RBI issues direction on compensation of private banks’ top officials, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The RBI said on Monday the fair value of the share-linked incentives paid to chief executive officers, whole-time directors and other key functionaries by the private banks should be recognised as an expense during the relevant accounting period. The RBI has also asked all banks, including local area banks, small finance banks and foreign banks to comply with its directions for all share-linked instruments granted after the accounting period ending March 31, 2021.

The central bank had issued guidelines on the compensation of whole-time directors/ chief executive officers/ material risk takers and control function staff in November 2019.

Issuing a clarification in this regard, the RBI said, “the fair value (of share-linked incentives) …should be recognised as expense beginning with the accounting period for which approval has been granted”.

In terms of the extant guidelines, share-linked instruments are required to be fairly valued on the date of grant using the Black-Scholes model.

The RBI issued the clarification saying “it has been observed” that banks do not recognise grants of the share-linked compensation as an expense in their books of account concurrently.



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Moratorium banks’ depositors set to get up to Rs 5 lakh back by Nov 30, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Depositors in dozens of co-operative banks currently under moratorium by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) can look forward to quick settlement now. That is because the government has notified September 1, 2021 as the date from which depositors of banks under moratorium will get up to Rs 5 lakh within 90 days. This would mean that by November 30, 2021, depositors of banks under the moratorium are likely to get their money back. The Ministry of Finance made this announcement via a notification on August 27, 2021.

As per the finance ministry notification issued on August 27, “In exercise of the powers conferred by sub-section (2) of section 1 of the Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporation (Amendment) Act, 2021 (30 of 2021), the Central Government hereby appoints the 1st day of September 2021, as the date on which the provisions of the said Act shall come into force.”

Even depositors of banks that are already under moratorium by the RBI before the amendments were made will be eligible to get their money back within 90 days from September 1, 2021 i.e., by November 30, 2021.

Nishant Singh, Partner, Induslaw says, “Where RBI is working on a scheme of merger, arrangement or restructuring of the stressed bank, it can ask the DICGC to further extend the time taken by it to pay out deposit claims by another 90 days. In such cases, depositors may need to wait for 180 days instead of 90 days to get their insurance money. The main objective is to get more time for stitching a merger deal with a stronger bank and it will help the depositors to get their money back eventually.”

As per the RBI website, some of the banks that are currently under moratorium are Garha Co-operative Bank Ltd., Guna, Madhya Pradesh, Deccan Urban Co-operative Bank Limited, Vijayapura, Karnataka, Independence Co-operative Bank Ltd, Nashik, Maharashtra etc.

Recently, the government announced that depositors of failed or stressed banks that are placed under a moratorium by the central bank will be able to get their deposits back (up to Rs 5 lakh) back within 90 days from the start of the moratorium. The amendments in the DICGC Act was passed by the parliament in its Monsoon Session in August 2021.

How will depositors get their money back?
As explained by Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, the 90-day period will be divided into two periods of 45 days. “The stressed bank on whom restriction is placed is expected to collate all information regarding the number of claimants and claim amount and inform DICGC about it within the first 45 days. Within the next 45 days, DICGC is mandated to process the claim and make payment to each eligible depositor,” finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman said during the press briefing on July 28, 2021.

“Normally, it takes 8 – 10 years after complete liquidation to get money under insurance; but now, even if there is a moratorium, within 90 days, the process will definitely be completed, giving relief to depositors,” the FM said in the press briefing on July 28, 2021.

The overall insurance amount of Rs 5 lakh includes both principal and interest held with the bank in the same right and capacity. This move is expected to cover around 98.3% of the total number of accounts and 50.9% of the value of total deposits held with the banks, the FM stated in the press briefing.

During a debate regarding the DICGC bill in the upper house of the parliament, it was clarified by the finance minister that PMC Bank depositors will also get the benefit of this amendment.

Deposits with all banks are covered under DICGC insurance cover of Rs 5 lakh; earlier many cooperative banks were not included in this coverage. However, in 2020 the government introduced an amendment in Banking Regulation Act where RBI was given complete regulatory control over cooperative banks and all banks were put under deposit insurance coverage.

Singh says, “In the last five years, almost 50 Urban Co-operative Banks (UCBs) have come under RBI’s All-Inclusive Directions and have posed a systemic risk in the banking sector. The amendment will pave the way for the stressed UCBs to merge with the stronger banks.”



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Axis Bank begins issuing securities under Rs 35,000 crore-debt raise plan, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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NEW DELHI: Axis Bank on Monday said it has started issuing debt securities under its Rs 35,000 crore-debt raise plan announced earlier this year.

In April, the private sector lender had said that its board had approved capital raise proposal up to Rs 35,000 crore by issuing various debt instruments in Indian or foreign currency in domestic/overseas markets in one or more tranches.

The shareholders of the bank had approved the proposal in bank’s annual general meeting in July.

“The bank has initiated the process of issuing of the debt instruments, in the form of the additional tier 1 notes (notes) in foreign currency, subject to market conditions,” Axis Bank said in a regulatory filing.

This will be a sustainable bond under the sustainable financing framework of the bank.

The issuance is part of the existing global medium term notes (GMTN) programme of the bank, it said.

The lender said the offering under the GMTN has been informed to Singapore Exchange Limited (SGX) and the International Securities Market (ISM).

“The notes will not be offered or sold in India under the applicable laws,” it added.



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Central banks’ shift from crisis policies gathers momentum, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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While the financial world waits for the Federal Reserve to start reversing its ultra-loose policy stance, recent moves by a clutch of other central banks signal the days of pandemic-era accommodation are already numbered even as COVID-19 continues to impede smooth economic recoveries around the world.

South Korea’s central bank on Thursday raised its benchmark interest rate by a quarter of a percentage point to blunt rising financial stability risks posed by a surge in household debt, becoming the first major monetary authority in Asia to do so since the coronavirus broadsided the global economy 18 months ago.

Even before the rate hike in South Korea, though, central banks in Latin America and eastern and central Europe had begun lifting interest rates this year to beat back inflation that is building on the back of currency fluctuations, global supply chain bottlenecks and regional labor shortages.

And larger-economy central banks also are getting into the swing. The Bank of Canada has already cut back on its bond purchases and could proceed to raise borrowing costs in 2022, and the Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ) is expected to lift rates by the end of this year despite balking at an expected hike last week in the face of a snap COVID-19 lockdown.

For its part, the Fed is lumbering toward tapering its $120 billion in monthly asset purchases, with an announcement expected before the end of 2021, possibly as early as next month. An actual US interest rate increase is likely a year or more away, however.

Fed Chair Jerome Powell is set to speak later on Friday on the economic outlook at the US central bank’s annual Jackson Hole summer research conference, which is being held virtually for the second year in a row. His remarks may color expectations at the margin for when the Fed makes its move but are not likely to offer any concrete signal.

THE DIFFERENCE A YEAR MAKES
When Powell spoke at last year’s conference – unveiling a new policy framework that is just starting to be tested – fewer than half of the 22 million US jobs lost to coronavirus shutdowns in the spring of 2020 had been recovered and inflation was running at half the Fed’s 2% target rate. The outlook outside the United States was no less bleak, with lockdowns still widespread.

The situation in the United States and other economies could hardly be more different a year later.

The US economy has more than fully recouped all of its lost output, roughly 9 million more jobs have been regained and inflation is well above target. Elsewhere, most of the world’s economies are back squarely in growth mode, albeit unevenly so in many cases as COVID-19 outbreaks fueled by the highly contagious Delta variant trigger localized lockdowns.

In South Korea, the economy grew 5.9% on a year-over-year basis in the second quarter, the fastest pace in a decade , and young people are bingeing on debt and kindling financial stability concerns at the Bank of Korea. The export-reliant Asian nation’s key factory sector expanded in July for a 10th straight month, even as the Delta variant crimped manufacturing output for rivals like China, Vietnam and Malaysia.

Central Europe’s recovery also accelerated in the second quarter as lockdowns in the region eased. The improvement – along with an upswing in inflation – has already spurred the Czech and Hungarian central banks to raise interest rates twice this summer, the first increases across the European Union. Both are expected to deliver more tightening, and Czech officials are debating if they need to deliver more than the standard quarter-percentage point increase.

While the earliest movers have been emerging market countries where inflation is often aggravated by movements in choppy currency markets, the gears of tightening are also starting to move in top-tier economies.

The RBNZ opted not to raise rates last week because of the messaging complications that would have arisen from such a move alongside a hastily-called lockdown after the island nation reported its first local COVID-19 infection in six months. Central bank officials, however, appear determined to get a rate hike in before the year runs out.

Meanwhile, Norway’s central bank is signaling it will not veer from its plan for its first rate hike next month despite a recent rise in infections, putting it on course to be the first of the Group of 10 (G10) developed economies to raise borrowing costs.

“In the committee’s current assessment of the outlook and balance of risks, the policy rate will most likely be raised in September,” Norges Bank Governor Oeystein Olsen said in a statement last week.

While the Fed and several other G10 banks now appear on course to start reducing their pandemic accommodation measures this year, tightening moves by the Fed’s two largest peers – the European Central Bank and Bank of Japan – look much further off.

Still, that doesn’t mean they don’t see some improvement in conditions even as the Delta variant spreads.

Japan was among the Asian economies to experience factory sector growth last month even as COVID-19 cases hit a record high. And a key ECB policymaker sees only a limited headwind to the euro zone’s recovery due to the variant.

“I would say we’re broadly not too far away from what we expected in June for the full year,” Philip Lane, the ECB’s chief economist, told Reuters on Wednesday. “It’s a reasonably well-balanced picture.”



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China shares end higher as central bank boosts short-term funding, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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SHANGHAI: China shares finished higher on Wednesday after China’s central bank boosted short-term funding to ease worries over tightening liquidity amid a faltering recovery, but losses in financial, tech and real estate sectors capped gins.

At the close, the Shanghai Composite index was up 0.74% at 3,540.38.

The blue-chip CSI300 index was up 0.2%, turning around from a small dip at midday. It was led by consumer staples firms, which rose 1.91%.

China’s central bank offered 50 billion yuan ($7.72 billion) through seven-day reverse repos into the banking system, bigger than daily injections in recent months, in what traders saw as a bid to support liquidity and lift market sentiment.

Foreign investors helped lift A-shares, with Refinitiv data indicating inflows of more than 7.5 billion yuan ($1.16 billion) on the day through the Northbound leg of the Stock Connect programme.

But underscoring continued financial risks in the real estate sector that some investors worry could spread, a supplier to debt-laden developer China Evergrande Group said Evergrande had failed to pay some overdue bills.

The real estate index lost 3.67% and the financial sector sub-index slipped 1.37%. The CSI Info Tech index fell 0.74%.

The smaller Shenzhen index ended up 0.39% and the start-up board ChiNext Composite index was 0.54% higher.

Around the region, MSCI’s Asia ex-Japan stock index was firmer by 0.23%, while Japan’s Nikkei index closed down 0.03%.

At 0702 GMT, the yuan was quoted at 6.4774 per US dollar, 0.11% weaker than the previous close of 6.4705.

So far this year, the Shanghai stock index is up 1.9% and the CSI300 has fallen 6%, while China’s H-share index listed in Hong Kong is down 15.8%. Shanghai stocks have risen 4.21% this month.



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Finance Ministry exploring insurance bonds as alternative to bank guarantees, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The government is considering to introduce insurance bonds as an alternative to bank guarantees, Finance Secretary T V Somanathan said here on Tuesday. Somanathan made the announcement during a meeting between industry captains and Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, who is on a two-day visit to the financial capital.

“Government is exploring on instituting insurance bonds as alternatives to bank guarantees,” an official statement said.

Bank guarantees are usually asked for while extending a loan and typically require a collateral. An insurance bond is also a surety but it does not require any collateral.

As per reports last year, insurance regulator Irdai was also looking at the option of insurers offering surety bonds in the context of road projects.

Sitharaman, who met the industry captains in the evening, said the government is committed to working towards ensuring policy certainty, adding that the regulators also have a key role in ensuring the same.

She said the government is working with the regulators on this “important issue”, as per the statement.

The finance minister emphasised the importance of ‘India’s own equity capital’ while addressing the industry and assured government facilitation for sunrise sectors and startups.

Revenue Secretary Tarun Bajaj said his department was working on tax-related issues of startups and sought industry inputs on the same.

Sitharaman also assured the industry of addressing issues related to competitiveness, including high power tariffs, and matters related to cumbersome regulatory compliances, the statement said.

The economy is moving gradually from a bank-led lending model to a more market-based finance model and the operationalisation of the Development Finance Institution (DFI) will ensure long-term lending for projects, Sitharaman said.

The DFI will increase competition for banks and also improve their efficiency, the statement quoted her as saying.

In the meeting, which comes in the wake of a controversy caused by her cabinet colleague Piyush Goyal’s reported remarks about disenchantment with the industry for not keeping the nation’s interest in mind, Sitharaman said, “This government believes in listening, working and responding and would extend all possible support.”

Tata Steel’s T V Narendran said for growth to take deep roots, sustained demand is critical, and the immediate source of demand has to be government expenditure.

Narendran also recommended frontloading of the committed capital expenditure, especially on infrastructure, adding that the first quarter’s handsome revenues create a room for the same, as per the statement.

On the issue of arbitration awards being appealed, Somanathan said there is a need for a behaviourial change and added that the government trusts wealth creators.

The constraint on vaccination is on the supply side and the same is likely to be addressed soon, he further said.

Sitharaman met officials from income tax, Goods and Services Tax (GST) and customs departments in two separate meetings in what is her maiden visit to the financial capital since the second wave of COVID-19.

She is scheduled to address chiefs of state-run banks at a meeting on Wednesday.



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RBI imposes Rs 27.5 lakh penalty on Dhanlaxmi Bank, Rs 20 lakh on a co-op bank, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The RBI on Monday said it has imposed a penalty of Rs 27.5 lakh on Dhanlaxmi Bank, Thrissur, for contravention of certain norms related to the ‘Depositor Education and Awareness Fund Scheme’.

The banking regulator also imposed a Rs 20 lakh penalty on the NE & EC Railway Employees’ Multi-State Primary Cooperative Bank, Gorakhpur, for deficiencies in regulatory compliance.

In a statement, the RBI said penalty on Dhanlaxmi Bank has been imposed for contravention of a section of the Banking Regulation Act, 1949 read with a paragraph of The Depositor Education and Awareness Fund Scheme, 2014 (the scheme).

The RBI said the Statutory Inspection for Supervisory Evaluation (ISE) of the bank was conducted with reference to its financial position as on March 31, 2020, and the examination of the Risk Assessment Report and Inspection Report pertaining to the same, revealed, inter-alia, contravention of the provisions of the Act read with the scheme.

A notice was issued to the bank advising it to show cause as to why penalty should not be imposed on it for contravention.

“After considering the bank’s reply to the notice and oral submissions made during the personal hearing, RBI came to the conclusion that the charge of contravention of aforesaid provisions of the Act read with the scheme was substantiated and warranted imposition of monetary penalty on the bank,” it said.

In another statement, the RBI said the inspection report of the NE & EC Railway Employees’ Multi-State Primary Co-operative Bank based on its financial position as on March 31, 2019 revealed non-adherence/violation of specific directions issued to it under the Supervisory Action Framework (SAF).

In both cases, the RBI said, the penalty is based on deficiencies in regulatory compliance and is not intended to pronounce upon the validity of any transaction or agreement entered into by the banks with their customers.



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Xiaomi to offer full spectrum of financial services in India via partners, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Chinese handset maker Xiaomi is doubling down on its financial services business. It is diversifying into the full spectrum of lending platforms, with a clear focus on the payments, lending and insurance verticals.

Financial services are no longer a subset as it is large enough in Hong Kong, India and China to be an independent business,” Manu Jain, managing director of Xiaomi India, told ET.

Xiaomi’s financial services vertical is now operating as an independent business due to the market size and the company’s renewed focus.

Under its lending services bouquet, Xiaomi has started offering business loans, gold loans and credit line card services.

Its financial services business returned to growth mode with a 95% jump in revenue in the March quarter over the October-December period in 2020.

“We’ve seen 35% on-year growth in Q1 of (calendar) 2021 despite a dip after the Covid-19 second wave… we are again growing at a significant pace despite the market downturn in the last two quarters,” Jain said.

The financial services business is running as a marketplace for various partners who offer services on Xiaomi’s platform, said Ashish Khanderwal, Head, financial services of Xiaomi India.

Xiaomi is working with Axis Bank, IDFC Bank, Aditya Birla Finance, Money View, Early Salary and Credit Vidya for lending services.

For the line credit card offering, it has partnered with Stashfin, while the health and cyber insurance service is being offered in partnership with ICICI Lombard.

Jain said the company has disbursed over 100,000 loans with credit of up to Rs 25 lakh and is operating across 22,000 pin codes. Mi Pay, he said, is growing rapidly with a 50 million pan-India user base.

On whether Xiaomi would venture into the growing cryptocurrency segment, Jain said, “We await clarity on the regulatory front…crypto is an interesting area, and is the biggest buzzword and doing exceptionally well.”

Two years ago, Xiaomi had invested in Bengaluru-based startup KrazyBee for the Mi Credit service. On startup investments, Jain said the new regulations require certain approvals before it can make an investment.

“…we would want to be 100% compliant with all local laws at every level, so no immediate investment plans,” Jain said.



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HC to liquidator, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Panaji: The high court of Bombay at Goa has directed the liquidator of Madgaum Urban Co-operative Bank S V Naik to take necessary steps expeditiously to provide relief to depositors from Curtorim, Macazanna, St Jose de Areal, Raia and others.

“The liquidator will have to pursue the matter with Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporation (DICGC), so that at least depositors maintaining balance of less than Rs 5 lakh receive the amount up to Rs 5 lakh, in terms of the insurance scheme. Even the depositors maintaining a deposit of above Rs 5 lakh will be entitled to receive the amounts up to Rs 5 lakh under the scheme,” the court held.

“The liquidator should process all such claims as expeditiously as possible so that there is no undue delay in the matter,” stated the division bench comprising Chief Justice of the Bombay high court Dipankar Datta and Justice Mahesh Sonak.

The residents from Curtorim and neighbouring villages in Salcete, in a letter to the high court in September last year, stated that almost 8,000 account holders mostly agriculturists, fishermen, tenants and labourers had deposited their hard-earned earnings in the bank, which had now gone into liquidation.

They stated that they were not being permitted to withdraw any amount over Rs 5,000 from their bank accounts in terms of directives dated May 3, 2019 issued by the RBI and highlighted the immense difficulties faced by them, particularly during Covid-19 pandemic on account of being unable to access their bank accounts.

During the pendency of the petition, the limit for withdrawal was enhanced from Rs 5,000 to Rs 30,000 and on January 19, the high court directing RBI to consider whether the limit could be further enhanced to Rs 50,000 since Adv C A Coutinho, the counsel for the bank, submitted that the grievances of no less than 49,500 depositors from out of a total of 58,000 depositors would be redressed with the enhancement of such limit.

Assistant general manager of RBI, Sandra Rodrigues submitted to the high court on August 17 that in the present situation, where an order of liquidation or winding up of an insured bank has been made, every depositor in respect of his deposit in the bank shall be entitled to receive up to Rs.5 lakh from in accordance with the provisions of the Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporation Act, 1961.

The court was told that almost 55,999 depositors had deposits of less than Rs 5 lakh with the bank and such depositors would therefore be entitled to receive amounts up to Rs 5 lakh from DICGC. This would leave about 636 depositors having a deposit of over Rs 5 lakh.



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IndusInd bank thought they had securities even as legal notices were ignored, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Repeated requests, follow ups and legal notices slapped on Karvy Stock Broking Ltd (KSBL) did not help IndusInd Bank since 2019 in ensuring repayment of Rs 137 crore loan taken from them.

“The bank tried its best to get clarity on the repayment schedule or the status of repayment. Despite repeated oral remainders and calls to C Parthasarathy, no reply was forthcoming as to when the repayment will be made,” IndusInd Bank told police at the time of lodging the complaint.

“On some occasions they assured the bank that they will pay on time and even at this stage they confirmed that security was available to cover the bank’s exposure,” the bank said.

Later, the bank served demand notices to KSBL and Parthasarathy saying that they repay the dues in five days. At this stage, the bank was under the impression that they are secured since they have sufficient collateral in the form of pledged securities to recover the outstanding dues.

But IndusInd bank got a rude shock after SEBI in November 2019 took action against KSBL, and IndusInd bank knew they had no collateral left as a surety. Finally, IndusInd bank approached Hyderabad police detective department.



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