Low bad loans may help Utkarsh Small Fin Bank look good on IPO Charts, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Utkarsh Small Finance Bank which has filed preliminary papers with markets regulator Sebi to raise Rs 1,350 crore through an initial share sale, has the lowest bad loans ratio among peers.

The bank’s deposits and disbursements grew at a CAGR of 54.48 per cent and 33.66 per cent, respectively during FY18-20.

The lender’s gross loan portfolio has grown at 44% CAGR since its start in FY18.

Loan book has remained stagnant in the last six months till September due to the pandemic, in line with its peers such as AU Small Finance Bank Ltd and Equitas Small Finance Bank Ltd.

Its gross non-performing assets are down to 0.71% as of March 2020 from 1.85% two years before that, but up from 0.64% in September 2020. About Rs 26.9 crore loans were not labelled as bad due to the Covid moratorium.

Collection efficiency

Collection efficiency is down with the bank able to collect 79.28% of its dues as against 90-95% rate before the pandemic.

The bank has the lowest level of bad loans among peers and is better poised to show faster improvement once the pandemic ends.

Deposits

The bank’s deposits grew by 14% during April-September with the share of its low-cost CASA deposits going up to 14.46% as of September, which will help in margins.

While the portfolio is dominated by microfinance assets, growth in newer segments has risen and the bank’s main focus is to diversify the asset portfolio.

The issue

The Initial Public Offer (IPO) comprises a fresh issue of equity shares worth Rs 750 crore and an offer of sale to the tune of Rs 600 crore by promoter Utkarsh Coreinvest Ltd, according to the Draft Red Herring Prospectus (DRHP) filed with Sebi.

The Varanasi-headquartered lender said it may also consider raising Rs 250 crore through a pre-IPO placement which would be in consultation with the lead managers to the issue.

The utilisation

The Proceeds from the fresh issue would be utilised to augment the Tier 1 capital base to meet future capital requirements.

As on September 30, 2020, the small finance bank across 528 banking outlets served 2.74 million customers, majorly located in rural and semi-urban areas in Bihar, Uttar Pradesh and Jharkhand that have a significant untapped market.



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Former SBI chairman Rajnish Kumar joins Baring as adviser, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Rajnish Kumar, former chairman of State Bank of India, has taken up an advisory role with Baring Private Equity Partners India four months after his retirement from the country’s largest lender.

“Yes, I have joined Baring India,” Kumar told ET. “It’s an advisory role, I will not be on the board.” He did not elaborate on his likely role at the PE firm. People familiar with the development said Kumar will advise Baring on investments in India and Southeast Asia.

He follows the footsteps of Aditya Puri, former managing director of HDFC Bank, who recently joined global investment firm the Carlyle group as a senior advisor to guide them on Asia investments.

Baring Private Equity (Asia), one of the largest global alternative investment firms, and its existing credit funds have made 21 investments across mid-sized companies and deployed around $310 million. Baring, known for its big-ticket buyouts, manages around $21 billion across Asia.

Kumar, who comes with a rich experience of 40 years, is expected to advise the Baring team on scouting portfolio investments and likely opportunities, and help improve businesses at portfolio companies.

Kumar, who retired from SBI in October last year, is credited to have made the lender much more resilient to absorb asset quality shocks, completed the mega merger of seven banks with SBI, and made the public sector lender an all-rounded digitally savvy bank.

Under Rajnish Kumar, SBI’s bad loans improved by a third with gross bad loans at Rs 1.29 lakh crore in the first quarter of the current financial year against Rs 1.86 lakh crore in the second quarter of the fiscal year 2018. During the same period, the bank’s gross non-performing asset ratio improved to 5.44% from 9.97%.



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Is there a case for a bad bank?

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The economic uncertainties from the Covid -19 pandemic has once again re-opened the debate on the need for setting up a bad bank to take care of the fresh wave of bad loans and also free up resources for lending.

While the Finance Ministry is understood to be examining such a proposal, Reserve Bank of India Governor Shaktikanta Das also recently said the central bank is open to look at such a plan.

Significantly, the Economic Survey 2020-21 has been silent on the issue of a bad bank but has pointed out the need for an asset quality review after the current forbearance ends and a re-capitalisation of banks to spur lending.

All eyes are now on whether Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman will announce such a plan in the Union Budget 2021-22 or will look at other ways to resolve the challenges in the banking sector.

The RBI in its latest Financial Stability Report has estimated that the gross NPAs of banks may increase from 8.5 per cent in March 2020 to 12.5 per cent by March 2021 under the baseline scenario and the ratio may escalate to 14.7 per cent under a very severely stressed scenario.

This is already becoming evident in the third quarter results of banks that reflect increased stress and lenders are gearing up to meet a fresh wave of NPAs.

 

HDFC Bank had said if it had classified accounts as NPA after August 31, 2020, the proforma gross NPA ratio would have been 1.38 per cent as on December 31, 2020 as against reported 0.81 per cent.

For Yes Bank, the proforma gross NPA would be nearly at 20 per cent as against the reported 15.36 per cent for the third quarter this fiscal.

In their pre-Budget interactions, setting up of a bad bank has been a key wish list for many stakeholders and experts. Industry chamber CII had urged the Finance Minister to consider such a proposal and allow multiple bad banks.

Explaining the rationale, veteran banker and CII President Uday Kotak had said, “In the aftermath of Covid-19 it is important to find a resolution mechanism through a market determined price discovery. With huge liquidity both globally and domestically multiple bad banks, can address this issue in a transparent manner and get the credit cycle back in action.”

Prashant Kumar, Managing Director and CEO, Yes Bank, also said it would be good for the economy. “We are the first ones to support the idea of a bad bank and we are working on our own ARC. I think a bad bank coming in any form would be really good for the economy,” he had recently told BusinessLine.

Analysts point out that a bad bank would lower the re-capitalisation need for public sector banks in the new fiscal year and boost incremental lending by banks.

Banks could become more cautious on lending if bad loans rise. The Survey highlighted that credit growth slowed down to 6.7 per cent as on January 1, 2021 from 14.8 per cent in February 2019.

Not a new idea

The idea of a bad bank is not a new proposal but has been revisited a couple of times in the last few years.

As the name suggests, a bad bank will buy the bad loans of financial sector entities so that they can clean up their balance sheets and move ahead with lending.

One such entity was set up in 1988 for US based Mellon Bank and other such agencies have been set up in countries including Ireland.

The proposal of setting up a bad bank in India had previously come up in the Economic Survey 2016-17, which had suggested setting up of a centralised Public Sector Asset Rehabilitation Agency (PARA) to take charge of the largest, most difficult cases, and make politically tough decisions to reduce debt.

In June 2018, then Finance Minister Piyush Goyal had set up a committee to examine whether transferring NPAs of PSBs to an ARC or a bad bank was a suitable proposal.

Many not in favour

But, there have also been many arguments against a bad bank, with reservations within the government and RBI at various points of time.

Funding could be an issue in a year when the government is hard pressed for resources. In its proposal submitted in May last year, Indian Banks’ Association had suggested an initial outlay of ₹10,000 crore.

But the main issue is that banks would have to sell the bad loans and take a haircut, which would impact its P&L. Until this issue is addressed, creating a new structure may not be as potent in addressing the problem.

A recent note by Kotak Institutional Equities had also said bad bank is perhaps well served in the initial leg of the recognition cycle.

“Today, the banking system is relatively more solid with slippages declining in the corporate segment for the past two years and high NPL coverage ratios, which enable faster resolution,” it said, adding that setting up such an agency today would aggregate but not serve the purpose observed in other markets.

As of now, the problem of NPAs are held at bay as the Supreme Court verdict is pending. Setting out a strategy to tackle the looming issue is critical – if not a bad bank, then via other options.

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Economic Survey: Governance, key to end zombie lending

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The Economic Survey 2020-21 has raised the issue of zombie lending. It has noted that apart from from re-capitalising banks, it is important to enhance the quality of their governance.

“Ever-greening of loans by banks as well as zombie lending is symptomatic of poor governance, suggesting that bank boards are ‘asleep at the wheel’ and auditors are not performing their required role as the first line of defence,” it said, adding that to avoid ever-greening and zombie lending following the current round of forbearance banks should have fully empowered, capable boards.

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IDBI Bank back in black, posts ₹378-cr net profit in Q3

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IDBI Bank reported a net profit of ₹378 crore in the third quarter ended December 31, 2020 against a net loss of ₹5,763 crore in the year ago period.

The bottomline was buoyed by a 89 per cent year-on-year (yoy) decline in provisions for bad loans, ₹ 105 crore write-back in provisions for depreciation in investments and ₹ 323 crore profit the Bank booked by selling a portion of its stake in its life insurance joint venture.

Net interest income (difference between interest earned and interest expended) was up 18 per cent yoy at ₹ 1,810 crore (₹ 1,532 crore in the year ago period).

Other income, including income activities such as commission, fees, earnings from foreign exchange and derivative transactions, profit and loss from sale of investments and recoveries from written off accounts, increased 7 per cent yoy to ₹1,368 crore (₹ 1,279 crore).

Bad loans

Gross non-performing assets (GNPAs) declined to ₹ 3,532 crore during the reporting quarter.

GNPAs declined to 23.52 per cent of gross advances as at December-end 2020 against 25.08 per cent as at September-end 2020.

Net NPAs declined to 1.94 per cent of net advances as at December-end 2020 against 2.67 per cent as at September-end 2020.

With proforma slippages (adjusted for the Supreme Court’s interim order), Gross and Net NPA ratio would have been 24.33 per cent and 2.75 per cent, respectively.

A break-up of the provisions shows that provisions towards NPAs and bad debts written-off declined to ₹ 49 crore (₹ 440 crore) and ₹ 208 crore (₹ 332 crore), respectively.

However, provisions towards standard assets rose to ₹624 crore (₹ 68 crore).

In its notes to accounts, the Bank said it has made additional provision of ₹ 941 crore over and above the IRAC/ income recognition and asset classification norms (includes shifting of ICA/ Inter-Creditor Agreement provision of ₹ 395 crore to IRAC provision) in respect of certain borrower accounts in view of the inherent risk and uncertainty of recovery in these identified accounts.

Global gross advances were down 7 per cent yoy to stand at ₹ 1,59,663 crore. This was mainly due to 18 per cent yoy decline in corporate advances. Retail advances edged up 1 per cent.

Total deposits increased about 3 per cent yoy to ₹ 2,24,399 crore. The share of low-cost of current account, savings account (CASA) in total deposits improved to 48.97 per cent from 47.65 per cent in the year ago quarter.

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GNPA situation may not turn as bad, say analysts, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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In the quarter-ended September 2020, the GNPA ratio of scheduled commercial banks improved to 7.7% against 9.3% in the year-ago period. India’s banking sector did see a decrease in its gross non-performing assets (GNPA) owing to the moratorium offered by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) and due to recoveries and higher write-offs by the multiple banks.

Going forward, some believe the stressed asset formation outlook is anticipated to be more benign than what was earlier expected. “The biggest change in outlook has been the formation of stressed assets which, at the start of the pandemic, we had anticipated to be around 10-12% of banks’ loan books. However, based on our recent channel checks with rating agencies, corporate banking heads of banks, consultants and also feedback from KV Kamath Committee, we expect overall stressed asset formation to halve to 5-6%,” said a report by Macquarie Research.

One of the biggest reasons for this is lower restructuring in the corporate segment. Macquarie pointed out that many large corporates haven’t sought restructuring and only a dozen large companies (with exposures greater than Rs 15 billon) have opted for it restructuring. It, however, expects the retail NPLs to increase in the next few quarters and can touch a 10-year high. “We draw comfort from the fact that collection efficiencies (CE%) from September to December 2020 have been high in the mid-90s, despite 40% of the loan book under moratorium as of August 31, 2020. Hence, we have reduced the credit cost estimates cumulatively for FY21E-FY23E by 150bps for private sector and 120bps for PSU banks to 550bps and 650bps, respectively,” it added.

Meanwhile analysts at BofA Securities have also turned hopeful. Anand Swaminathan, Research Analyst, BofAS India, said, “Asset quality is no longer an existential risk in mid-2020, Indian banks’ asset quality has been surprisingly resilient. Our channel checks further support few risks of negative surprises near term. Moreover, new disbursals are already back to above pre COVID levels in most segments. After NPA recognitions are dealt with in 1H, we expect growth tailwinds to emerge in 2H.”

He also believes that capital and liquidity have never been better, and this should help cushion downside risks from asset quality and net interest margins and help further consolidate market share gains in 2021. Further, multiple government and regulatory measures have been a major help for asset quality in 2020 and this will support the growth revival in 2021, he added.

Swaminathan, however, noted new NPA formation could throw some surprises, and this may disturb the pace of growth recovery.

In fact, last week, RBI came out with its Financial Stability Report, in which it said banks’ GNPA may rise to 13.5% by September 2021, from 7.5% in September 2020 under the baseline scenario. The GNPA ratio of PSBs may increase from 9.7% in September 2020 to 16.2% by September 2021; that of PVBs (private banks) to 7.9% from 4.6% in 2020; and FBs’ (foreign banks) from 2.5% to 5.4%, over the same period. Under the baseline scenario, it would be a 23-year-high. The last time banks witnessed such NPAs was in 1996-97 at 15.7%, showed the RBI data.

And in case of severe stress scenario, the GNPA ratios of PSBs, PVBs and FBs may rise to 17.6%, 8.8% and 6.5%, respectively, by September 2021. The GNPA ratio of all SCBs may escalate to 14.8%. This highlights the need for proactive building up of adequate capital to withstand possible asset quality deterioration, said the report.

Most experts view the performance of financial sector will remain under pressure on account of lack of credit uptake, risk aversion, lower fee income and covid-related provisioning, but some banking analysts have predicted light at the end of the tunnel.



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RBI open to examining bad bank proposal, says Shaktikanta Das; wants lenders to identify risks early

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The RBI Governor said that the idea of a bad bank has been under discussion for a long time.

Reserve Bank of India Governor Shaktikanta Das today said that the central bank is open to looking at a proposal around setting up a bad bank. “Bad bank under discussion for a long time. We at RBI have regulatory guidelines for Asset reconstruction companies and are open to looking at any proposal to set up a bad bank,” Shaktikanta Das said while delivering the 39th Nani Palkhivala Memorial Lecture on Saturday. Das touched up on a range of issue during the event as he lauded the role played by the RBI during a pandemic.

Bad Bank for India?

The RBI Governor said that the idea of a bad bank has been under discussion for a long time now but added that the RBI tries to keep its regulatory framework in sync with the requirement of the times. “We are open (to look at bad bank proposal) in the sense, if any proposal comes we will examining it and issuing the regulatory guidelines. But, then it is for the government and the private players to plan for it,” Das said. He added that RBI will only take a view on any proposal only after examining it. 

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The Idea of setting up a bad bank to help the banking system of the country has picked up after Economic Affairs Secretary, Tarun Bajaj earlier last month, said that the government is exploring all options, including a bad bad, to help the health of the lenders in the country. However, earlier in June last year, Chief Economic Advisor Krishnamurthy Subramanian had opined that setting up a bad bank may not be a potent option to address the NPA woes in the banking sector.

Discussion the idea of bad banks, domestic brokerage and research firm Kotak Securities this week said that it may be an idea whose time has passed. “Today, the banking system is relatively more solid with slippages declining in the corporate segment for the past two years and high NPL coverage ratios, which enable faster resolution. Establishing a bad bank today would aggregate but not serve the purpose that we have observed in other markets,” a recent report by Kotak Securities said.

Banks, NBFCs need to identify risks early

Looking ahead, Shaktikanta Das said that integrity and quality of governance are key to good health and robustness of banks and NBFCs. “Some of the integral elements of the risk management framework of banks would include effective early warning systems and a forward-looking stress testing framework. Banks and NBFCs need to identify risks early, monitor them closely and manage them effectively,” he added.

Talking about recapitalising banks, the RBI governor said that financial institutions in India have to walk on a tight rope. The RBI has advised all lenders, to assess the impact of the pandemic on their balance sheets and work out possible mitigation measures including capital planning, capital raising, and contingency liquidity planning, among others. “Preliminary estimates suggest that potential recapitalisation requirements for meeting regulatory norms as well as for supporting growth capital may be to the extent of 150 bps of Common Equity Tier-I 10 capital ratio for the banking system,” Shaktikanta Das said.

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Given uncertainty induced by Covid-19 and its real economic impact, asset quality set to worsen sharply: RBI

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Fresh slippages remained the highest among PSBs.

Reserve Bank of India (RBI) on Tuesday cautioned the modest bad loan ratio of 7.5% at end-September 2020 end “veils the strong undercurrent of slippage” warning of a sharp decline in asset quality. The central bank pointed out the financial performance of the banking sector in H1FY21 had been shored up by the moratorium and the standstill in asset classification. “Going forward, although the risks to the banking sector remain tilted upwards, much hinges around the pace and spread of the economic recovery that is gradually gaining traction in H2: 2020:21,” RBI noted.

The accretion to NPAs, as per the RBI’s income recognition and asset classification (IRAC) norms, would have been higher in the absence of the asset quality standstill provided as a Covid-19 relief measure. “Given the uncertainty induced by Covid-19 and its real economic impact, the asset quality of the banking system may deteriorate sharply, going forward,” it said.

The moderation in the gross non performing asset (GNPA) ratio, which started after the peak in March 2018, continued through FY20 and FY21 so far, to reach 7.5% by end-September 2020. The improvement was driven by lower slippages which declined to 0.74% in September 2020 and resolution of a few large accounts through the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC).

Fresh slippages remained the highest among PSBs.

Going forward, with gradual rollback of policy measures, deterioration in asset quality may pose challenges, although build-up of buffers like Covid-19 provisions and capital raising from market may help alleviate the stress, the central bank observed.

After a gap of two consecutive years, the loan growth at SCBs decelerated in 2019-20, reflecting both risk aversion and tepid demand. During the current financial year so far, this was accentuated by the Covid-19 pandemic.

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We believe can recover 50% of Rs 40,000-crore bad loans: Prashant Kumar, MD and CEO, YES Bank

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The October-December quarter witnessed 75% of the credit ratings being reaffirmed.

By Malini Bhupta

Barely nine months after the moratorium was imposed on Yes Bank, the private sector lender is on the road to recovery. Prashant Kumar, MD and CEO, in an interview with Malini Bhupta, says operating profits and recoveries would be sufficient to provide for credit costs and it would not need to consume capital. Excerpts:

Nine months after the moratorium was imposed, can you say the Yes Bank turnaround story is complete?

The moratorium was imposed on March 5 and I joined the next day. At that point, the expectation was that the bank would be merged with SBI. Customers lacked confidence and it reflected in deposit outflows. In September 2019, deposits stood at Rs 2.1 lakh crore and those came down to Rs 1.05 lakh crore in March 2020. The bank’s CD ratio was at 166% at the time, as it was not able to raise substantial capital during FY20. And within a week of this, the nationwide lockdown due to the COVID-19 situation was imposed. At SBI, we always believed that we are capable of dealing with any situation. With SBI having a 49% stake in the bank, we embarked on the bank’s journey of transformation, and failure was not an option. The bank had raised Rs 1,930 crore through QIP in August 2019.

To rebuild the confidence of the stakeholders, it was not only important to recognise the problems, but also be transparent about them. If you don’t recognise the problem, there can be no solution.

What was critical for the turnaround of the bank?

After 12 days, the bank came out of the moratorium and I was clear that communicating with customers and employees would be the key. Every day, I was talking to customers and our employees. The bank announced the December 2019 results on March 14 and we provided 73% on our GNPAs.

Three things were very critical for the turnaround. First, the quality of our human resources. Second, the customer engagement and service, and third the digital and technology capabilities of the bank. The entire payment system of the country was paralysed during the moratorium and some players did move on to other banks. However, when the moratorium was lifted, most of the customers came back to us with the feedback that other banks could not handle the traffic.

What about the bank’s ability to cover credit costs?

The most critical aspect for any bank is its machinery to generate the operating profit. Despite the COVID-19 situation, the bank could generate operating profits, which was used to provide for credit costs, showing a profit both in Q1 and Q2 of FY21. We already had 75% provisions for NPAs, but COVID-19 has a separate impact on the loan book. Operating profits and recoveries would be sufficient to provide for credit costs and we would not need to consume capital.

How are you planning to chase recoveries and that too in times like these?

We created a separate vertical within the bank for stressed assets. This team’s responsibility is recovery and resolution of stressed assets. We have a wonderful team of 75 people and we are engaging with customers every week. The board reviews it every month. While this is against nobody, but since it is public money, I need to recover it. We have recovered Rs 1,000 crore in the first two quarters, and for this year, our target is to recover Rs 5,000 crore. Each account needs a different strategy and genuine customers need to be supported. We believe we can recover 50% of Rs 40,000 crore of bad loans.

What about the bank’s financials after taking the hit upfront after you took over?

If you see, our operating profit is back to last year’s levels and we are firmly on track to grow the business and generate profit. Today, while we cannot recognise NPAs due to COVID-19, we are making provisions. We have made provisions of ~Rs 2000 crore but more will be required, which will be met from operating profit (earned) in Q3 and Q4. Hopefully this, plus recoveries will be enough to meet our needs.

What about your capital ratios?

At present, our CET ratio is 13.4% and overall capital is at 20%. In a worst case scenario, 1-1.5% of capital may be needed to take care of the stress. Even then our capital will be at 12%. For any bank, it is important to generate operating profit which can take care of any surprise on the loan book.

What is Yes Bank’s strategy going to be once it puts its problems behind?

The bank will focus on retail. When we say more focus on retail, it does not mean that we will not focus on corporate. Earlier, corporate was 56% and retail/MSME was 44%. Our strategy is to increase the mix of retail/MSME to 60% over the medium term.

This is also because the corporate sector is not growing for a couple of reasons. No investments are coming from the private sector. On the working capital side too, the requirement from good corporates wasn’t there as they could raise money from the money markets. Good companies can raise money from money markets at 3.5%. So, if corporate demand is not there, you park your money in government securities or lend to retail. If you park money in government securities, then you are not a banker.

On the retail side, there is a huge demand. All banks have their own credit risk frameworks and because of your own constraints you can cater to a limited section of the society. Today, when NBFCs are missing from the market, it is a huge opportunity for banks.

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