NABARD wants state to speed up implementation of bank’s scheme, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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BHOPAL: National bank for agriculture and rural development (NABARD) wants the state government to speed up implementation of the schemes funded by the bank in MP.

Chairman of the bank GR Chitala said that almost half of the state’s cooperative bodies also need improvement. Talking to media here on Thursday, Chitala sighted the examples of the states of Andhra Pradesh and Tamil Nadu for implementing the NABARD schemes.

He has been on a six days’ visit to the state where he would Dewas and Indore also where the bank has funded many schemes. Talking about the state of affairs of the cooperative banks in the state, he hinted that 50 % of them need improvement in functioning.

He said that of 4800 cooperative banks in the state, almost half of them need technical upgradation for better and efficient functioning of the cooperative sector . He said that about 38 % of farmers did not have Kisan credit cards in the state and there are a variety of reasons.

“ Which is why a large number of farmers have not been able to get benefits of the government’s scheme”, he said Replying to a query on the NABARS’s help to the state , Chitala said it has disbursed Rs 55759 crore towards crop Loan covering more than 71 lakh farmers during the last few years in MP.

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RBI ups threshold for personal loans given by a bank to directors of other banks

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The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has upped the threshold up to which a bank can grant personal loans to any director of other banks by 20 times from ₹25 lakh to ₹5 crore.

The upward revision in the threshold is aimed at reflecting the increase in general prices, encourage professionals with the expertise to join the boards, and reduce the cases requiring approval at the board/management committee level without diluting the regulatory intent. The ₹25 lakh threshold was fixed way back in 1996.

However, the RBI said unless sanctioned by the board of Directors/Management Committee, banks cannot grant loans and advances aggregating ₹5 crore and above (hitherto ₹25 lakh and above) to any relative (other than spouse) and dependent children of Chairmen, Managing Directors or other Directors of their own bank as well as other banks.

The central bank said the proposals for credit facilities of an amount less than ₹25 lakh or ₹5 crore to these borrowers may be sanctioned by the appropriate authority in the financing bank under powers vested in such authority, but the matter should be reported to the board.

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RBL Bank taps Visa to issue credit cards as RBI barred Mastercard from issuing new cards, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Private lender, RBL Bank has entered into an agreement with Visa Worldwide Pte Limited (Visa) to issue credit cards on the Visa payment network.

The bank informed the exchanges about the agreement with Visa as RBI had barred Mastercard from issuing new cards due to non-compliance of data storage norms.

RBL Bank in the exchange notificiation said, “We await further information from Mastercard on RBI’s supervisory action. RBL Bank currently issues credit cards on the Mastercard network only. The debit and prepaid cards issued by the Bank are already enabled on other payment networks in addition to the Mastercard network.”

The bank said the integration with Visa will take another 8-10 weeks post which they will start issuing credit cards on Visa’s payment network. It’s current run rate of approximately 100,000 new credit card issuances per month could potentially be impacted till the integration with Visa gets over and regulatory clarity on the Mastercard network.

The bank currently has 3 million credit card customers and is the fifth largest credit card issuer in the country with roughly 5% market share.

On July 14, RBI had directed Mastercard to not issue any new cards on its network from July 22 onwards over non-compliance with data storage norms.

Mastercard said in a statement that it was disappointed with the stance taken by the regulator.

The payment giant in the statement said, “Mastercard is fully committed to our legal and regulatory obligations in the markets we operate in. Since the issuance of the RBI directive requiring on-soil storage of domestic payment transaction data in 2018, we have provided consistent updates and reports regarding our activities and compliance with the required stipulations. While we are disappointed with the stance taken by the RBI in their communication dated July 14, we will continue to work with them to provide any additional details required to resolve their concerns. Building on our considerable and continued investments in India, we remain committed to working with our customers and partners in advancing on the Government’s Digital India vision.”



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Defying Covid wave, disbursal of Mudra loans grows in Q1

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Notwithstanding the severe second wave of Covid-19, disbursal of petty business loans under Pradhan Mantri Mudra Yojana (PMMY) has picked up in the first quarter of the current financial year compared to the same period last year.

As on July 2, loans worth ₹37,601 crore have been disbursed against a total sanctioned amount of ₹41,516 crore, according to data available with Mudra.

“The disbursals in the first quarter of FY22 were higher by about ₹4,000 crore compared to the first quarter of FY,’’ a senior official of Mudra told BusinessLine.

“Though the second wave of the pandemic in the first quarter was more severe than last year, the lockdowns were scattered in different States and there was no national lockdown. Even bank employees braved Covid and continued to work. All this drove growth in disbursal of Mudra loans,’’ a senior official of State Bank of India told BusinessLine.

Three categories

Mudra loans are extended in three categories – Shishu (up to ₹50,000), Kishor (above ₹50,000 and up to ₹5 lakh) and Tarun (above ₹5 lakh and up to ₹10 lakh).

Among the three categories, Shishu loans have a lion’s share in the total loans at about 48 per cent.

Bankers expect the growth in PMMY loans to gain pace further in the remaining quarters with the second wave of covid coming under control now.

Last financial year was challenging for the small business loans. The loans dropped to ₹2,79,481 crore from ₹3,37,495 crore in the financial year 2019-20.

However, there is no complete data on the state of non-performing assets (NPAs) in the segment and among banks.

Mudra loans are given by commercial banks, regional rural banks, small finance banks, MFI and NBFCs. The public sector banks, however, have been the main channel and account for over 60 per cent of the loans disbursed.

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Amazon Pay ICICI Bank credit card surpasses two million customers, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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ICICI Bank and Amazon Pay have announced that the Bank has crossed the milestone of issuing two million ‘Amazon Pay ICICI Bankcredit cards. In the process. Having been introduced in 2018, the card has emerged as the fastest co-branded credit card to cross this milestone in the country.

The card also holds the record of being the fastest co-branded credit card in India to cross the milestone of one million issuances in October last year. Thereafter, the card has onboarded another one million customers in the last nine months, with over 80% of new customers availing the card completely digitally, without any physical interaction.

Any registered customer of Amazon.in, including those who are not customers of ICICI Bank, can apply for the card digitally, from anywhere in the country. This is among the first credit cards in India which introduced ‘Video KYC’ for customers in June 2020.

“The Amazon Pay ICICI Bank credit card has received an exciting response from customers across the country. The best-in-industry rewards, seamless access to credit and the easy onboarding process are the key contributors of this excitement.” said Sudipta Roy, Head – Unsecured Assets, ICICI Bank.

“At Amazon Pay, we are transforming the way customers make digital payments. The Amazon Pay ICICI Bank credit card is one of the most rewarding, convenient and trusted payment experiences in the country. Over 2 million customers have shown their trust in us and how they value the experience.” said Vikas Bansal, Director – Amazon Pay India.

The reward earnings are credited monthly, after the billing cycle date of the card to the customer’s Amazon Pay balance. They can redeem these earnings to purchase from more than 16 crore items available on Amazon.in across. The reward earnings can also be used with Amazon Pay partner merchants for transactions like flight tickets, booking hotels, food delivery, movie tickets and much more.

“We’re delighted that the Amazon Pay ICICI Bank credit card powered by Visa has crossed two million cards, with the last one million cards issued in less than a year, despite the ongoing pandemic. This reinforces the belief that consumers prefer cards that give them great rewards and ease of payment.” said Shailesh Paul, Head of Merchant Sales & Acquiring and CyberSource, India and South Asia, Visa.



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How did a start-up win a rare banking license in India?

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BharatPe, a barely three-year-old payments start-up, is going to be the half-owner of a bank in India — a prize that has eluded many of the country’s pedigreed tycoons.

It’s a lucky break. Even Jaspal Bindra, who’ll own the other half, has had to wait six years for this chance, ever since his reign as the top Asia banker at Standard Chartered Plc ended amid a heap of losses in India and Indonesia.

Also read: PMC Bank’s resolution could become a template for rescuing other weak UCBs

The in-principle approval for BharatPe and Bindra is a marriage made in heaven, or rather the capital-starved hell that has been the country’s banking system for much of the past decade. The regulator is rewarding the duo for agreeing to help remove the debris of a scam-tainted small lender. Punjab & Maharashtra Co-operative Bank collapsed after it made 70 per cent-plus of its loans to one bankrupt shantytown developer. To prevent a run, the Reserve Bank of India had to stop PMC depositors from freely accessing their money.

That was in September 2019. After two years and two waves of a pandemic, the stuck savers finally have a resolution: BharatPe and a unit of Bindra’s Centrum Capital Ltd will put their financial businesses into a newly licensed bank tasked with making small-ticket loans to unbanked segments of the population. For the privilege of getting that license, the new lender will have to assume at least some of the liabilities of the troubled PMC, as well its moth-eaten assets.

It’s unclear how much of the past baggage the new bank can be expected to carry. PMC’s March 2020 deposit base of ₹10,700 crore ($1.5 billion) may have shrunk after the RBI relaxed re strictions on withdrawals in June last year. But it doesn’t have many good assets left to earn a return: About 80 per cent of its ₹4,500-crore loan book had gone bad by March last year. Depending on the deal the regulator strikes on their behalf, one option may be to sweeten PMC depositors’ take — beyond what they’ll be paid out by the deposit guarantee corporation — with some equity in the new bank.

Beyond that, it’s a clean slate. BharatPe, which allows merchants to accept payments from any of the several apps popular with consumers, is yet to join the unicorn club of start-ups with at least $1 billion in valuation. TechCrunch has reported a Tiger Global-led fund-raising round that will take it comfortably past that hurdle. The money will also come in handy in creating a new-age bank. Gauging retailers’ creditworthiness from real-time customer data, and making that the basis for pricing working capital loans, will preclude the need for a costly physical branch network.

Tens of millions of India’s small retail shops rely on personal relationships with wholesalers for credit. Bringing them under the ambit of formal lending will also draw them into the tax net, helping ease the resource crunch for a government that has seen its debt explode because of the Covid-19 crisis. For Bindra, it’s time to try something different from the old corporate banking model of financing empire-building by large conglomerates. In India, taking errant corporate debtors through a formal bankruptcy process or coming to a settlement with their politically influential owners was always like pulling teeth. Of late, extraction of capital from failed businesses has become a painful joke — yielding recovery rates of 4 per cent to 6 per cent for creditors.

In the absence of a formal mechanism to deal with bank failures, expect more bespoke arrangements. Inviting Singapore’s DBS Group Holdings Ltd to take over the assets and liabilities of struggling Lakshmi Vilas Bank Ltd offered a strong hint that the Indian central bank had learned its lesson from unsatisfactory half-rescue of YESs Bank Ltd., a major corporate lender that was allowed to hobble along as a standalone lender.

BharatPe’s unexpected bonanza could well set a template for post-Covid recapitalisation of Indian lenders. The RBI responded to the pandemic by slashing interest rates and making available nearly 7 per cent of GDP in easy liquidity. When that cheap money is eventually unwound, more banks with depleted capital coffers may need new homes. If RBI Governor Shaktikanta Das is going to reprise the anxious Mrs. Bennet from Pride and Prejudice, maybe other fintech suitors, too, will get to play Mr. Darcy.

(This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners.

Andy Mukherjee is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering industrial companies and financial services. He previously was a columnist for Reuters Breakingviews. He has also worked for the Straits Times, ET NOW and Bloomberg News.)

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RBI allows banks to buy-back Certificates of Deposits

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The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has decided to permit issuers of Certificates of Deposit (CD) to buy back their CDs before maturity, subject to certain conditions.

This move is aimed at facilitating flexibility in liquidity management by issuers (Banks) of CDs.

Also read: RBI keeps rates unchanged to support growth

RBI also decided to permit Regional Rural Banks (RRBs) to issue Certificates of Deposit (CDs). This will provide RRBs greater flexibility in raising short term funds.

CDs are negotiable money market instruments and issued in dematerialised form or as a Usance Promissory Note, for funds deposited at a bank or other eligible financial institution (FI) for a specified time period.

Banks can issue CDs for maturities from 7 days to one year whereas eligible FIs can issue for maturities from 1 year to 3 years.

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Bharti AXA Life in bancassurance pact with Shivalik Small Finance Bank

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Private life insurer Bharti AXA Life Insurance has entered into a bancassurance partnership with Shivalik Small Finance Bank for the distribution of its life insurance products through the bank’s pan-India network of branches.

Under this agreement, Bharti AXA Life Insurance will offer its suite of life insurance products, including protection, health, savings and investment plans, to customers of Shivalik Small Finance Bank across its 31 branches and digital network across the country.

This alliance will enable over 4.5 lakh customers of Shivalik Bank to access the range of products offered by the company to provide financial security.

Bharti AXA General launches Health AdvantEDGE

Expansion of distribution footprint

Commenting on the association, Parag Raja, Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer, Bharti AXA Life Insurance, said in a statement: “The outbreak of Covid-19 has led to a notable shift in customers’ perception of life insurance, which is fundamentally about protection. With our alliance with Shivalik Bank, we shall empower the bank’s customers with protection and holistic insurance solutions and help us strengthen our commitment while reaching out to urban, tier-II and tier-III markets. We believe this partnership will enrich our distribution footprint and help us increase insurance penetration in the country.”

UP-based Shivalik SFB commences operations

Suveer Kumar Gupta, Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer, Shivalik Small Finance Bank, said this alliance is a part of the bank’s various measures towards financial inclusion and acceleration of wealth creation for its customers.

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SBI should be able to build a book of Rs 2,000 crore through expanded ECLGS: Dinesh Khara

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IBA chairman Rajkiran Rai G said the products have been standardised with approvals from all public sector banks’ boards last week.

The largest lender State Bank of India’s (SBI) chairman Dinesh Kumar Khara on Sunday said that as per preliminary assessment, the bank should be able to build a book of Rs 2,000 crore through expanded emergency credit line guarantee scheme (ECLGS). Khara made this comment at a joint press conference of SBI and Indian Bank’s Association (IBA) to launch standardised Covid loan products by public sector banks.

Earlier in the day, Finance Ministry had enlarged the scope of the Rs 3 lakh crore ECLGS to cover loans up to Rs 2 crore for setting up on-site oxygen generation plants at healthcare facilities and brought in the ailing civil aviation sector under its ambit.

Khara said that public sector banks have come up with three sets of products to build a ‘Covid book’ under Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI) liquidity scheme and the ECLGS. The relief measures include a healthcare business loan for setting up oxygen plants, healthcare facilities and unsecured personal loans for Covid-19 treatment.

The rate of interest for business loans given for setting up oxygen plant under ECLGS will be capped at 7.5%, and the repayment can be done in five years. The banks have not specified rates for other healthcare facility loans. However, the rate of interest will stand at 8.5% at SBI, Khara said. Apart from it, borrowers can avail loans of Rs 25,000 to Rs 5 lakh for Covid-19 treatment with a tenure of five years.

IBA chairman Rajkiran Rai G said the products have been standardised with approvals from all public sector banks’ boards last week.

He also said that customers opting for restructuring will have to apply for recast on the website or manually at a bank branch. RBI on May 5 had allowed lenders to carry out a fresh round of restructuring of retail and MSME accounts. The resolution process will be invoked in 30 days and the last day for invocation is September 30, 2021. Thereafter, the resolution plan will be implemented within 90 days, or latest by December 31, 2021. The moratorium period on loans will be a maximum of two years, starting soon after invocation.

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Banks likely to transfer about 80 large NPA accounts to NARCL, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Banks are likely to transfer about 80 large NPA accounts for the resolution to National Asset Reconstruction Company Ltd (NARCL), which is expected to be operational by next month.

NARCL is the name coined for the bad bank announced in the Budget 2021-22. A bad bank refers to a financial institution that takes over the bad assets of lenders and undertakes resolution.

The size of each of these NPAs accounts is over Rs 500 crore and the banks have identified about 70-80 such accounts to be transferred to the proposed bad bank, sources said.

It is expected that NPAs over Rs 2 lakh crore will move out of the books of the banks to the bad bank, they added.

The company will pick up those assets that are 100 per cent provided for by the lenders.

Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman in the Budget 2021-22 announced that the high level of provisioning by public sector banks of their stressed assets calls for measures to clean up the bank books.

“An Asset Reconstruction Company Limited and Asset Management Company would be set up to consolidate and take over the existing stressed debt,” she had said in the Budget speech.

It will then manage and dispose of the assets to alternate investment funds and other potential investors for eventual value realisation, she added.

Last year, the Indian Banks’ Association (IBA) had made a proposal for the creation of a bad bank for swift resolution of non-performing assets (NPAs). The government accepted the proposal and decided to go for asset reconstruction company (ARC) and asset management company (AMC) model for this.

NARCL will pay up to 15 per cent of the agreed value for the loans in cash and the remaining 85 per cent would be government-guaranteed security receipts.

The government guarantee would be invoked if there is a loss against the threshold value.

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has said that loans classified as fraud cannot be sold to NARCL. As per the annual report of the RBI, about 1.9 lakh crore of loans have been classified as fraud as of March 2020.

To facilitate the smooth functioning of asset reconstruction companies, the RBI last month decided to set up a panel to undertake a comprehensive review of the working of such institutions.

After enactment of the Securitisation and Reconstruction of Financial Assets and Enforcement of Security Interest (SARFAESI) Act in 2002, regulatory guidelines for ARCs were issued in 2003 to enable the development of this sector and to facilitate the smooth functioning of these companies.

Since then, while ARCs have grown in number and size, their potential for resolving stressed assets is yet to be realised fully.



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