Bandhan Bank posts ₹3,009-cr net loss in Sept quarter on high provision

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Dragged down by a 13-fold rise in provisions Bandhan Bank posted a net loss of ₹3,009 crore for the quarter ended September 30, 2021. The bank had registered a net profit of ₹ 920 crore during the same period last year.

Total provisions during the quarter under review jumped up to ₹5,578 crore, as against ₹379 crore same period last year.

According to Chandra Shekhar Ghosh, MD & CEO, Bandhan Bank, the loss reported during the quarter is a “one off” and is mainly due to the accelerated provisioning undertaken. However, the bank is expecting credit growth and collection efficiency to improve going forward.

“We have seen substantial improvement in collections as the second wave of Covid subsided. We have recognised the stress pool and proactively taken additional requisite provisions such as to meet any contingency requirements and we look forward to do business on a clean slate. This has resulted in loss for the quarter,” he told newspersons at a virtual conference on Friday.

The provision on NPA accounts stands at around ₹1,500 crore resulting in Provision Coverage Ratio of 74 per cent as against 62 per cent in Q1FY22. In addition to this, it has also provided additional standard assets provision amounting to ₹2,100 crore and provision on restructured assets amounting to ₹1,030 crore amounting to total of ₹4630 crore, the bank said in its investor presentation.

Collection efficiency improved by around 200 basis points to 88 per cent (86 per cent in June quarter) during the quarter under review.

Gross non-performing asset (NPA) as a percentage to advances increased to 10.82 per cent (1.18 per cent), net NPA went up to 3.04 per cent (0.36 per cent).

“There is an improvement in asset quality and now that the asset quality challenges is behind us we should be able to push ahead with growth,” he said. The bank expects business to be back to pre Covid levels by the end of this fiscal.

The bank’s total business (deposits and advances) grew 15 per cent year-on-year to reach ₹1.64-lakh crore as on September 30, 2021.

During the second quarter of the current financial year, its deposit book grew 24 per cent over the corresponding quarter of the previous year. The total deposits stand at ₹81,898 crore. The current account and savings account (CASA) book grew by 45 per cent year-on-year, and the CASA ratio now stands at close to 45 per cent of the overall deposit book.

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Housing and realty sector heading into the best of times, says Deepak Parekh

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


The country’s housing and real estate sector is heading into the best of times, said Deepak Parekh, Chairman, Housing Development Finance Corporation.

“Right now, there is a lot of optimism in the air on the potential of the housing and real estate sector. This isn’t just feel good talk, it is real. The Indian real estate market is on the cusp of a new growth cycle and it is important that we make the best of it,” Parekh said at the CREDAI Financial Conclave 2021 on Friday.

Parekh said that in his over 50 years of work life, he has not seen better housing affordability in the country, such easy liquidity conditions and record low interest rates and such “burning desire” to be a homeowner than in these current times.

Parekh said India is fortunate not to have a housing bubble and said the inherent demand for housing remains immense and concerted efforts have been made to ensure supply at the right price points to meet the needs of various income groups.

Apart from sales, new projects have also been launched, which he termed as “the greatest mark of confidence for the future”.

Noting that a developer’s reputation is of the foremost importance in the real estate business, Parekh said they must focus on reputation and resolution.

“Both these go hand in hand. Choose a resolution path that bails you out the fastest, not necessarily the path that maximises your returns,” he advised them.

Defaulter tag

Parekh also stressed that a defaulter tag is hard to shake-off. “Financial regulators are not willing to look at real estate non-performing loans through a different lens,” he said, adding that financiers have no choice and have to respect the views of the regulators.

While adequate provisioning can be made against NPAs, incremental funding for these projects to be completed becomes difficult, he said, adding that then it triggers a vicious cycle of no other lender wanting to step in either.

He also stressed on the need for a Credit Linked Subsidy Scheme version 2.0, stating that “it has been amongst the best executed and impactful government schemes”.

Parekh stated that both, financiers and developers should continue to work on affordable homes, as the segment has the greatest demand.

He also called on banks and NBFCs to continue to support the credit needs of the real estate sector.

“We need more homes, more commercial premises, more construction and for the Indian economy to grow at its true potential, credit growth cannot stay tepid at a mere six to seven per cent,” he said.

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Firm reports net loss of Rs 3,008 cr on higher provisioning, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


New Delhi: Private sector lender Bandhan Bank on Friday reported a huge loss of Rs 3,008.60 crore for the second quarter ended September 30, as the surge in bad loans led to a rise in provisioning. The bank had posted a net profit of Rs 920 crore during the corresponding quarter of the previous fiscal.

Total income of the bank in July-September 2021-22, however, rose 6 per cent to Rs 2,427 crore, as against Rs 2,289.9 crore in the year-ago period, Bandhan Bank said in a regulatory filing.

The net interest income increased marginally by 0.6 per cent to Rs 1,935.40 crore, even as the non-interest income jumped 34 per cent to Rs 491.60 crore during the reported quarter.

The bank’s provisions (other than taxes) rose multi-fold to Rs 5,577.9 crore in Q2 FY22 against Rs 379.6 crore in the year-ago quarter.

There was a dent in the lender’s asset quality as the gross non-performing assets (NPAs or bad loans) spiked to 10.8 per cent of the gross advances as of September 30, 2021, against 1.2 per cent a year ago.

Likewise, the net NPAs jumped to 3.04 per cent from 0.36 per cent.

“We have recognised the stress pool and proactively taken additional requisite provisions such as to meet any contingency requirements and to look forward to do business on a clean slate. This has resulted in a loss for the quarter,” Chandra Shekhar Ghosh, Managing Director and CEO of Bandhan Bank, said.

During the quarter, the bank has seen a substantial recovery in collections as the second wave of COVID subsided, he added.

“However, it will help us to concentrate on fresh business growth and to concentrate towards achieving our long term goals with renewed energy,” Ghosh said.

Shares of Bandhan Bank closed 2.36 per cent down at Rs 291.50 apiece on BSE.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

IndusInd Bank raises Rs 2,800 cr debt capital via bonds, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


New Delhi: Private sector IndusInd Bank on Friday said it has raised Rs 2,800 crore by issuing bonds on private placement basis.

The Finance Committee of the board of the bank in its meeting approved allotment of 2,800 rated, listed, non-convertible, subordinated and unsecured Basel III compliant bonds in the nature of debentures towards non-equity regulatory tier 2 capital (T2 bonds) for cash aggregating to Rs 2,800 crore, the bank said in a regulatory filing.

The bonds, sto mature in 10 years, bear a coupon rate of 8.11 per cent payable annually.

The bonds are rated AA+ by Crisil and India Ratings.

IndusInd Bank stock traded at Rs 1150.50 apiece on BSE, down 2.12 per cent from previous close.

Follow and connect with us on , Facebook, Linkedin



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

RBI board reviews economic situation, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


The Central Board of Directors of the RBI on Friday reviewed the current domestic and global economic situation and challenges.

The board also deliberated upon possible measures for addressing the emerging challenges, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) said in a release.

The 591st meeting of the board was held under the Chairmanship of Governor Shaktikanta Das. His tenure as the Governor has been extended by three years up to December 2024.

“The board also congratulated the Governor on his reappointment,” the central bank said.

According to the release, the board also discussed the working of sub-committees of the central board and activities of a few Central Office Departments, including the nationwide survey among bank customers regarding banks’ grievance redress system and the functioning of the Ombudsman schemes.

Deputy Governors Mahesh Kumar Jain, Michael Debabrata Patra, M Rajeshwar Rao, and T Rabi Sankar attended the meeting. Other directors on the board — N Chandrasekaran, Satish K Marathe, S Gurumurthy and Sachin Chaturvedi — were also present.

Besides, Debasish Panda, Secretary, Department of Financial Services and Ajay Seth, Secretary, Department of Economic Affairs, attended the meeting.

Das was appointed the RBI’s 25th Governor on December 11, 2018 for a period of three years after the abrupt resignation of his predecessor Urjit Patel.

He is the first RBI Governor to get extension after the BJP-led government came to power in 2014.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

‘Rural economy is in a good position for the next 2-3 years’

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Sentiments in rural India has turned positive with the ebbing of the second Covid wave and a good harvest, said Ramesh Iyer, Vice-Chairman and Managing Director, Mahindra & Mahindra Financial Services.

The company is back on the growth track with a consolidated net profit of ₹1,102.94 crore in the second quarter of the fiscal and 61 per cent year on year growth in disbursements. Going forward, the availability of vehicles will be a key factor, he said in an interview with BusinessLine. Edited Excerpts:

Has business normalised after the second Covid wave?

After the first quarter, I had said things are returning back to normal in the rural economy. Of course, that time we were still using the term subject to the third wave, but it seems there has not been a severe third wave impact and the sentiments have definitely turned positive. Most of the businesses are slowly and steadily getting back to normal, which automatically means there is a better utilisation of vehicles.

Also read: Mahindra & Mahindra Financial Services Q2 net profit up at ₹1,103 crore

This trend is likely to continue and with good monsoons, good harvest and support price, we expect the farm cashflow to be good. Third, now even the infrastructure will open up in the rural market. So, with these three factors, I believe that the rural economy is in a good position for the next two to three years. The only two issues at this stage are the availability of vehicles for which the supply side has to improve.

Once that improves, you know, the business volumes will pick up. And the second is that diesel petrol prices gone up, and that has had some impact on the viability of the operators. But if the price is going to be at this level, then even the freight rates and the passenger fares will go up.

How far does the supply issues in the auto sector and diesel prices impact consumer sentiment?

We would have done another 15 per cent to 20 per cent more in disbursements, if the inventory had no problem. If the supply continues to remain like this, obviously the loss of volume will be higher.

High diesel prices are a very recent phenomena and it should not have a major impact on the sales because anyway vehicles are in short supply, people are willing to wait. The real impact will be on the commercial use of the vehicle – taxi and goods transportations. Unless they are able to price the customer or the freight rates, it can act as some pressure.

What is your expectation on disbursements?

We are back in growth in disbursement. Disbursements grew by 61per cent year on year on year to ₹6,475 crore in the second quarter of the fiscal. Going forward, asset growth will begin to happen. Growth in the second half will depend on vehicle availability. Otherwise, the growth rate will be in the same range that we are seeing already. Being one of the best borrowers, we also have a good benefit of cost of funds and our margins are healthy.

Are the restructured accounts an issue? Will you consider writing back some of the provisions?

We have restructured 1,04,130 contracts. But people don’t want to only pay as per the restructured contract. They will pay more than the restructured EMI if they start earning more. Then there is a possibility for us to reclassify these accounts.

Also read: Tech Mahindra looking to hire talent from Tier-2 cities and overseas markets

We have classified 96,391 contracts in Stage whereas they could have stayed typically been classified in the zero stage or Stage 1. Once we see they start paying regularly, then it’s an opportunity to restate the restructuring. On writing back of provisions, it is too early to say. We will wait for two or three quarters performance. Once the gross NPA continues to keep coming down the way we have seen in this quarter, then definitely we may not require a substantial overlay to be carried forward.

What is your view on the scale based framework for NBFCs announced by the RBI?

There was already a draft paper on this and I do not see too much of a regulatory change in the framework. FIDC had requested the RBI to give time to the smaller NBFCs for stage wise moving to 90 days, which the RBI has done. Most NBFCs like us will be in category two or NBFC-upper layer and we are already subject to a lot of on-site inspections, regulations and capital adequacy requirement.

Also read: IT firms poaching talents to meet 5G service demand

It’s good that NBFCs of different sizes get classified differently and the big ones will not have to suffer if something goes wrong with a smaller NBFC or vice versa. Also, today all NBFCs are looked at as one in terms of borrowings. Maybe tomorrow, there will be a carve out separately for each category of NBFC with a separate limit. We have to wait and see how this classification gets utilised going forward.

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

MoS Finance Karad urges banks to improve credit penetration in NE states, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Minister of State for Finance Bhagwat Karad has asked lenders to improve banking access points and also increase credit penetration in north-eastern states. Karad, who is on a week long tour to Assam, Tripura and Manipur, reviewed the performance of various flagship schemes of the government aimed at expediting development in the north-east.

The minister advised banks through the State Level Bankers’ Committee (SLBC) to increase general awareness about the Public Sector Banks Doorstep Banking Service (PSB DBS) that can be registered by the customers, an official statement said.

Under the scheme various services like pick-up services for cheques, drafts, pay orders and new cheque book, etc, can be availed at doorstep without visiting the branch. This facility launched earlier this year is currently limited to a few locations in the country.

With regard to greater physical presence, SLBC members promised opening 56 new bank branches and 150 bank correspondence (BC) facilities in Assam by March 2022. Among these, 34 will be established by public sector banks while the remaining 22 by private banks.

He attended Credit Outreach Program in these states and encouraged banks to give loans to required segments.

To bolster financial inclusion, he asked banks to promote the PM Jan Dhan Yojana (PMJDY) accounts for citizens that have recently attained majority.

The minister advised them to promote safe credit practices with sound dissemination of financial knowledge. PTI DP ANS ANS



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Bank Holidays November 2021: Banks to remain shut for up to 17 days; check full list here

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


There is also going to be one long weekend in states where banks are closed for Guru Nanak birthday on 19 November 2021.

2021 Bank Holidays in November: Banks will be closed for up to 17 days across the country in November 2021. The banks remain open on the first and third Saturdays every month and close on the second and fourth. There is also going to be one long weekend in states where banks are closed for Guru Nanak’s birthday on 19 November 2021. Except for Bengaluru, all the banks will observe a holiday on Diwali Amavasya (Laxmi Pujan). It may be noted that apart from the weekly offs, banks will not be closed for all 17 days for all states as these are state-specific holidays for different occasions.

Bank holidays in November 2021

1 November 2021: Kannada Rajyostsava/Kut
3 November 2021: Naraka Chaturdashi
4 November 2021: Diwali Amavasaya (Laxmi Pujan)/Deepavali/Kali Puja
5 November 2021: Diwali (Bali Pratipada)/Vikram Samvant New Year Day/Govardhan Pooja
6 November 2021: Bhai Duj/Chitragupt Jayanti/Laxmi Puja/Deepawali/Ningol Chakkouba
10 November 2021: Chhath Puja//Surya Pashti Dala Chhath (Sayan ardhya)
11 November 2021: Chhath Puja
12 November 2021: Wangala Festival
19 November 2021: Guru Nanak Jayanti/Karthika Purnima
22 November 2021: Kanakadasa Jayanthi
23 November 2021: Seng Kutsnem

On 1 November, banks in Karnataka and Manipur Kannada will be closed. Banks in Karnataka will be closed on 3 November. On Deepawali Pujan day, banks will be closed in all states except Karnataka. On Bali Pratipada, banks will be closed in Gujarat, Karnataka, Uttar Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Sikkim and Himachal Pradesh. While on Bhai Duj, banks in Sikkim, Manipur, and Uttar Pradesh will be closed.

Banks in Bihar will observe a holiday on account of Chhath Puja on 10 November and 11 November 2021. While banks in Meghalaya will remain on 12 November 2021. On Guru Nanak Jayanti, banks will be closed in states such as Maharashtra, Delhi, Uttar Pradesh, Jharkhand, Jammu and Kashmir, among others. Bank in Karnataka will remain closed on 22 November and those in Meghalaya will remain closed on 23 November.

Weekend Bank Holidays in November 2021

07 November 2021: Sunday
13 November 2021: Second Saturday
14 November 2021: Sunday
21 November 2021: Sunday
27 November 2021: Fourth Saturday
28 November 2021: Sunday

Even as banks will remain shut on the above-mentioned days, customers can avail online services. Moreover, mobile and internet banking will remain operational. The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has categorised holidays under three categories — Holiday under Negotiable Instruments Act; Holiday under Negotiable Instruments Act and Real-Time Gross Settlement Holiday; and Banks’ Closing of Accounts. The list of holidays given below has been notified by RBI.

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

RBL Bank shares tank 15% on disappointing numbers in Q2, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


New Delhi: Shares of RBL Bank tanked as much as 15 per cent in Friday’s session after a disappointing set of numbers in the September 2021 quarter.

The private sector lender reported a 78 per cent year-on-year (YoY) decline in its September quarter net profit at Rs 31 crore on a jump in asset quality issues but guided towards a better second half, with improved ratios.

Following the announcement of results, shares of RBL Bank slid as much as 15 per cent to Rs 172.1, before making some recovery to trade at Rs 177.75 at 10.05 am. BSE Sensex was down 258 points or 0.43 per cent at 59,726 around the same time. RBL Bank shares had settled at Rs 201.40 on Thursday.

The gross non-performing assets ratio increased to 5.40 per cent from the year-ago period’s 3.34 per cent and 4.99 per cent in the quarter-ago period.

The overall provisions jumped to Rs 651 crore from Rs 487 crore in the year-ago period and the preceding quarter’s Rs 1,384 crore.

Shares of RBL Bank have underperformed benchmark indices in the last one year. The scrip has risen merely 2 per cent compared to a 50 per cent rise in BSE barometer Sensex.

The non-interest income increased 42 per cent to Rs 593 crore in Q2 on a fee income growth and the management hopes it will do well as the credit card issuances got restarted after an impact because of the restrictions on Mastercard.

The fresh slippages came at Rs 1,217 crore with a bulk of them coming from the microfinance book and the credit card portfolio, which had been impacted because of the second wave.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

WazirX finds cryptocurrency Shiba Inu too hot to handle

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


 

A record-breaking rally and frantic trading in meme-themed cryptocurrency Shiba Inu disrupted crypto exchange WazirX as its systems could not keep up with the volumes. Listed exclusively on WazirX in India, Shiba Inu is the 11th largest cryptocurrency with a market cap of $32 billion.

According to traders on WazirX, though the money was transferred from the bank, the orders could not get executed or once placed, they could not get cancelled. Also, those who traded on Wednesday did not get details of their transactions till Thursday morning.

“We are investigating the delays in the WazirX app and website. The team is working on scaling up the systems and will update as soon as it is fixed. Sorry for the inconvenience,” WazirX told its clients in a communication without giving any reason for the tech disruption.

When contacted, Nischal Shetty, CEO, WazirX said, “In the last 24 hours, WazirX clocked a trading volume of over $566 million. This is the highest volume recorded by any crypto exchange in India ever. We also witnessed an all-time high in terms of sign-ups, active traders and concurrent users. It’s over 40X of what we had seen before.”

Dream run

Shiba Inu has been on a dream run ever since Vitalik Buterin, the founder of the world’s second-largest cryptocurrency Ethereum, donated around $1 billion (₹7,324 crore) worth of Shiba Inu coins to India’s Covid Crypto Relief Fund. Buterin is a Russian-Canadian programmer and writer, known to be close to Elon Musk.

Shiba Inu was founded in 2020 by an anonymous person going by the Japanese name Ryoshi who put it on the blockchain network to decentralise its operations.

The rally in Shiba Inu can be attributed to the petition on Change.org urging Robinhood, a trading platform, to list the meme-inspired currency. The petition has received more than three lakh signatures.

With inputs from

Debangana Ghosh

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

1 64 65 66 67 68 540