Emkay Global, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The recent Reserve Bank of India clarification on banks’ promoter holdings is likely to benefit IndusInd Bank, if the central bank does not have any issues related to the promoters, Emkay Global said in a report.

In IndusInd Bank, the Hinduja brothers hold a 16.5 percent stake. The increase in promoter stake will boost the bank’s financial strength, and their clients will be protected.

The RBI had recently clarified that the promoters who have recently reduced their holdings to below 26% and want to increase it back, can approach the central bank. The promoter will have a choice to bring down the promoter holding to below 26% after the initial locking period is over.

The RBI retained the norm to maintain a minimum (floor) of 40% of paid-up voting equity share capital by the promoter for the first five years, but there is no cap on the promoters’ holdings in the initial five years, Emkay highlighted. That said, the cap on the promoter’s stake over 15 years has been raised from 15% to 26%, which was implemented in the case of Kotak Mahindra Bank.

Non-promoter shareholding will be capped at 10% of the paid-up voting equity share capital of the bank for natural persons and non-financial institutions and at 15% for all categories of financial institutions, supranational institutions, public sector undertaking or government. If this is allowed, then possibly HDFC may not had to bring its stake in Bandhan to 10%, Emkay said.

In the case of invoking pledged shares of a bank, the pledgee’s voting rights will be restricted to 5% till the time the pledgee obtains permission from the RBI for the regularisation of the acquisition of these shares.

The RBI has retained non-operative financial holding company (NOFHC) as the preferred structure for all new licences to be issued for universal b anks, but it will be mandatory only in cases where the individual promoters, promoting entities or converting entities have other group entities, the report said. However, banks currently under NOFHC, such as IDFC First Bank and Bandhan Bank, may be allowed to exit such a structure if they do not have any other group entities in their fold.

The RBI has given in-principle approval to IDFC First Bank-Bandhan Bank, but IDFC will have to first divest stake in its MF/tech businesses for a reverse merger with IDFC First Bank, while Bandhan Bank is not keen on diluting the structure as of now, the report said.

Furthermore, on the relaxation of the listing norms for future small finance banks (SFBs), existing SFBs in queue, including Utkarsh, Fincare, Jana, ESAF, and even the recently-formed Unity SFB, may not get any relief. However, Unity SFB, which is a venture between BharatPe and Centrum, could have different terms, given the potential acquisition of beleaguered PMC Bank.

Small finance banks can now list within eight years from the date of commencement of operations against the earlier condition of within three years of reaching a net worth of Rs 5 billion, and against the demand for 10 years. For universal banks, the listing requirement remains the same, that is after six years of commencement of operations.



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Bank branch addition drops 82% in FY21; bankers bet on phygital model, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The branch addition by banks fell to a decade low in fiscal 2021, felled by digitisation, pandemic and growth of alternative channels such as business correspondents.

Banks added only 1,383 branches in FY2021 as against 7,728 branches in FY2020.

As of March-end 2021, the network of offices of scheduled commercial banks increased to 1,54,485 from 1,53,102 as against a year ago, as per RBI data.

The consolidation of banks into five large banks too led to a drop in the number of branches as banks went for right sizing of operations following the amalgamation of several PSBs.

Phygital model

Even as there is a surge in adoption of digital banking, physical branches will continue to be relevant as a large percentage of customers are more comfortable doing transactions at branches, according to bankers.

Banks should make efforts in educating customers about various aspects of digital banking so that they can conveniently use these channels.

“I think branches, as a mode or a channel, will not be totally discounted. There is still a significant population who will be more comfortable in one-to-one dealings rather than only digital.

“Therefore, this world of physical plus digital or phygital will be the way forward,” State Bank of India Managing Director Ashwini K Tiwari said at ETBFSI Converge.

City Union Bank Managing Director and CEO N Kamakodi said that though the older generations are much comfortable with the manual banking channel, many of them are now trying to use the digital channel also.

“Around 90 per cent of the banking transactions in India have now started moving into the non-branch channel such as internet banking, mobile banking or ATM. The number of transactions happening at the branches are in single digit,” he said.

Business correspondent growth

The business correspondent outlets of public sector banks in villages have shrunk during 2016 and 2020 while private banks have shown positive growth.

“PSBs dominated the number of BC outlets in villages, but during the review period, on account of consolidation, their BC outlets showed negative growth,” according to an RBI study said.

PSBs’ share in BC village outlets has dropped marginally to 57 per cent in 2020 from 60 per cent in 2016.

The growth in BC outlets in villages was also negative for regional rural banks.

The share of PSBs in BC outlets in rural areas has remained consistently above 60% over the years, being the highest among the bank groups.

Private banks shine

As PSBs continued to maintain their hold, PVBs too registered a higher growth in both access and usage indicators during the review period. There was a growth in BC outlets in villages for PVBs with the growth being significantly high for the north-eastern, eastern and central regions, surpassing the growth of PSBs and RRBs together.

PVBs also significantly improved their tally of urban BC outlets during the five years with their share growing from 77 per cent in 2016 to 97 per cent in 2020. On similar lines, contribution of PVBs in the total number of BC agents too grew exponentially from 37 per cent in 2016 to 80 per cent in 2020.

The BC model grows

“From being an alternate delivery model, the BC model is emerging as the predominant delivery model. While the growth in number of rural branches remained subdued during the review period, there was a significant growth in BC outlets in both villages and urban pockets providing formal financial services at the doorstep of large number of unserved/underserved population,” the study said.

The study noted that about 56 per cent of total Basic Savings Bank Deposit Accounts (BSBDAs) and 65 per cent of General Credit Cards (GCCs) were channelled through BCs. While BCs of public sector banks (PSBs) dominated the deposit space, private sector banks (PVBs) accounted for a major share in GCCs through BCs.

During the review period, the total transactions routed through BC outlets increased considerably both in terms of volume as well as value, it said.



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HDFC, Axis Bank sold Reliance Capital debt facilities to ACRE, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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A few months before the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) superseded the board of Reliance Capital (RCap), Ares SSG Capital-backed Assets Care & Reconstruction Enterprise (ACRE) acquired debt facilities from HDFC and Axis Bank at 27-28 paise on a rupee.

ACRE, an asset reconstruction company, purchased a ₹524-crore term loan from housing finance company HDFC Ltd and a ₹100-crore term loan and ₹490-crore non-convertible debentures (NCDs) from Axis Bank, the people said. Both trades were carried out on an all-cash basis, one of the persons cited above said.

HDFC and Axis Bank were the only two lenders that had provided term loans to RCap, according to the company’s annual report for the financial year March 31, 2021.

The Anil Dhirubhai Ambani Group-promoted finance company has total liabilities of ₹19,123 crore.

Axis Bank sold two 8.85% NCDs maturing in 2026 amounting to ₹488.2 crore and one 9% NCD maturing in 2026 of ₹1.85 crore to Assets Care & Reconstruction in the secondary bond market in October.

Default Category
The trade with HDFC was concluded in June, the people cited above said. HDFC had an outstanding loan of ₹524 crore and interest overdue of ₹79 crore as of March 31, 2021.

HDFC, Axis Bank and ACRE did not respond to the request for comment. The debt facilities of RCap were downgraded to D – indicating default category – in September 2019 by CARE Ratings, when it missed payments on NCDs.

RCap, having been in default for over two years, saw its board superseded on Monday. In a statement, RBI said it had done this given the “defaults by Reliance Capital in meeting the various payment obligations to its creditors, and serious governance concerns, which the board has not been able to address effectively.” The company’s total liabilities include NCDs of ₹16,260 crore, term loans of ₹625 crore and inter-corporate deposits of ₹561 crore. It has also issued a corporate guarantee of ₹1,677 crore.

In June last year, ET reported that Deutsche Bank had purchased ₹565 crore of Reliance Capital bonds at a discount of 70% in the secondary market through seven transactions.

RBI will approach the National Company Law Tribunal between Friday and Monday to admit the finance company for corporate insolvency resolution process, one of the persons cited above said. Y Nageswara Rao, a former executive director at Bank of Maharashtra, has been appointed administrator of RCap. The ADAG-promoted Reliance Capital is registered as a core investment company with RBI, with investments in general and life insurance, asset management, stockbroking, housing finance, wealth management and asset reconstruction.



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Bank officers’ union launches nationwide movement against privatisation, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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New Delhi, Bank officers’ union on Tuesday launched nationwide movement against proposed privatisation of stat-owned lenders. ‘Bank Bachao Desh Bachao Rally’ was held at New Delhi’s Jantar Mantar on Tuesday attended by officers and other stakeholders from various parts of the country, the All India Bank Officers’ Confederation (AIBOC) said in a statement.

Addressing the rally, AIBOC General Secretary Soumya Datta appealed to the government to withdraw the Banking Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2021, which has been listed for introduction and passing in the winter session of Parliament.

“In case the government tables and passes the bill paving the way for the privatisation of the public sector banks, the bank officers will unite all the stakeholders of the banking sector and launch a nationwide agitation,” he said, urging the bankers to draw inspiration from the farmers movement.

Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman while presenting Budget 2021-22 earlier this year had announced the privatisation of public sector banks (PSBs) as part of disinvestment drive to garner Rs 1.75 lakh crore.

The Banking Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2021, to be introduced during the session is expected to bring down the minimum government holding in the PSBs from 51 per cent to 26 per cent.

In the last concluded session, Parliament passed a bill to allow privatisation of state-run general insurance companies.

The General Insurance Business (Nationalisation) Amendment Bill, 2021, removed the requirement of the central government to hold at least 51 per cent of the equity capital in a specified insurer.

The Act, which came into force in 1972, provided for the acquisition and transfer of shares of Indian insurance companies and undertakings of other existing insurers in order to serve better the needs of the economy by securing the development of general insurance business.

Government think-tank NITI Aayog has already suggested two banks and one insurance company to Core Group of Secretaries on Disinvestment for privatisation.

According to sources, Central Bank of India and Indian Overseas Bank are likely candidates for the privatisation.



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Reliance Capital’s public shareholders to take big hit; Anil Ambani barely hurt

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Public shareholders of Reliance Capital, holding over 97 per cent in the company, will take a major hit with the RBI superseding the NBFC’s board even as the ousted promoter-Chairman, Anil Ambani, walks away, barely bruised, as he had reduced his stake to less than 2 per cent by March 2020 from over 52 per cent in December 2018.

Even as the promoters were selling the shares, retail investors were lapping them up. Data with BSE show that the promoter group, led by Anil Ambani and his family, owns just 1.51 per cent stake as on September 30, 2021, while public shareholders held 97.85 per cent. Retail shareholders with a share capital of up to ₹2 lakh hold as much as 57.53 per cent.

 

 

Promoter stake cut, red flag

Foreign portfolio investors, who held as much as 22.74 per cent as on June 30, 2019, owned just 0.43 per cent by September 30, 2021. JN Gupta, Managing Director, Stakeholder Empowerment Services, said: “Past failures such as those at YES Bank and DHFL indicate that rarely a company with high promoter stake fails… The first red flag is when the promoter stake begins to come down. This should be a trigger for the RBI to sit up and take action, rather than wait till the company completely fails.”

LIC, with a stake of 2.98 per cent, is the single largest shareholder of Reliance Capital. Ramkrishna Reddy Chinta is another large shareholder (2.16 per cent), with his RKR Investments Services Private Limited holding a further 1.43 per cent. The RBI must re-look ownership norms, setting also a minimum threshold, Gupta said.

 

Advisory panel

Simultaneously, the RBI has constituted a three-member Advisory Committee to assist the Administrator of Reliance Capital. The members are Sanjeev Nautiyal, former Deputy Managing Director, SBI; Srinivasan Varadarajan, former Deputy Managing Director, Axis Bank; and Praveen P Kadle, former MD and CEO, Tata Capital.

 

RBI supersedes the board of Anil Ambani’s Reliance Capital

 

Reliance Capital shareholding      
       
  Promoter % Public % FPI %
Jun 30- 2018 52.23 47.14 17.13
Sept 30-2018 52.24 47.12 19.64
Dec 31-2018 52.24 47.12 16.5
March 31-2019 47.48 51.88 24.35
Jun 30- 2019 41.71 57.66 22.74
Sept 30-2019 40.41 58.95 13.67
Dec 31-2019 33.51 65.85 5.16
March 31-2020 1.51 97.85 0.24
Jun 30- 2020 1.51 97.85 0.42
Sept 30-2020 1.51 97.85 0.41
Dec 31-2020 1.51 97.85 0.39
March 31-2021 1.51 97.85 0.42
Jun 30- 2021 1.51 97.85 0.44
Sept 30-2021 1.51 97.85 0.

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Rupee Cooperative Bank gets RBI extension

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Rupee Cooperative Bank gets RBI extension

Rupee Cooperative Bank has been granted an extension for its banking licence by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) for another three months, up to February 2022. This is the 27th extension given by the RBI to the bank till date.

Rupee has submitted various options for resolution of the bank, which include an exploratory proposal for merger. The RBI has given an undertaking in the Bombay High Court to take an appropriate decision before December 31 with respect to the resolution of the bank, Sudhir Pandit, administrator of the bank, said.

Pandit said investors have approached the bank and a multi-state schedule cooperative bank has submitted a preliminary proposal for a merger for approval to the RBI. The RBI has invoked provisions of Section 18A (7) of the DICGC Amendment Act, 2021, and advised the DICGC to defer the refund of deposits up to Rs 5 lakh for another ninety months, he said.

The bank has recovered a total Rs 326.49 crore, earned operating profit aggregating to Rs 70.82 crore during the last five years and disbursed Rs 376.95 crore to 95,115 depositors under hardship withdrawal, according to the note.

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Non-food bank credit growth accelerates to 6.9% in October

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Non-food bank credit growth accelerated to 6.9 per cent in October 2021 as compared to 5.2 per cent in October 2020, according to the Reserve Bank of India’s data on sectoral deployment of bank credit.

Agri sector sees accelerated growth

Non-food bank credit growth was propelled by credit to agriculture and allied activities, industry and personal loans. A slowdown in credit growth to services continued.

RBI observed that credit to agriculture and allied activities continued to perform well, registering an accelerated growth of 10.2 per cent in October 2021 as compared to 7.2 per cent in October 2020.

Also see: Unwise to place a ban on private crypto assets: Report

Credit growth to industry picked up to 4.1 per cent in October 2021 from a contraction of 0.7 per cent in October 2020.

Credit to industries

Within industry, credit to medium industries registered a robust growth of 48.6 per cent in October 2021 as compared to 20.8 per cent last year. Credit to micro and small industries accelerated to 11.9 per cent in October 2021 from 0.7 per cent a year ago. Credit growth to large industries stood at 0.5 per cent in October 2021 as compared to a contraction of 1.8 per cent a year ago.

Credit growth of services decelerated to 2.9. per cent in October 2021 from 8.6 per cent a year ago.

Personal loans continued to grow at a robust rate of 11.7 per cent in October 2021 vis-a-vis 8.7 per cent in October 2020, primarily due to housing, vehicle loans and loans against gold jewellery.

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Visa announces new business heads for India and South Asia

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Visa India and South Asia Group Country Manager, T R  Ramachandran, will relocate to Singapore in the new year to assume a regional role leading the company’s newly created New Payment Flows business.

Sandeep Ghosh, most recently Partner and Leader of the Financial Services Consulting practice of EY for India, will take over from Ram.

Ram joined Visa in 2015 to lead Visa‘s business across India and South Asia. During that time, he has overseen a significant expansion of the company as Visa’s international capabilities helped support the burgeoning growth of electronic payments across his area of responsibility.

“As a prominent industry leader, Ram is well-known and respected in the industry,” said Chris Clark, Visa Inc regional president. “We’re excited to take his expertise across Asia Pacific.

“We’re also excited to welcome Sandeep to the team and cannot think of a better talent to take Visa’s success in the market to the next level,” said  Clark. “His deep experience in supporting clients to transform their businesses is exactly what is needed in such a dynamic market.”

 

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We will walk the talk on introducing crypto Bill in Parliament this session: Sitharman

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Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman on Tuesday said that the Government was working on a new Bill on cryptocurrency and that this Bill would be introduced in the ongoing session of Parliament after Cabinet approval.

The ongoing winter session of Parliament commenced on November 29 and is slated to end on December 23.

Replying to questions on cryptocurrency in Rajya Sabha today, Sitharaman said the new Bill takes into account the rapidly changing dimensions in virtual currency space and incorporates certain features of earlier Bill that could not be taken up.

‘Genuine intent’

She asserted that the government had “genuine intent” of introducing the Bill last time itself in the Monsoon session and that it would be incorrect to infer or conclude that the government would this time too not go ahead with enactment of law. “Once the Cabinet clears the new Bill, it will come into the House,” she said.

Sitharaman, however, did not indicate how the government intends to approach the issue of private cryptocurrency and whether the new Bill will look to ban private cryptocurrencies or not.

It may be recalled that a Bill on Cryptocurrency and Regulation of Official Digital Currency for introduction in the Lok Sabha had been recently included in the Lok Sabha Bulletin-Part II, as part of the government business expected to be taken up during the ongoing winter session.

According to the Lok Sabha Bulletin, the Bill seeks to create a facilitative framework for the creation of the official digital currency to be issued by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) for the ongoing winter session of Parliament. It also seeks to prohibit all private cryptocurrencies in India, however, it allows for certain exceptions to promote the underlying technology of cryptocurrency and its uses.

Asked if the government proposes to ban misleading advertisements on cryptos in the media, she told the Rajya Sabha on Tuesday that the guidelines of Advertising Standards Council of India are being studied and their regulations are also being looked into “so that we can take, if necessary, some kind of position or a decision to see how we can handle it”.

In a written reply to a few questions on cryptocurrency posed by Rajya Sabha members, Sitharaman said cryptocurrencies including non-fungible tokens are unregulated in India and the government does not collect data on transactions in cryptocurrency.

Crypto frauds

She also revealed that as many as eight cases of cryptocurrency frauds are under investigation by the Enforcement Directorate. “Further disclosure of information may not be in larger public interest”, she added.

Sitharaman also said the government, RBI and SEBI have been cautioning people about the cryptocurrencies that could be a “high risk” area and “more can be done” to create awareness.

A study was conducted by the government through a research firm on ‘Virtual Currencies: An Analysis of the Legal Framework and Recommendations for Regulation’ in July 2017. Thereafter, the government constituted an inter-ministerial committee (IMC) in November 2017 under the chairmanship of the secretary (economic affairs) to study issues related to virtual currencies and propose specific action to be taken in this matter.

The committee, inter-alia, recommended that all private cryptocurrencies be prohibited in India. The panel also recommended that it would be advisable to have an open mind regarding the introduction of an official digital currency in India.

Meanwhile, Minister of State for Finance Pankaj Chaudhary, said in a written reply that RBI has been cautioning users, holders and traders of virtual currencies vide public notices on December 24, 2013, February 1, 2017, and December 5, 2017, that dealing in virtual currencies is associated with potential economic, financial, operational, legal, customer protection and security-related risks.

Also, the RBI had, in a circular dated May 31, 2021, advised the regulated entities to continue to carry out customer due diligence processes for transactions on virtual currencies, in line with the regulations governing standards for know your customer, anti money laundering, combating of financing of terrorism, obligations under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act 2002, he said.

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Airtel Payments Bank appoints Pinak Chakraborty as Chief Information Officer

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Airtel Payments Bank has appointed Pinak Chakraborty as its Chief Information Officer. In his new role, Chakraborty, a seasoned technology professional,will lead Airtel Payments Bank’s overall technology strategy and be responsible for digital innovation and transformation of products and services, sources close to the development said.

Prior to joining Airtel Payments Bank, he was heading product engineering for PayMaya, a fintech based out of the Philippines. Chakraborty is an engineering graduate in Computer Science and Engineering from NIT Silchar and has completed a post graduate certification from IIIT Hyderabad. He has 14 patents granted by the US Patent Office in the areas of application of machine learning and natural language processing.

At Airtel Payments Bank, Chakraborty will be a member of the Bank’s Executive Committee and will work closely with the bank’s MD and CEO, Anubrata Biswas and COO Ganesh Ananthanarayanan, sources added.

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