Inside BharatPe-Centrum proposed JV to acquire troubled PMC Bank, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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BharatPe’s proposed joint venture with non-banking financial company Centrum Finance to set up a Small Finance Bank (SFB) that will acquire troubled Punjab and Maharashtra Co-operative (PMC) Bank is a landmark event for fintech players harbouring banking ambitions.

The deal, however, has not been easy to stitch up.

The story of how a startup has within three years partnered a 44-year-old NBFC led by veteran banker Jaspal Bindra to acquire a banking licence has more to it than meets the eye.

The idea behind this SFB is anything but conventional – considering BharatPe’s leadership dynamics to the Reserve Bank of India’s approach towards reviving a dying bank.

“As far as resolution plans go (for PMC Bank), this is a highly unusual one,” a senior banker at a private sector lender said. “While there is no set resolution framework to revive a dying bank, it is definitely a measure RBI has taken out of desperation rather than choice.”

Over the last two weeks, ET spoke to more than a dozen sources to make sense of the Centrum-BharatPe SFB.

We asked them what the central bank’s thinking was, how soon PMC Bank’s depositors could access their hard-earned deposits and what were the conditions that RBI had conveyed to stakeholders in private before giving approval to set up the SFB.

Special Exemption
The alleged Rs 6,500-crore fraud at PMC Bank is one where several regulatory and audit checks had been given the go-by over the last two decades.

The bank’s board had for many years allegedly concealed loan defaults by real estate firm Housing Development and Infrastructure Ltd (HDIL) of the Wadhawan Group.

Ultimately, the RBI had to step in to freeze depositors’ accounts last year. In light of this, the resolution plan has to be completed at the earliest since retail depositors’ withdrawal limits have been capped at Rs 50,000.

Even as the Centrum-BharatPe bid received its nod, the banking regulator has been at the forefront of drafting the resolution plan, which includes repaying depositors’ principal along with interest.

“The sense is that while a significant portion, or 45% of deposits less than Rs 5 lakh, will be returned as soon as the Deposit Insurance Scheme kicks in, the rest – amounting to deposits of nearly Rs 5,000 crore – will be converted into a low-yielding debt instrument, likely a 10-year bond,” a source privy to the plan told ET.

RBI has yet to finalise these though.

Ashneer Grover, the cofounder of BharatPe, said operationalisation of the SFB was still “3-4 months away.”

There are other deal riders not yet in the public domain.

These include the future structuring and listing propositions for the SFB, sources close to the company said.

The as-yet unnamed SFB will be a 50-50% partnership between BharatPe’s parent Resilient Innovations and Centrum Finance.

A typical NBFC converted to an SFB is given three years’ time after achieving a net worth of Rs 500 crore before its mandatory Initial Public Offering (IPO). The proposed JV has been provided a special exemption to go in for an IPO in six years.

Second, Centrum and BharatPe must also reduce their combined shareholding to less than 50% from the current 100%.

RBI has sought that the process be completed in eight years.

While Centrum can hold 40% stake, Resilient Innovations has been told to cut its stake to a maximum of 10%.

This effectively means that BharatPe will lose majority ownership of the banking venture by 2030.

The SFB will also not be allowed to offer housing loans or microcredit until Centrum Group is able to hive off its own housing finance and microfinance arms.

Both the owners had agreed to these conditions before RBI gave the in-principle approval.

A merchant-focussed bank
According to sources, the bank will be positioned as “India’s first merchant-focused bank.”“BharatPe is planning on building a lot of its offerings around merchant-focused credit and savings products,” a person directly aware of the matter said.

According to sources, the SFB is likely to offer loans to small and medium enterprises as well as unsecured retail loans lower than Rs 50,000.

BharatPe is likely to take the lead in acquiring merchants and providing technology support to the banking entity, while Centrum will handle financials and compliances.

BharatPe will not transfer its existing merchant base of around six million small vendors to the new SFB as most are with its existing banking partners, ICICI Bank and Yes Bank. These merchants could, however, be a base for cross selling its loan products.

The firm is also expected to retain its autonomous identity as a payment-focused fintech.

The SFB could also leverage BharatPe’s digital payment capabilities while building out new products, just like the operational structure currently followed by fintech unicorn Paytm and its Payments Bank entity.

“We will continue to operate as an independent entity,” Grover told ET. “For its payments business, BharatPe works with multiple banks (ICICI, Yes Bank) and will continue to do so. There are no plans to transition the existing base to the new SFB. We will work with the new SFB in areas where it adds value to our existing and to-be-acquired merchant base.”

Centrum Finance did not respond to ET’s queries.

The promoters of Centrum and BharatPe are expected to commit Rs 1,800 crore to the SFB, of which Rs 900 crore will be infused in the first year, Grover said. The remaining will be infused “when needed,” he added.

Next leg of growth?
Centrum Finance’s Bindra, a veteran banker and formerly head of Standard Chartered’s Asia unit, has reportedly been influential in getting RBI’s approval in the JV’s favour.

The banking foray by BharatPe – which has been working with Centrum Finance for the last three years – is expected to boost its next leg of growth for several reasons.

While there is an obvious opportunity to increase margins on loans through lowered cost of acquiring funds, there could be a greater purpose, sources said.

Payments companies no longer command the same valuation premiums as they did a few years back.

Competition from players such as Walmart, Google and Amazon mean that a company looking to build a profitable payment business will need to compete effectively with these tech giants – an endeavour where Paytm has also failed.

The differentiator is, therefore, in having a banking licence, which is not easy to get for companies outside India’s legacy banking ecosystem.

This not only increases the entry barrier to compete at the same scale but allows the company to expand its product portfolio significantly.

“What is happening here is BharatPe wants to emulate Paytm, but on steroids,” said an industry expert.

“As a banking entity where the entry barriers are high, BharatPe will bypass the competitive challenges it was set for several years before making a meaningful dent. It will now be a banking entity and have access to cheaper funds and the margins will be much higher. As a bank, you are destined to be profitable, and that for an Indian fintech is invaluable,” the expert said.

BharatPe is on the verge of closing a $350 million funding round led by Tiger Global, which will likely make it a unicorn, valuing it at around $2.8 billion, a person directly aware of the matter said.

Leadership changes
BharatPe has made at least six senior management hires in the last year. It expects to do the same this year as well.

Suhail Sameer was brought in last year as group president and has emerged as an influential voice within the company. He is expected to assume the role of ‘founder’. Sameer is also now positioned as the only other public face of the startup besides Grover.

Bhavik Koladiya and Shashvat Nakrani are the other cofounders of BharatPe.

Koladiya has largely been under the radar but sources aware of BharatPe’s origin said he has been hands-on as a founder from the beginning. In fact, Grover met Koladiya and firmed up plans to set up BharatPe and soon Nakrani joined as well, a person aware of the matter said.

Earlier this year, Guatam Kaushik joined BharatPe as group president, the second executive at this level after Sameer.

Kaushik was CEO of loyalty platform Payback India, which was acquired by BharatPe in June.

Sameer has been virtually leading all the funding talks and been a core part of strategic decision making at BharatPe.

“He has been actively involved in all the fundraising discussions with investors — for both equity and debt rounds. As the company moves to the next stage of its journey -especially with banking aspirations – it’s important to have senior experienced executives at the helm and that’s why Sameer has become critical to BharatPe’s strategic decision making,” a person aware of the thinking of the company and its investors said.

BharatPe also hired Parth Joshi as chief marketing officer in June.

While senior executives like Sameer and others strengthen its leadership team, sources said some of BharatPe’s investors have not been comfortable with Grover’s mercurial style of leadership.

Grover said this was not true.

“We have a strong leadership team of 14 people, including the founders. All of us are well established professionals in our respective domains and bring enormous credibility and expertise to BharatPe. We all have our role to play for the success of BharatPe. Suhail is a critical member of this leadership team, like others,” he said.

Grover’s public remarks on disputes with rivals like PhonePe have not helped in addressing these concerns, the sources added.

“Our investors are extremely supportive of BharatPe and what we have built in such a short span of time. Leadership hiring is done in sync with the business requirements,” Grover said.

One of the sources said: “Look, every founder has his way of doing things and not everyone will like it. Some have had concerns but that doesn’t dilute Grover’s position as a cofounder.”

BharatPe is also on the lookout for senior management roles in compliance, finance and legal departments to strengthen its entry into the world of banking.

“The other younger members of the founding team have done well but the need for more experienced hands was felt and thus they continue to beef up the senior positions,” one person said.



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BharatPe eyes $6 billion in annualised transaction processed value from PoS business, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Fintech firm BharatPe on Thursday said it is planning to scale up its POS business by three times and has set a target of USD 6 billion (about Rs 44,719 crore) in annualised transaction processed value (TPV) by the end of 2021-22. BharatPe, which is the third largest player in private point of sale (POS) category, is also working on ramping up its reach by five times and sell ‘BharatSwipe‘ in 80 cities across India by the end of the ongoing fiscal year, a statement said.

Besides, it is planning to expand brand partnerships significantly, and offer consumer credit to drive further value on the POS business, it added.

BharatPe had launched BharatSwipe, its card payment acceptance machine in the second half of 2020.

“This (POS) business has scaled up rapidly, and now contributes 20 per cent to the overall payments TPV of the company. Today, BharatPe has an installed base of over 1 lakh BharatSwipe machines across 16 cities in the country and facilitates transactions of over Rs 1,400 crore every month,” a statement said.

Suhail Sameer, Group President at BharatPe, said the company has witnessed phenomenal growth in the POS business.

“I believe it is our disruptive business model that worked in our favour and appealed to the small merchants. With 60 per cent of our POS merchants being first time card acceptance machine users…we believe that the business is ripe for growth,” he added.

Sameer said the company will be expanding the reach of its POS business to 80 cities and deploy 3 lakh machines by end of 2021-22.

“Additionally, we are exploring strategic partnerships with banks, financial institutions and brands with the objective of enhancing the customer experience on our POS devices. This would include providing customer credit offerings in the form of Buy Now Pay Later (BNPL),” he said.

The company will also add loyalty and rewards features to the POS devices to aid merchants’ business growth and drive increased consumer footfalls at their shops, he added.

BharatPe has raised close to USD 300 million in equity and debt, till date. Its investors include Coatue Management, Ribbit Capital, Insight Partners, Steadview Capital, Beenext, Amplo and Sequoia Capital.

Last month, the company had announced the acquisition of Payback India, the country’s largest multi-brand loyalty programme company with over 100 million members. In the same month, it also received an in-principle approval by the Reserve Bank to establish a small finance bank, in partnership with Centrum Financial Services Ltd (Centrum).



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BharatPe to spread PoS business to 80 cities

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Merchant-focused fintech BharatPe plans to triple its point of sale (PoS) business, BharatSwipe, and targets $6 billion in annualised transaction processed value (TPV) by the end of this fiscal year.

“We will be expanding our reach in the PoS business to 80 cities and deploy three lakh machines by the end of 2021-22. Additionally, we are exploring strategic partnerships with banks, financial institutions and brands with the objective of enhancing customer experience on our PoS devices,” said Suhail Sameer, Group President, BharatPe.

Fintech continues to garner highest seed funding after a pandemic-hit 2020

“BharatPe, which is now the number three player in the private PoS category, will also ramp up its reach by five times,” the company said in a statement on Thursday, adding that it plans to ramp up brand partnerships and offer consumer credit to drive further value in the PoS business.

BharatSwipe was launched in the second half of 2020 and contributes 20 per cent to the overall payments TPV of the company.

Fintech will be the silver bullet for growth in 2021

At present, there are over one lakh BharatSwipe machines installed across 16 cities in the country, which facilitate transactions exceeding ₹1,400 crore every month.

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RBI extends restrictions on PMC Bank further till Dec 31

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The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has extended the validity of its Directions to the scam-hit Punjab and Maharashtra Co-operative (PMC) Bank for a further period from July 1 to December 31, 2021, subject to review.

RBI extended the validity of its directions by six months, taking into account the time required for completion of various activities involved in the process of rescuing the bank.

The central bank, in a statement, said certain proposals were received in response to the expression of interest (EOI) floated in November 2020 by PMC Bank for its reconstruction.

“After careful consideration, the proposal from Centrum Financial Services Ltd. (CFSL) along with Resilient Innovation Pvt. Ltd. (BharatPe) has been found to be prima facie feasible.

SFB proposal

“Accordingly, in specific pursuance to their offer dated February 1, 2021, in response to the EOI, RBI has, on June 18, 2021, granted “in-principle” approval, valid for 120 days, to CFSL to set up a small finance bank (SFB)…,”RBI said in a statement.

Once the SFB is floated, PMC Bank would be merged into it.

Jaspal Bindra, Executive Chairman, Centrum Group, said that CFSL and BharatPe, equal partners in the proposed SFB, will together commit ₹900 crore to their joint venture in the first year.

As and when required, the partners will commit ₹900 crore more. The minimum paid-up net worth requirement for starting an SFB is only ₹200 crore.

Chander Purswani, President, PMC Depositors Forum, emphasised that the central bank must ensure that retail depositors get all their savings back.

Currently, withdrawals from PMC Bank are capped at ₹1 lakh per depositor for the entire duration that it is under RBI Directions. The bank has been under Directions with effect from the close of business on September 23, 2019.

The bank got into trouble due to fraud/ financial irregularities associated with huge exposure, which according to reports was at 73 per cent of its total advances, to a real estate group and manipulation of its books of accounts.

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‘Business interest not driven by PMC Bank alone’

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Jaspal Bindra

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) may have paved the way for the resolution of PMC Bank by granting an in-principle approval for small finance Bank (SFB) to Centrum Financial Services, but its executive chairman Jaspal Bindra says the business interest was not driven by PMC Bank alone. In an Interview with Ankur Mishra, he says the new bank is going to have all of the Centrum’s NBFC business, a good portion of BharatPe’s business, and PMC will also fold into the bank. He also says PMC Bank depositors will have to wait for clarity till the amalgamation scheme is finalised by the regulator. Excerpts:

What has been the reason for showing interest in PMC Bank?

We looked at it on a standalone basis and thought it (PMC Bank) is resolvable. We basically wanted to find a resolution which was better than liquidation for the lender. Our business interest was not driven by PMC Bank alone. We have looked at it as a bank which will also have PMC as a component. The new bank is going to have all of the Centrum’s NBFC business, a good portion of BharatPe’s business, and PMC will also fold into the bank. The reason for looking for a banking licence was to get a deposit franchise.

What was your proposal for the resolution of PMC Bank?

We are putting in some amount of capital. Now it is for RBI to draft a scheme and the government of India to approve it.

How much capital you are going to put into the new bank?

We have underwritten Rs 1,800 crore between partners (CFS and BharatPe), before we start diluting. Whether we dilute or not, Rs 1,800 crore is underwritten by us, of which Rs 500 crore will be there on Day one. Another Rs400 crore will be there within the first year, and other Rs900 crore will be available on tap from the partners. We will increase it as and when required depending on the growth of the business.

How will the procedure of acquiring PMC Bank work out?

Before we can amalgamate the PMC Bank, we will have to be an operational bank. Under Section 45 of the Banking Regulation Act, one can only prepare a merger scheme between two banks and therefore the process will start only once we have been converted into a bank. So, you need to necessarily become a bank first. Then an amalgamation scheme will be proposed to the government of India and then final notification will come after approvals.

How soon can we see small finance bank shaping up?

Our effort is to do as soon as possible, but there is some procedural time in terms of an EGM has to be called, and we have to incorporate our company. Some of these timelines are beyond our control. However, we are hoping to complete it as soon as possible. It will definitely happen within 120 days timeline.

You would have gone through the latest balance sheet of PMC Bank in detail. What are the immediate pain points and how you are going to deal with it?

In terms of pain points, there is a negative net worth and that is an issue in any financial institution. How I am going to deal with it? I cannot tell, because a lot of it will depend on what gets approved in the amalgamation scheme. So, the biggest pain point is the negative net worth which was created due to poor management and fraudulent transactions in the lending side. Otherwise, the bank was well known for good service. And that is what is really hurting depositors, because their money got misused.

What should PMC Bank depositors expect from new owners What is your intent to deal with depositors?

The intent is to start, we must get to a point which is better than liquidation. How much that will be dependent on the scheme.

Was there any discussion with RBI on PMC depositors?

Till this time, the clock was on standstill for PMC Bank depositors, and now at least the clock has started. Now, the question for depositors is when and how much they will be able to withdraw? I think after getting the licence we will be in position to discuss it with RBI.

How will you control PMC depositors moving out of the bank? What is the strategy there?

We will not want to stop PMC depositors. However, we will convince them that there is a new management and a new set-up. We will be able to manage things better. We will try that to an extent that is possible. However, one of the reasons we have been given licence is that if somebody calls for money, we will have to pay.

Is there any incentive you have planned for the depositors?

Over the next four months, we will be giving a thought to these kinds of things to create some incentives. Is there a way we can create some financial incentives? We will work on that. SFBs anyway pay higher than the market even today to depositors.

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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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PMC Plan: BharatPe and CFS will collectively infuse between Rs 500-3,000 crore in SFB

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“We do not know how much amount existing PMC Bank depositors will be able to withdraw, but we want to allow them withdrawing as much as possible,” he further said.

By Ankur Mishra

Centrum Financial Services and BharatPe, will collectively infuse anywhere between Rs 500-3,000 crore capital in the small finance bank (SFB) as per requirement, according to BharatPe group president Suhail Sameer. In an interaction with FE, he said both the partners have agreed to put an equal amount in the bank which will start with Rs 500 crore capital. He also said a final call on PMC Bank depositors will be taken after the amalgamation scheme is prepared by the regulator.

“One thing was clear in our discussion with RBI that interest of depositors is supreme,” Sameer said. According to him the new owners want to allow PMC depositors to withdraw as much as possible from the bank. “We do not know how much amount existing PMC Bank depositors will be able to withdraw, but we want to allow them withdrawing as much as possible,” he further said.

Without sharing details of exact asset-liability mismatch in PMC Bank, Sameer said they have a plan in mind to tackle the same, which is yet to be approved by the regulator.

In the next 3-4 months, the focus for Centrum-BharatPe will be to make small finance bank (SFB) operational, after Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has granted in principle approval to set up SFB on Friday. Under Section 45 of the Banking Regulation Act one can only prepare a merger scheme between two banks and, therefore, the process will start only once SFB is set up. BharatPe expects to extend its existing relationship with its merchants by offering them savings and current accounts, along with banking and credit services.

“Initially high interest rates on deposits will be our pull factor, but overall we want to offer convenience to our customers,” Sameer said. With the kind of reach BharatPe has, mobilising deposits should not be an issue for our bank, he added.

BharatPe facilitates over Rs 200 crore of loans to its merchant partners every month through its NBFC partners. The company has deployed more than 50,000 point of sales (PoS) machines and enables transactions of more than Rs 900 crore per month on PoS machines. BharatPe has presence in 75 cities in the country.

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It’s a bank, PMC will be part of, it’s not takeover, says Centrum’s Jaspal Bindra, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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For Jaspal Bindra, who headed Standard Chartered Bank’s Asia operations in his 40s, the road back to banking is a challenging one. Bindra, who exited StanChart to turn entrepreneur by acquiring a stake in Centrum in 2016, will have to build a bank by merging operations of a failed local cooperative, a non-banking finance company and a new age digital lender.

For Bindra, who has been pursuing a bank licence for some time, the RBI’s quest for a white knight for Punjab and Maharashtra Cooperative Bank (PMC) provided that opportunity. The RBI has granted Centrum 120 days to convert itself into a bank with fintech player BharatPe as an investor who will merge its payment business with the bank. “We are seeing it as a bank which PMC will be a part of and not a takeover. We are capitalising it abundantly so that we will have room to do other things and PMC’s operations will not dominate the new bank,” said Bindra.

“As against the Rs 200-crore minimum capital required for a small finance bank, we are committing to bringing in Rs 900 crore in the first year and we have further committed Rs 900 crore from both of us. In all, we are committing Rs 1,800 crore,” said Bindra. He added that currently the partners are self-sufficient for capital and funds would be raised only at a later day.

Bindra agrees that PMC Bank has a large hole in its books which Centrum examined in January before making the bid. It is not yet clear to what extent the hole will get filled as the Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporation would pay out depositors only after the RBI invokes Section 45 of its Act which has the same effect as a bankruptcy resolution and does not leave scope for any additional payments outside the plan notified by the government.

Both Centrum and Bharat Pe will have to follow RBI’s diktat and undertake all financial businesses within the new bank and not in group companies. This means that the bank will begin with Centrum’s sizeable loan book and BharatPe’s large payment business.

“The PMC loan book is wholesale which is not part of our business, and this will be a runoff. This will not exist in our future as we want to be a pure digital play with over 85% of business being done on the digital platform. The offline presence will be for only those segments of society without digital access,” said Bindra.

The government notification will also determine the terms for the staff of PMC Bank. “For PMC staff we will have to see what comes in the government notification. For our existing staff, we are going to choose the best person between Centrum, BharatPe and the market. We are going to plan talent for the longer term. It does not mean that there will be layoffs as there will be jobs outside the bank for Centrum and BharatPe,” said Bindra.

While there is no guarantee that customers will retain their deposits once the new bank opens its doors, Bindra sees value in the retail deposit franchise. “The branch network is relevant from deposit collection point. They were quite exceptional in their service quality, and we will be happy to have the staff as a valuable addition to the group. They have Finacle which is a leading software platform,” said Bindra. Besides the amalgamation of unlikely partners, the PMC resolution is an experiment at several levels. This is the first time that the RBI is using the lure of a bank licence to refloat a failed bank. This would also be the first time that an old-world business is being moved onto a digital system.



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BharatPe acquires PAYBACK India – The Hindu BusinessLine

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BharatPe on Thursday announced the acquisition of PAYBACK India from American Express and ICICI Investments Strategic Fund.

It did not disclose the transaction value.

Also read: BharatPe signs strategic partnership with ICC

“This is the first-ever acquisition by BharatPe and will make PAYBACK India, the country’s largest multi-brand loyalty program with over 10 crore members, a wholly-owned subsidiary of BharatPe,” it said in a statement.

The acquisition of PAYBACK India is in line with BharatPe’s strategy to build a robust and engaged network of over two crore small merchants by 2023, it further said.

The acquisition will help BharatPe enhance its value proposition for merchant partners and also help it build a lucrative set of offerings for end customers that will enhance footfalls at merchants and accelerate the growth of their businesses.

PAYBACK India will continue operating under its current name and there will be no impact on its existing customer and partner relationships. It will also continue to roll out initiatives to offer value for all customers.

All PAYBACK India employees will now become part of the BharatPe group.

Suhail Sameer and Gautam Kaushik, Group Presidents, BharatPe, along with Sumeet Singh, General Counsel, BharatPe, have joined the Board of PAYBACK India, the company said in the statement.

Further, the role of the senior leadership team at PAYBACK India will be expanded to include the loyalty program for the over 60 lakh merchants of BharatPe.

“With the acquisition of PAYBACK India, we will be able to add a whole new dimension to our merchant value proposition. In addition to the range of payment and credit products which BharatPe offers to help merchants scale their business, we will also be able to drive more consumers to their stores,” said Ashneer Grover, Co-Founder and CEO, BharatPe.

Also read: BharatPe raises ₹50 crore in debt from Northern Arc Capital

“It was our top priority to ensure that for the members of the successful PAYBACK India program there would be no changes and that the great customer experience would also be maintained: Users can collect points while shopping offline and online and benefit from exclusive offers in the usual way, now at even more merchants with BharatPe,” said Markus Knorr, CFO, PAYBACK Global.

Launched in 2010, PAYBACK India has a network of more than 100 offline and online partners. Customers can earn and redeem points on every transaction at its partner merchant outlets

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Fintechs pick up MDR tab, enjoy merchant’s float

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To be sure, merchants would opt for a waiver of the MDR, typically 2-3% on the value of the purchase, only if they are severely strapped for cash. Else, it would not make sense for them to give up the float.

In a push to expand their merchant networks, fintech intermediaries have come up with an innovative settlement scheme by which they waive the merchant discount rate (MDR) on offline card transactions. This allows offline merchants to opt for a delayed settlement of a transaction by not shelling out the MDR rather than settling it on a next-day basis. The payment intermediary has access to the merchant’s float until the transaction is settled.

To be sure, merchants would opt for a waiver of the MDR, typically 2-3% on the value of the purchase, only if they are severely strapped for cash. Else, it would not make sense for them to give up the float.

Industry sources said BharatPe and Paytm are among the companies offering this form of settlement. Emails sent to the two companies did not elicit responses till the time of going to press.

Mohit Gopal, senior VP and strategy head, PayU India, said that the practice is not necessarily wrong. “On the offline side, this does happen. As long as it makes business sense between the fintech and the merchant, it’s fine. If it’s a merchant with strong cash flows, then this is an acceptable thing to them,” he said.

An executive with a fintech, which offers this facility, explained that when the card is swiped by the customer the merchants have two options: Opt for a regular settlement or receive the money within 15 days, by using the app. “Beyond 15 days, we have waived off the MDR charge. We pay the charge to the concerned bank for all transactions,” the executive said. His company believes MDR on card-based transactions is heading for a 2% level, except for Rupay, where MDR is already zero.

Sachin Shettigar, EVP, (merchant onboarding, risk and settlement), Mswipe, told FE the company does not offer merchants a deferred settlement facility but pays all its merchants on a T+1 basis and, for QR transactions, on the same working day. “This is in line with the RBI 2009 directives for merchant payments by intermediaries,” Shettigar said. The only exception is for online transactions where payments can happen on a T+1 basis with the T depending on the agreement with the merchant.

Since RBI’s 2021 guidelines on the regulation of payment aggregators and payment gateways are not applicable to offline players, fintechs can use their discretion for settlement practices. Emailed queries sent to the RBI on its stance on the 15-day offline settlement option remained unanswered. A former RBI executive said that the innovation bears marks of a credit product. “If this is happening then it’s quite surprising because it will also involve banks and the card networks who are prone to be more compliant than fintechs. I don’t think the RBI will look upon this kindly,” he said.

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