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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Bandhan Bank eyes reduction in group microfinance loans

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Bandhan Bank is looking to bring down the share of group microfinance loans to around 50 per cent by March 2022 and to 30 per cent of its total loan book in the next four to five years.

Diversify asset mix

The share of group loan to the total loan book of the bank, which was around ₹81,660 crore, currently stands at close to 57 per cent.

The bank plans to grow the share of individual loans which are typically not restrained by ticket size (as in the case of group loans) to around 20–30 per cent (of its total loan book) from the current 10 per cent as a part of its strategy to diversify its asset mix.

Group to individual loans

According to Chandra Shekhar Ghosh, MD & CEO, Bandhan Bank, the bank is in the process of upgrading some of their group loan borrowers into individual loanees. The bank chooses some of its existing borrowers under group loan model who have been doing well and generating “good income”. It also checks for the credit quality using data from credit bureaus before upgrading the customer into an individual borrower.

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

“We developed this product (group loan to individual loan) about two years back and we have tested the system and processes. It has witnessed a very good growth of around 155 per cent on a y-o-y basis. Individual loans account for around 14 per cent of our total microcredit book and in the future we are looking to diversify group loan to individual loan,” Ghosh told BusinessLine.

Save on time

While there may not be much of a difference in terms of interest paid by both set of borrowers, individual loanees are usually not required to attend group meetings which are organised on a weekly or fortnightly basis, thereby saving time. Staff can utilise the time to grow other businesses.

Besides, unlike in group loans where there is a cap on the amount that can be disbursed to a particular group (by a set of lenders), in individual loans that is not the case and the bank can extend a loan based on the viability of the business model, Ghosh said. Moreover, the bank would also be free to cross-sell other products including housing loan, consumer loan etc to these customers, thereby bringing in more business in the future.

Vision 2025

The bank, which had unveiled its Vision 2025 last year and laid out a roadmap for diversification, expects the plan to get pushed back by a few months due to Covid induced slowdown and its impact on businesses.

As on September 30, 2021, its total advances stood at ₹81,660 crore. Of this, group microcredit (EEB Group) accounted for around 57 per cent, individual loans (EEB Individual) around 10 per cent, commercial 8 per cent, housing 24 per cent, and retail one per cent.

Also see: RBI approves Bandhan Bank as ‘agency bank’ to conduct govt biz

Under Vision 2025, the share of group loans should come down to 30 per cent; individual and commercial loan together should account for around 30 per cent; housing would be another 30 per cent and the share of retail is expected to increase to 10 per cent.

“Our Vision 2025 plans may get delayed by one year because of this Covid…. we should get a clearer picture next year and we would be able to revise our plan accordingly,” Ghosh said.

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Bandhan Bank gets empanelled as agency bank of RBI

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We are indeed grateful for this opportunity,” said Chandra Shekhar Ghosh, managing director and chief executive officer.

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has authorised private sector lender Bandhan Bank as its agency bank for undertaking government businesses. The appointment would allow the Kolkata-based lender to undertake government businesses on behalf of the RBI. With this, Bandhan Bank joins ranks with a few other scheduled private sector banks to be empanelled as agency banks of the RBI, the lender said in a release on Monday.

As an agency bank of the RBI, authorised to undertake government business, the bank will be able to handle transactions related to collection of state taxes and revenue receipts such as the GST and VAT; collection of stamp duty and pension payments on behalf of the central and state governments.

“The bank’s extensive branch network, especially in rural and semi-urban areas; state-of-the art products and services; and digital banking capabilities will help it discharge its duties effectively by bringing governments and citizens closer to each other,” the release said.

“Since its launch six years ago, Bandhan Bank has been dedicated towards bringing millions of Indians into the fold of formal financial services and catalysing the creation of sustainable livelihoods. The RBI’s decision to authorise Bandhan Bank to undertake government business as an agency bank will further help us contribute to nation building; and we thank the RBI for this approval. Bandhan Bank enjoys the trust of over 2.4 crore customers, and now, we have the opportunity to serve the government with our banking services. We are indeed grateful for this opportunity,” said Chandra Shekhar Ghosh, managing director and chief executive officer.

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RBI approves Bandhan Bank as ‘agency bank’ to conduct govt biz

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The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has authorised Bandhan Bank as an agency bank for undertaking government business. With this, the bank joins ranks with a few other scheduled private sector banks to be empanelled as agency banks of the RBI.

The announcement comes close on the heels of a RBI guideline earlier in May this year that authorises scheduled private sector banks as agency banks of the regulator for the conduct of government business.

The guidelines were revised by the Central bank following the lifting of embargo put in place by Department of Financial Services, Ministry of Finance in 2012 on further allocation of government business to private sector banks through a communication dated February 24, 2021.

Handle transactions

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

The bank’s extensive branch network, especially in rural and semi-urban areas, and its digital banking capabilities would help bring governments and citizens closer to each other, the bank said in a press statement.

“The RBI’s decision will further help us contribute to nation-building and we thank the RBI for this approval. Bandhan Bank enjoys the trust of over 2.4 crore customers. We now have the opportunity to serve the government with our banking services,” Chandra Shekhar Ghosh, MD & CEO, Bandhan Bank said in the statement.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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



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Confident that NPAs will reduce ‘substantially’ in next few months: Bandhan Bank

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In absolute terms, NPAs of the bank soared to Rs 8,763.60 crore from Rs 873.97 crore for the corresponding period last fiscal.

Private sector lender Bandhan Bank, which witnessed a massive 10-fold year-on-year rise in its non-performing assets (NPAs) for the second quarter this fiscal, has said it is confident that the NPA level will reduce “substantially” in the next few months as there is clear visibility of improving asset quality day-by-day.

The bank on Friday reported a whopping net loss of Rs3,008.59 crore for the second quarter on the back of Rs5,577.92 crore provisions as the lender saw a huge surge in bad loans. In absolute terms, NPAs of the bank soared to Rs8,763.60 crore from Rs873.97 crore for the corresponding period last fiscal. On a quarter-on-quarter basis, NPAs grew 36% from Rs 6,440.38 crore in the first quarter this fiscal.

“The option was to take it (provisions) over three quarters or take it upfront. But what happens is if I take it over three quarters, the people, the readers will not get the sense of what is the level of stress and how long it can remain. Today, when I am taking it upfront, I am taking the entire possible stress portfolio, whether it is restructuring or whether it is NPA upfront. As I am fully provided, going forward, it will be business as usual and you will see the real strength of Bandhan Bank what it used to be in the pre-pandemic period,” Sunil Samdani, chief financial officer, Bandhan Bank, told FE on Saturday.

During the second quarter, the bank made an accelerated provision on NPA accounts of around Rs1,500 crore. In addition to this, it also provided an additional standard assets provision amounting to around Rs 2,100 crore and provision on restructured assets amounting to around Rs 1,030 crore.

Asked about the Rs2,100 crore provisioning on the standard accounts, Samdhani said, “It is not that we are seeing stress against our standard book. Since we have restructured some accounts, when they come out of restructuring, surely there will be some portions that will fall into the NPAs. So, against that we have taken this provisioning.”

Bandhan Bank MD and CEO Chandra Shekhar Ghosh said this was a “right time” to make one-time provisioning and focus more on future growth. “In the ground level, there are very good improvements. The scenario is becoming normal as Covid-related lockdown restrictions have been removed in most parts of the country. Business is coming back. This is the right time we go for one-time provisioning and focuss more on future growth. It is better to make provision in one quarter and then register profits in the subsequent quarters,” Ghosh pointed out.

“Our bank’s collection efficiency on month-on-month basis improving in a good way. Credit growth is coming back. Whatever we are seeing now, we may see normalcy in the third quarter itself,” he said.

In a post-earnings conference call on Friday, Ghosh said the majority of the bank’s customers are either part paying or full paying their dues. “There is clear visibility of improving asset quality day-by-day. In the last month alone, we have seen that per day 14,000 customers standardized their accounts every day. I firmly believe that the most difficult period with respect to Covid-related disruptions and asset quality challenges are behind us,” he said. The lender was now in a position to accelerate the next phase of its growth with a strong balance sheet, he emphasised.

“If economic growth is coming back as the recoveries come in, there is a strong possibility of a part of this provisioning getting retained back. With credit growth rising, collection efficiency improving, recoveries gathering steam, we are confident that our NPA level will reduce substantially in the next few months,” Ghosh added.

Samdani, during the post-earnings conference call, said the bank was very confident that by the end of this fiscal it would be able to recover around Rs6,000 crore of bad loans. “If we look at collections, disbursement and demands from customers and DPD (days past due) position, there has been substantial improvement,” he added.

In September, the lender’s collection efficiency for non-NPA customers stood at 94%. Sector-wise, EEB (erstwhile microbanking segment) collection efficiency stood at 93% as against 77% in June. In Assam and West Bengal, collection efficiencies improved.

During the second quarter this fiscal, the bank’s gross NPAs as a percentage of total loans increased 964 basis points on year-on-year basis to 10.82% from 1.18% during the same quarter last fiscal. On a quarter-on-quarter basis, the gross NPA ratio soared 264 basis points from 8.18% in Q1FY22.

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Bandhan Bank posts whopping Rs 3,009-crore loss in Q2 as bad loans surge

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During the period under review, the bank made an accelerated provision on NPA accounts of around Rs 1,500 crore. It also provided an additional standard assets provision amounting to Rs 2,100 crore and provision on restructured assets amounting to Rs 1,030 crore.

Private sector lender Bandhan Bank on Friday reported a whopping net loss of Rs 3,008.59 crore for the second quarter this fiscal, on the back of Rs 5,577.92-crore provisions as the lender saw a huge surge in bad loans.

In absolute terms, non-performing assets (NPAs) of the bank, which had posted a net profit of Rs 920 crore in the second quarter last fiscal, soared 10-fold year-on-year to Rs 8,763.60 crore in the second quarter this fiscal from Rs 873.97 crore in the year-ago period. On a quarter-on-quarter basis, NPAs grew 36% from Rs 6,440.38 crore in the first quarter.

During the period under review, the bank made an accelerated provision on NPA accounts of around Rs 1,500 crore. It also provided an additional standard assets provision amounting to Rs 2,100 crore and provision on restructured assets amounting to Rs 1,030 crore.

Addressing a virtual press meet, Bandhan Bank MD & CEO Chandra Shekhar Ghosh said, “It was a very critical quarter. But not just for us, everyone is undergoing the same. We recognised this reality and strengthen our balance sheet to be prepared for the future business. All stresses are assessed and finalised in this moment. And then, the bank made a one-time additional provision. This quarter total provisioning was Rs 5,578 crore. Due to such provisioning, the bank has reported a loss of around Rs 3,000 crore in this quarter…it is not a loss, it is like taking some break comfortably, so that from today, we can only focus on business growth and quality of the portfolio.”

Ghosh said the bank believed that this provisioning should be “sufficient” to take care of any previous asset quality issues on account of the ongoing pandemic as well as protect it against the disruptions caused by any potential third wave.

During the second quarter this fiscal, the bank’s gross NPAs as a percentage of total loans increased 964 basis points on year-on-year basis to 10.82% from 1.18% during the same quarter last fiscal. On a quarter-on-quarter basis, the gross NPA ratio soared 264 bps from 8.18% in Q1FY22.

Net interest income (NII) for the quarter stood at Rs 1,935.41 crore, against Rs 1,923.09 crore in the year-ago period. Net interest margin (NIM) stood at 7.6%, down 4 bps from 8% for Q2FY21.

Ghosh informed that collection efficiencies improved in the September quarter and credit growth came back to nearly the pre-Covid situation. Growth in loan and advances for the bank in this quarter was 7%.

“For the EEB segment (erstwhile microbanking segment), collection efficiency was 83% in June, and now it is 129%, which is a very strong message to the bank from the customers on how they are coming back to the pre-pandemic situation. In the EEB segment, around 9% of our customers had not paid any instalment in June, while in September this number was only 4%. Now, around 79% of our customers are paying full instalments, while the number was 62% in June. September onward, it will gradually improve. We hope that in the future it will be better for the bank. We remain hopeful that if things continue to improve in the country from here now, we would reach our pre-Covid efficiency in the next couple of quarters,” Ghosh added.

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

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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.

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

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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.



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Bandhan Bank’s collection efficiency improves sharply, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Private sector lender Bandhan Bank said its collection efficiency improved to 90% at the end September from 80% three months back with the easing of lockdowns and fall in number of Covid-19 active cases that offered relief and room for economic recovery.

The bank’s repayment collection from microfinance vertical, which contributes about a third of its loan portfolio, also improved to 86% from 72% over the same period, the bank said in a regulatory filing to stock exchanges.

Bandhan’s loan asset rose 7% year-on-year to Rs 81668 crore at the end September. Deposit mobilisation jumped 24% to Rs 81898 crore, the provisional data for this quarter showed.

Loans data as on September 30, 2021 are before considering write-offs, if any, the bank said.

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