vis-a-vis preceding quarter’s 9.3 per cent.

Gross stage 3 (credit impaired) assets rose to 3.26 per cent of gross advances against 2.18 per cent in the year ago quarter. However, the proportion of such assets in the reporting quarter was down vis-a-vis preceding quarter’s 3.45 per cent.

Net stage 3 assets rose to 0.61 per cent of net advances against 0.12 per cent in the year ago quarter. However, the proportion of such assets in the reporting quarter was down vis-a-vis preceding quarter’s 0.81 per cent.

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Bandhan Bank gets empanelled as agency bank of RBI, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Bandhan Bank said on Monday that it has been empanelled by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) to act as an agency bank to facilitate transactions related to government businesses. The RBI’s decision will help Bandhan Bank in contributing to nation-building, its MD and CEO Chandra Sekhar Ghosh said.

The announcement comes months after a RBI guideline that authorised scheduled private sector banks as agency banks of the regulator for the conduct of government business.

With this, Bandhan Bank joins ranks with a few other scheduled private sector banks to be empanelled as agency banks of the RBI, the bank said in a statement.

As an agency bank, Bandhan Bank will be able to handle transactions related to collection of state taxes, and revenue receipts such as GST and VAT, collection of stamp duty, and pension payments on behalf of central and state governments, it added.

The bank’s extensive branch network will help it discharge its duties effectively by bringing governments and citizens closer to each other, it said.

“Since its launch six years ago, Bandhan Bank has been dedicated towards bringing millions of Indians into the fold of formal financial services and catalysing the creation of sustainable livelihoods,” Ghosh said. PTI dc SOM SOM



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Former SBI boss Chaudhary arrested for selling hotel at cheap price after declaring as NPA, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Former SBI chairman Pratip Chaudhary has been arrested by the Jaisalmer Police from Delhi on the basis of arrest orders issued by the Chief Judicial Magistrate Court in the case of selling a hotel property at a cheap price after declaring it NPA.

Pratip Chaudhary was arrested on Sunday and will be brought to Jaisalmer on Monday. According to information received from the police, Pratip Chaudhary was arrested from his residence in Delhi in a case related to a hotel group in Jaisalmer. It is alleged that the property worth about Rs 200 crore was sold for Rs 25 crore by declaring it Non Performing Asset (NPA).

This property, in fact, was seized in lieu of the loan. According to the police, the hotel group had taken a loan of Rs 24 crore from SBI in 2008 for the construction purpose. At that time, another hotel of the group was running smoothly. After that, when the group could not repay the loan amount, the bank seized both the hotels of the group after considering it as a non-performing asset. At that time, the chairman of the bank was Pratip Chaudhary.

The bank then sold both the hotels to a company for Rs 25 crore at a much lower price than the market rate. On this, the hotel group went to court.

Meanwhile, the buyer company took over it in 2016 and when this property was valued in 2017, its market value was found to be Rs 160 crore. At the same time, after retirement, Pratip Chaudhary joined the same company as a director to which this hotel was sold. At present, the value of these hotels is being estimated at Rs 200 crore.

In this case, the CJM Court of Jaisalmer ordered the arrest of Pratip Chaudhary.



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To spur lending, finance ministry pushes to ease fears of bankers, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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To protect the people taking bona fide business decisions, the finance ministry issued a uniform staff accountability framework for NPA accounts up to Rs 50 crore.

These guidelines shall be implemented with effect from April 1, 2022, for accounts turning non-performing assets (NPAs) beginning next financial year.

The Department of Financial Services (DFS), under the finance ministry, “vide its order dated October 29 advised broad guidelines to be adopted by all public sector banks (PSBs) on ‘Staff Accountability Framework for NPA Accounts up to Rs 50 crore’ (Other than Fraud Cases)”, the Indian Banks’ Association (IBA) said in a statement.

Banks have been advised to revise their staff accountability policies based on these broad guidelines and frame the procedures with approval of the respective boards, it said.

The IBA, being a key stakeholder of the framework, was involved in the process right from the beginning.

These guidelines will help quell apprehension that bankers could be hauled up for their bonafide commercial decision to go wrong. It will also help bankers to take credit decisions faster and help support the economy.

Stressing that the new guidelines will surely boost the morale of the PSBs employees immensely, it said banks will have to complete staff accountability exercises within six months from the date of classification of the account as NPA.

Further, it said that depending on the business size of the banks, threshold limits have been advised for scrutiny of the accountability by the chief vigilance officer (CVO).

Past track record

Past track record of the officials in appraisal or sanction/ monitoring will also be given due weightage, it added.

“At present, different banks are following different procedures for conducting staff accountability exercises. Also, staff accountability exercise is being carried out in respect of all accounts which turn into NPA. This approach not only adversely affects staff morale but also puts a huge strain on the bank’s resources,” it said.

Punitive measures

While punitive action needs to be taken against the officers having malafide intent/involvement, it is essential to ensure that bonafide mistakes are dealt with compassion, IBA said.

It added that there is a need to protect the people taking bonafide business decisions in this competitive environment.

Moreover, IBA said that at a time when the country is in need of an economic boost, slow credit delivery to industries due to the fear of implication is a matter of concern and needs urgent attention.

Banks with the approval of their board may decide on a threshold of Rs 10 lakh or Rs 20 lakh depending on their business size for the need of examining the aspect of staff accountability, it said.



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