Bank of Baroda plans to raise up to ₹4,000 crore via QIP

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Bank of Baroda (BoB) is planning to raise ₹2,000 crore to ₹4,000 crore via a qualified institutions placement (QIP) in the current quarter ending March 31, 2021.

Sanjiv Chadha, MD & CEO, said: “We are looking at accessing the market in the current quarter for a QIP, which might be in the ₹2,000 crore to ₹4,000 crore range.”

Chadha believes BoB’s capital position remains satisfactory as it has already raised about ₹3,700 crore by way of Additional Tier-1 (AT-1) bonds as against ₹4,500 crore it had targeted.

The BoB chief emphasised that if internal accruals and AT-1 inflows are added back (they are not added back in the third quarter as per accounting norms), the Bank’s capital adequacy ratio would have been at 13.41 per cent, which is pretty much the same level at which it had started the current financial year.

Referring to the optimum deployment of surplus in some short-term loans, which carried a higher risk weight of about 150 per cent, Chadha observed that going ahead, as these loans are paid off, there will be a release of capital. On average, BoB’s risk-weighted assets are about 50 per cent of loans.

“So, this capital release along with QIP and also the accruals that we expect, both in the balance part of this year as well as next year, we believe are adequate to take care of any kind of stresses that might be there as also our growth ambitions,” the BoB Chief said.

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SAT asks LIC, SBI, Bank of Baroda to develop protocols to comply with securities laws, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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MUMBAI: In a firmly-worded order, the Securities Appellate Tribunal urged state-owned enterprises to form protocols to comply with applicable laws and regulations.

“It is necessary that governmental entities, including public sector undertakings, need to develop protocols for coming out from being prisoners of protracted procedures for complying with applicable laws and regulations timely, because as legal entities accountability falls on them,” the Tribunal said.

The Tribunal said that all rules and regulations should be equally applicable to every legal entity irrespective of its ownership. “Only such an approach would bring in clarity and certainty to laws and regulations and a predictable rule of law regime,” it added.

SAT’s advise takes prominence in the context of concerns that the capital market rules are not applied in the same spirit to public sector undertakings as they are to private sector listed companies.

The Tribunal was presiding over an appeal made by Life Insurance Corp of India, Bank of Baroda and State Bank of India against a Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) order against them with respect to violations of certain mutual fund norms.

In August, the capital market regulator had imposed a fine of Rs 10 lakh each on the three appellants for violating SEBI’s mutual fund regulations, under which a sponsor of one mutual fund cannot hold a more than 10 per cent stake in another mutual fund.

LIC, SBI and Bank of Baroda each have their own mutual funds but also hold significant stakes in UTI Asset Management Co.

SAT has turned the monetary penalty for the three state-owned entities into a warning as it found no “justifiable” reasons to impose a monetary penalty on the violators.

“In these matters, a warning is sufficient. Further, SEBI is at liberty to impose penalty for similar violations in future,” the Tribunal said.



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Bank of Baroda signs MOU with SIDBI to support MSMEs, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Bank of Baroda signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) with the Small Industries Development Bank of India (SIDBI) to extend relief to MSME enterprises with an online facility of submitting their loan restructuring proposal.

Automated / Do-It-Yourself (DIY) web-portal ‘ARM-MSME‘ provides MSMEs with a platform to self-create their restructuring proposal with financial viability projections by iteration of multiple scenarios and relief options.The borrowers can also modify the online application or re-submit a new online application.

Dr. Ram Jass Yadav, Chief General Manager – MSME & Retail Business, Bank of Baroda, said, “As a bank, we are continuously working towards digitization and consumer friendly processes. This has led to our partnership with SIDBI for a platform like ARM-MSME, which will provide time saving convenient solution to MSMEs, at no additional cost. Through this partnership, we will hopefully assist numerous MSMEs who are in need of guidance.”

The Government of India and RBI has come up with several measures to support MSMEs to tide over the present pressing times post pandemic. Furthermore, RBI has extended the One-Time Restructuring (OTR) window till March 2021 to provide relief to MSMEs under financial stress, with credit exposure up to Rs. 25 crores.



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BoB signs MoU with SIDBI to enable MSMEs apply online for one-time restructuring

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Bank of Baroda (BoB) has signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) with the Small Industries Development Bank of India (SIDBI) to enable MSMEs (micro, small and medium enterprises) apply online for one-time restructuring (OTR).

The public sector bank’s MSME customers can now access the web-based portal, ‘Asset Restructuring Module for MSMEs (ARM-MSME)’. To support viable MSME entities (with credit exposure up to ₹25 crore), which are under financial stress due to the fallout of the Covid-19 pandemic, the central bank has allowed banks to consider OTR proposals from MSMEs, whereby the restructuring of the borrower account has to be implemented by March 31, 2021.

ARM-MSME is an automated / Do-It-Yourself (DIY) web-portal for MSMEs to self-create their restructuring proposal with financial viability projections by iteration of multiple scenarios and relief options, the bank said in a statement.

Existing MSME borrowers of the bank can avail the online facility of submitting the application for restructuring of loan accounts from the comfort of their home/office free of cost, it added.

BoB said borrowers can also modify the online application or re-submit a new online application, as per their convenience. This will help MSMEs prepare their restructuring proposals by keying in only the most essential data of their past and projected financials, the bank said.

Ram Jass Yadav, Chief General Manager – MSME & Retail Business, BoB, said: “Through this partnership, we will hopefully assist numerous MSMEs who are in need of guidance and currently seeking advisory for the one-time restructuring application from external sources as of today.”

 

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Bank of Baroda Launches WhatsApp Banking Services, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Bank of Baroda announced the launch of banking services on messaging app, WhatsApp. The services offered by the bank via WhatsApp will be balance inquiry, mini statement, cheque status enquiry, cheque book request, blocking of debit card, information on Bank’s product and services, register/apply for digital products etc.

A.K. Khurana, Executive Director, said, “We are consistently working towards introducing simple and innovative banking solutions using latest technologies. With the growing prominence of social media, we believe that WhatsApp banking will offer immense convenience to our customers to meet their banking requirements.”

The key benefits engaged with the service are 24*7 availability of banking services, no additional requirement of application download, easy access and convenience to all customers, availability on both Android and iPhone at no additional service charge.

Non-customers can also use this platform for queries related to Bank’s products, services, offers, ATM & branches location. The familiarity and simplicity of the solution makes it convenient for the customers to avail banking services in a seamless manner via WhatsApp.

How to activate WhatsApp Banking services

1. Register: Save Bank’s WhatsApp Business Account Number 8433 888 777 in your Mobile Contact list

2. Send message: Send “HI” on this number using WhatsApp platform and initiate the conversation



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What are the less risky options for higher returns on your FDs

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My wife has a fixed deposit of ₹3-lakh in Dena Bank. Now, with the merger of the bank with Bank of Baroda, we would like to discontinue it and switch it over to some other bank. On checking with Indian Overseas Bank, we found they offer 5.2 per cent for 3- to 5- year tenures . I am looking to invest with a horizon of 3-5 years in a safe and less risky asset with a 7 to 8 per cent yield. Please suggest a suitable investment avenue.

— N.P. Desai

Given that the full financial impact of Covid-related moratoriums and concessions on bank financials is not yet known, it is best to stick to larger and financially stronger banks and NBFCs for deposits at this juncture. Switching your deposit out of Bank of Baroda into Indian Overseas Bank (IOB) for a 5.2 per cent rate is not a prudent course of action in this context as Bank of Baroda is a stronger and larger bank. In the quarter ended September 2020, IOB had reported net profits of ₹148 crore, managing a turnaround from losses in the previous year, with gross NPAs of over 13 per cent and capital adequacy ratio of 10.9 per cent. The bank was also placed under RBI’s Prompt Corrective Action framework.

Bank of Baroda, apart from being consistently profitable, had comfortable capital adequacy of 13.2 per cent as of the same date. Given that RBI’s policy rates today are at their lowest levels in two decades at 4 per cent and market interest rates for highly rated entities are at rock-bottom too, you can get a 7 to 8 per cent return only from riskier entities. Given that the rates may go up at least a bit once the economic situation normalises from Covid, locking into these low rates for periods beyond a year is not advisable. Therefore, it is best not to consider 3- to 5-year fixed deposits currently and stick with up to 1 year deposits even if rates seem unappealing.

Having said this, we can suggest three courses of action given the situation. If you would like a slightly higher yield on your fixed deposits, you can consider the one-year post office time deposits offering 5.5 per cent which offer superior safety with a higher return. If you really seek higher returns and don’t mind some risks with it, you can stay with Bank of Baroda for some of your money and diversify into 1- year deposits from small finance banks such as Equitas for say, one-third of the money. Such banks, however, do lend to riskier segments of small borrowers and, therefore, your deposits are subject to higher risks than with the leading commercial banks like Bank of Baroda.

Deposits with top-rated NBFCs such as Sundaram Finance or HDFC which offer about 5.7 per cent on cumulative deposits of up to 1 year can also be an option. If monthly income is your objective, the Post Office Monthly Income Account offering 6.6 per cent is an option to look at too, though the long lock-in of five years is a deterrent. If your wife is a senior citizen you can also consider the post office senior citizens savings scheme offering 7.4 per cent, albeit with a 5-year lock-in period.

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