Morgan Stanley appoints Anahita Tiwari as India global centers head, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Morgan Stanley has appointed Anahita Tiwari as their new head of India Global Centers. She will be responsible for the implementation of the firm’s global growth and deployment strategy in India.

“The Global Centers are an integral part of our business strategy and I am excited to join Morgan Stanley as the firm continues to invest in the growth of our highly talented and dynamic workforce in India. I am honored to be a part of this journey and look forward to contributing and working closely with the business and the global organization to create value.” she said.

Tiwari has over 25 years of experience in finance and technology consulting, project management, corporate finance, and business transformation, and will be based in Mumbai.

Earlier, she was the head of global finance and business management at JP Morgan Chase.

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Advisory fees of investment bankers drops to 3-year low at $761 million, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Advisory fees of investment bankers have fallen $761.5 million, the lowest in three years, said a report by Refinitiv, an entity owned by the London Stock Exchange.

During the first nine months of 2021, SBI Caps led the underwriting fees league table with 8.6 percent wallet share or $65.7 million. Morgan Stanley comes next with 6.3 percent with $48.1 million, followed by JPMorgan at 6.2 percent with $47.5 million.

Goldman Sachs stood at fourth with $46.7 million or 6.1 percent of the market pie. Axis Bank got $46.7 million or 6.1 percent share, while ICICI Bank had $40.4 million, 5.3 percent.

BofA Securities got $33.5 million for a 4.4 percent deal share, Kotak Mahindra Bank at $32.8 million, 4.3 percent, Citi at USD 29.1 million, 3.8 per cent, and Avendus Capital stood at the 10th place with $23.3 million for a 3.1 percent deal share.

ICICI Bank leads with $2.5 billion, 11.3 percent of the market share in ECM league table.

Since the deal making process is online, the i-banking fees have dropped as merchant bankers are charging less from their clients. Another reason for the drop is the higher average deal value size of $105 million, which was up 14.4 percent year-on-year with 17 deals topping the $1-billion mark and totalling $38.8 billion, compared with 12 deals above $1 billion worth a total of $30.1 billion on a year-on-year basis.



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Bank of Maharashtra cuts down lending rate by 10 bps, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Public Sector Lender, Bank of Maharashtra on Monday announced that it has reduced it’s Repo Linked Lending Rate (RLLR) from 6.90% to 6.80% with effect from 11 October, 2021. The 10 basis point reduction will make housing, car, education, MSMe and other loans cheaper.

“By reduction in RLLR our customers will be immensely benefited with zero processing charges in home loan, car loan and gold loan segments. This is going to add fillip to our customer satisfaction and bring cheers during the festive seasons,” said A S Rajeev , Managing Director, Bank of Maharashtra.

Additionally, the bank has also reduced its Marginal Cost of Funds based Lending Rate (MCLR) by 10 basis points. MCLR for overnight has been reduced to 6.70%, 1 month- 6.80%, 3 months- 7.10% and 6 months tenure to 7.15%. One year MCLR has been reduced by 5 bps to 7.25%.

Ahead of the festive season, the bank had earlier announced a processing fee waiver on home, car and gold loans. Post the new development, the home loan rate have been reduced to 6.8%, car loans to 7.05% and gold loans to 7%.



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India gets 3rd set of Swiss bank details under automatic info exchange framework, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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NEW DELHI/BERNE: India has received the third set of Swiss bank account details of with Switzerland as part of an annual exercise under which the European nation has shared particulars of nearly 33 lakh financial accounts with 96 countries.

The Federal Tax Administration (FTA) of Switzerland said in a statement on Monday that the exchange of information this year involved 10 more countries — Antigua and Barbuda, Azerbaijan, Dominica, Ghana, Lebanon, Macau, Pakistan, Qatar, Samoa and Vauatu.

While the exchange was reciprocal with 70 countries, Switzerland received information but did not provide any in the case of 26 countries — either because those countries do not yet meet the international requirements on confidentiality and data security (14) or because they chose not to receive data (12).

While the FTA did not disclose names and further details of all 96 countries, officials said India figured among those having received the information for the third year in a row and the details shared with Indian authorities pertained to a large number of individuals and companies having accounts in Swiss financial institutions.

The exchange took place last month and the next set of information would be shared by Switzerland in September 2022.

India had received the first set of details from Switzerland under AEOI in September 2019. It was among 75 countries to get such information that year. Last year, India was among 86 such partner countries.

According to experts, the AEOI data received by India has been quite useful for establishing a strong prosecution case against those who have any unaccounted wealth, as it provides entire details of deposits and transfers as well as of all earnings, including through investments in securities and other assets.

On the condition of anonymity, officials said the details relate mostly to businessmen, including non-resident Indians now settled in several South-East Asian countries as well as in the US, the UK and even some African and South American countries.

Switzerland had agreed to AEOI with India after a long process, including a review of the necessary legal framework in India on data protection and confidentiality.

The exchanged details include identification, account and financial information, including name, address, country of residence and tax identification number, as well information concerning the reporting financial institution, account balance and capital income.

For three years now, India has been among prominent countries with which Switzerland has shared these details.

Besides, Swiss authorities have already shared information about more than 100 Indian citizens and entities so far this year on receipt of requests for administrative assistance in cases involving probes into financial wrongdoings including tax evasion, the officials added. This count has been similar in the past few years.

These cases mostly relate to older accounts that might have been closed before 2018, for which Switzerland has shared details with India under an earlier framework of mutual administrative assistance as Indian authorities had provided prima facie evidence of tax-related wrongdoing by those account holders. AEOI is applicable only to accounts that are active or were closed during 2018.

Some of these cases relate to entities set up by Indians in various overseas jurisdictions like Panama, the British Virgin Islands and the Cayman Islands, while the individuals include mostly businessmen and a few politicians and erstwhile royals as well as their family members.

The officials, however, refused to share details about the exact number of accounts or the quantum of assets held in the accounts held by Indians, for which the information has been shared with India, citing strict confidentiality clauses governing the exchange framework.

The exchanged information allows tax authorities to verify whether taxpayers have correctly declared their financial accounts in their tax returns.

For the first time, Switzerland has also agreed this year to share details about real estate assets owned by foreigners there, but the information about contributions to non-profit organisations and other such foundations, as also details on investments in digital currencies still remain out of bounds from AEOI framework.

This is being seen as a key milestone in the Indian government’s fight against black money allegedly stashed abroad, as authorities will be able to get the complete information on flats, apartments and condominiums owned by Indians in Switzerland as also on earnings made from such properties to help it look into tax liabilities associated with those assets.

The move assumes significance on the part of Switzerland which is trying hard to reposition itself as a key global financial centre while warding off the long-persisting perception about the Swiss banking system being an alleged safe haven for black money.

Experts and those engaged in the business of attracting investments to Switzerland believe the move would also help clear misconceptions about all fund inflows into Swiss assets being illicit and would go a long way in establishing Switzerland as a preferred investment destination, including for real estate properties.

The FTA said it sent information on around 33 lakh financial accounts to the partner states and received information on around 21 lakh accounts from them.

“The FTA cannot provide any information on the amount of financial assets,” it added.

Switzerland’s first such exchange took place at the end of September 2018 and involved 36 countries, but India did not figure in the list at that time.

The Global Forum of the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) reviews AEOI implementation.



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Bank credit to grow at 7.5- 8.0 per cent for FY’22: CARE Ratings

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The outlook for bank credit growth is expected to be in the range of 7.5 per cent to 8.0 per cent for FY22 on the back of a low base effect, economic expansion, extended Emergency Credit (ECLGS) support, and retail credit push, according to CARE Ratings.

On a year-on-year (y-o-y) basis, non-food bank credit growth stood at 4.9 per cent in March 2021 as compared to 6.7 per cent in March 2020, per Reserve Bank of India data.

“The medium-term prospects look promising with diminished corporate stress and increased provisioning levels across banks. Retail loan segment is expected to do well as compared with industry and service segments,” the credit rating agency said in a report.

Q2 disbursements by some banks rise but overall loan growth muted

The agency assessed that y-o-y bank credit growth rate increased by 160 basis points (bps) to 6.7 per cent (fortnight ended September 24, 2021) from the year ago level of 5.1 per cent (fortnight ended September 25, 2020) and remained stable when compared with the previous fortnight.

“The y-o-y increase reflects the low base effect and the easing of lockdown restrictions across regions in India.

“In absolute terms, credit offtake increased by ₹ 6.8 lakh crore over the last twelve months and by ₹ 0.5 lakh crore as compared with the previous fortnight,” the report said.

Festive season credit pick up

The agency expects bank credit to improve further in the coming fortnights led by growth in the retail segment in the wake of onset of the festive season and rate cuts.

“This rise is expected to be supported by rate cuts by banks to push retail credit as several banks are offering loans at record low-interest rate ahead of the festive season,” the credit rating agency said in a report.

For example, in September 2021, banks like Kotak Mahindra Bank and Punjab & Sind Bank cut 1-year MCLR/ marginal cost of funds based lending rate (on m-o-m basis) by 5 basis points (bps) each, respectively.

Also, to attract borrowers several banks have slashed the home loan interest rates as a special offer in the festive season — for example, State Bank of India, Bank of Baroda and Kotak Mahindra Bank have reduced their home loan rates by 45 bps, 25 bps, and 15 bps, respectively, the report said.

Similarly, foreign banks have also started to pitch for home loans at lower interest rates. HSBC India reduced home loan interest rates by 10 bps to 6.45 per cent.

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Rupee slumps 17 paise to 75.16 against US dollar in early trade

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The Indian rupee depreciated 17 paise to 75.16 against the US dollar in opening trade on Monday, as rising crude prices and strength of the American currency in the overseas market weighed on investor sentiments.

At the interbank foreign exchange, the rupee opened on a weak note at 75.11, then fell further to 75.16, registering a decline of 17 paise from the last close.

On Friday, the rupee had settled at 74.99 against the US dollar.

Dollar index

Meanwhile, the dollar index, which gauges the greenback’s strength against a basket of six currencies, rose 0.08 per cent to 94.13.

According to Anil Kumar Bhansali, Head of Treasury, Finrex Treasury Advisors, “with oil above $82 and US yields higher, USD/INR may come down to a maximum of 74.80 where importers may hedge their near-term payable, while exporters may sit quite with a stop loss of 74.75.” Foreign institutional investors were net sellers in the capital market on Friday as they offloaded shares worth ₹64.01 crore, as per exchange data.

On the domestic equity market front, the 30-share Sensex was trading 214.43 points or 0.36 per cent higher at 60,273.49, while the broader NSE Nifty was trading 74.80 points or 0.42 per cent higher at 17,970.

Global oil benchmark Brent crude futures advanced 1.43 per cent to $83.57 per barrel.

Meanwhile, the 13th round of military talks between India and China did not produce any resolution of the remaining issues in eastern Ladakh, the Indian Army said on Monday a day after the dialogue.

It said the Indian side made “constructive suggestions” for resolving the remaining areas but the Chinese side was not agreeable to them and also could not provide any forward-looking proposals.

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Rupee slumps 17 paise to 75.16 against US dollar in early trade

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The Indian rupee depreciated 17 paise to 75.16 against the US dollar in opening trade on Monday, as rising crude prices and strength of the American currency in the overseas market weighed on investor sentiments.

At the interbank foreign exchange, the rupee opened on a weak note at 75.11, then fell further to 75.16, registering a decline of 17 paise from the last close.

On Friday, the rupee had settled at 74.99 against the US dollar.

Dollar index

Meanwhile, the dollar index, which gauges the greenback’s strength against a basket of six currencies, rose 0.08 per cent to 94.13.

According to Anil Kumar Bhansali, Head of Treasury, Finrex Treasury Advisors, “with oil above $82 and US yields higher, USD/INR may come down to a maximum of 74.80 where importers may hedge their near-term payable, while exporters may sit quite with a stop loss of 74.75.” Foreign institutional investors were net sellers in the capital market on Friday as they offloaded shares worth ₹64.01 crore, as per exchange data.

On the domestic equity market front, the 30-share Sensex was trading 214.43 points or 0.36 per cent higher at 60,273.49, while the broader NSE Nifty was trading 74.80 points or 0.42 per cent higher at 17,970.

Global oil benchmark Brent crude futures advanced 1.43 per cent to $83.57 per barrel.

Meanwhile, the 13th round of military talks between India and China did not produce any resolution of the remaining issues in eastern Ladakh, the Indian Army said on Monday a day after the dialogue.

It said the Indian side made “constructive suggestions” for resolving the remaining areas but the Chinese side was not agreeable to them and also could not provide any forward-looking proposals.

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China Evergrande bondholders brace for Monday’s coupon deadline

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Offshore bondholders of beleaguered developer China Evergrande Group were on Monday bracing for news on more than $148 million in looming bond coupon payments after the company missed two coupon deadlines last month.

Expectations that the company will make the semi-annual payments on its April 2022, April 2023 and April 2024 notes due October 11 are slim as it prioritises onshore creditors and remains silent on its dollar debt obligations.

That has left offshore investors worried about the risk of large losses at the end of 30-day grace periods as the developer wrestles with more than $300 billion in liabilities.

For Indian junk bonds, it’s love in the time of Evergrande

Evergrande’s troubles have sent shock waves across global markets and the firm has already missed payments on dollar bonds, worth a combined $131 million, that were due on September 23 and September 29.

Advisers to offshore bondholders said on Friday that they want more information and transparency from the cash-strapped property developer.

The offshore bondholders are also demanding more information about Evergrande’s plan to divest some businesses and how the proceeds would be used, the advisers said.

Explained: What is the Evergrande controversy all about?

Trading in shares of Evergrande, as well as its Evergrande Property Services Group unit, has been halted since October 4 pending a major deal announcement. On Monday, the company’s electric vehicle unit swung between large losses and gains, falling as much as 4.65 per cent and rising to 9.28 per cent.

Fantasia troubles

Evergrande contagion worries affecting the broader Chinese property sector spilled into heavy selling of Chinese high-yield dollar debt last week, particularly after smaller developer Fantasia Holdings Group Co missed the deadline on a $206-million international market debt payment on October 4.

Fantasia Group China Co said on Monday it will adjust the trading mechanism of its Shanghai-traded bonds following credit downgrades by China Chengxin International Credit Rating Co (CCXI), and said its parent had formed an emergency group to resolve liquidity problems.

Takeaways from Evergrande crisis for Indian investors

The move comes after the Shanghai Stock Exchange on Friday paused trading of two of Fantasia Group’s exchange-traded bonds following sharp falls, and echoes a similar adjustment in trading of Evergrande’s onshore bonds last month.

“We believe policymakers have zero tolerance for systemic risk to emerge and are aiming to maintain a stable property market, and policy support could be forthcoming if the deterioration in property activity levels worsens,” said Kenneth Ho, head of Asia Credit Strategy at Goldman Sachs.

“That said, we also believe that policymakers do not want to over-stimulate, and their longer term goal is to deleverage the property sector.”

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Banks set for a sharp earnings rise in Q2, may face asset quality jitters, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Indian banks’ earnings are likely to pick up in the September quarter, led by a recovery in business growth, fee income and a gradual reduction in credit costs.

However, they may be tempered by higher provisioning in the retail and small and medium enterprises (SME) loan segments that have seen higher delinquencies.

Earnings growth

Private banks are likely to report PPoP growth of 9% YoY (3.8% QoQ) and net profit growth of 14% YoY (17.3% QoQ). Earnings are likely to pick up, led by recovery in business growth / fee income and a gradual reduction in credit costs.

“Loan growth would pick up, led by revival in economic activity and the opening up of the economy. Demand going into the festive season and commentary around the FY22 outlook would be key monitorables. Retail and SME segment is likely to show strong recovery; though growth in the Corporate segment is likely to remain soft and recovery within this segment would be another monitorable,” according to Motilal Oswal Securities.

Banks are likely to report earnings growth of 41% in the fiscal year 2021-22, it said.

PSBs to report improved operating performance, supported by modest business growth and a gradual reduction in provisions. Opex is likely to remain elevated on account of the revised guidelines on pension provisions.

SBI NPAs may decline

As per analyst estimates, State Bank of India could post a further decline in bad loans and could see a moderation in credit costs. Private lender ICICI Bank appears firmly placed to deliver healthy sustainable growth, led by its focus on core operating performance. It may utilise higher buffers in case of a possible asset quality impact.

Exchange filings have shown HDFC Bank has posted strong credit growth in the September quarter and after the embargo being lifted on sanctioning credit cards, the bank is poised for a healthy revival in retail loans.

Estimates suggest that ICICI Bank could deliver 16.6% year-on-year loan growth, while Axis Bank and Kotak Mahindra Bank could grow over 9% each.

For state-run banks, operating expense is likely to remain elevated on account of the revised guidelines on pension provisions.

Asset quality

Asset quality could pose challenges with near-term slippages expected in the retail, SME and microfinance segments. Though analysts said there could be a decline over the June quarter.

Slippages would remain elevated, led by the Retail and SME segment; however, the quantum is likely to moderate, keeping asset quality in check – barring mid-sized banks, which could see marginal deterioration. Corporate slippages could see an uptick due to the downgrade of SREI Infra which is likely to get offset by the recoveries from DHFL resolution



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