JP Morgan becomes world’s most systemic bank, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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LONDON, – JP Morgan Chase has become the world’s most systemically important bank once again according to the latest annual ranking of top lenders by global regulators, with BNP Paribas and Goldman Sachs also now deemed more systemic.

The Financial Stability Board (FSB), made up of regulators from G20 countries, published its latest table of the world’s 30 most systemic banks on Tuesday.

Being included in the table means having to hold additional capital and undergo more intense supervision to avoid a repeat of taxpayer bailouts in the banking crisis over a decade ago.

In practice, the lenders typically hold capital buffers that are already above FSB requirements.

The 30 banks are divided between four “buckets” in order of how systemic, interconnected and complex they are, with JP Morgan now in a higher bucket than its nearest peers.

Last year JPMorgan shared the highest bucket with HSBC and Citigroup, but is now alone in the next bucket up, which had been empty. JP Morgan had been the world’s most systemic bank in 2019.

BNP Paribas and Goldman Sachs have also moved up one bucket. (Reporting by Huw Jones Editing by Rachel Armstrong)



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BNP Paribas keen to become ‘go to’ bank for India Inc’s overseas buys

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BNP Paribas,which operates in over 70 countries, sees itself emerging as the “go to” investment bank for Indian corporates looking to expand their global footprint through the mergers & acquisitions (M&A) route, Aymar de Liedekerke Beaufort, Head of Territory, India, has said.

“We do see several Indian corporates emerging as champions (at the global stage). We want to work with the top 100 Indian corporates and believe many of these will have specific acquisitions to do in Europe and this is where they may need a bank like us,” Beaufort told BusinessLine in an interview.

Beaufort, who is also the chief of Corporate and Institutional Banking in India, highlighted that Indian corporates have begun to acquire companies abroad for specific needs such as technology and BNP Paribas with its huge global network and one client approach can add value to those corporates looking for specific growth opportunities.

“It’s always good for a CFO to be able to talk to a banker in Delhi, Mumbai and Chennai and deal with the same bank in Argentina, Korea and Vietnam. We as biggest Euroland investment bank bring network benefits for our clients and for us it is one client approach wherever you go in any part of the world,” he said.

There are good chances where BNP Paribas will know both the buyer ( in India) and seller (in Europe) and this is the trend that is likely to play out in coming days, Beaufort added.

He highlighted that Indian corporates in the IT and pharma sectors are already active on overseas acquisitions in recent days.

“We are positioning ourselves as top leader for banking needs of Indian corporates. We bring an angle that others cannot bring by being the best and biggest market cap in Europe,” he said.

New economy

Beaufort said that BNP Paribas India also wants to move from old economy to new economy and get closer to the champions of the new economy. “That is our vision of next ten years. We want to be closer with those companies that are potentially not part of the top hundred today but will become top hundred in next five years. We need to be agile to look at Indian digital businesses and capture them as they grow”, he said.

Asked if he sees investment bank or corporate banking (BNP Paribas is not into retail banking in India) as growth driver for BNP Paribas India in coming days, he said, “Going forward, I do see both growing, but very difficult to say if both will grow at the same speed. I believe our Investment Banking pie will grow quicker. I do expect more commoditisation of corporate banking as it gets digitised.”

Also, BNP Paribas —just as it wants to be seen as the window to Europe for Indian corporates — is keen that its European corporate clients see it as the window for their journey outside of Europe.

Beaufort, who has been with BNP Paribas for more than 30 years, also oversees as part of his responsibilities the bank’s back-office operations and retail brokerage arm Sharekhan.

Investment destination

He also said that India is even more attractive today as an investment destination than before. This is because other destinations may become more challenging and prospects for India is getting better and better.

“India is in competition with the rest of the world. India has lot to offer by sheer size. Just as corporates focus on client centricity, India should focus on investors to convey that they are welcome and their coming in is seen as positive. Nobody will have wrong perception that India is looking to push their local champions. It’s normal and every country does it, but you have to do it in a fair and transparent way so that foreigners don’t feel they have no space for them,” he said.

Asked if BNP Paribas will look to enter retail banking in India, he replied in the negative. “We don’t expect to be competing on solutions where local banks will be much better than us,” he added.

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Canara Bank allots over 16.73 cr shares in Rs 2,500 cr QIP, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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State-run Canara Bank on Tuesday said it has approved allotment of over 16.73 crore shares in the Rs 2,500 crore qualified institutions placement (QIP) that closed a day earlier. The QIP opened on August 17 and closed on August 23, 2021.

The sub-committee of the board, capital planning process of the board of directors of the bank, at its meeting held on August 24, 2021, approved the allotment of 16,73,92,032 equity shares to eligible qualified institutional buyers at an issue price of Rs 149.35 per equity share, aggregating up to Rs 2,500 crore, Canara Bank said in a regulatory filing.

With this, the paid-up equity share capital of the bank stands increased to Rs 1,814.13 crore from Rs 1,646.74 crore, it said.

A total of seven investors have been allotted more than 5 per cent of the equity offered in the QIP issue, said the Bengaluru-based lender.

LIC subscribed to 15.91 per cent; BNP Paribas Arbitrage 12.55 per cent; Societe Generale 7.97 per cent; Indian Bank and ICICI Prudential Life Insurance – 6.37 per cent each.

Morgan Stanley Asia (Singapore) Pte-ODI bought 6.16 per cent of the shares issued in QIP and Volrado Venture Partners Fund II 6.05 per cent.

Canara Bank stock traded at Rs 154.80 apiece on BSE, up by 1.31 per cent from its previous close. PTI KPM ANS ANS



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Carlyle Group exits SBI Life Insurance Company, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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NEW DELHI: Private equity firm Carlyle Group has exited SBI Life Insurance Company Ltd by selling its stake representing 1.9 per cent shareholding of the company, through open market transactions.

The total deal value stood at Rs 2,147 crore.

As per the BSE’s block deal data for Thursday, Carlyle Group through its entity, CA Emerald Investments, sold a total of 1.9 crore scrips at an average price of Rs 1,130 per scrip.

SBI Life Insurance Company’s shareholding data for the June 2021 quarter showed that CA Emerald Investments was its public shareholder and held 1.9 per cent stake in the firm.

Separately, the shares were picked up by Max Life Insurance Company Ltd, Morgan Stanley Asia Singapore Pte, HDFC Standard Life Insurance, BNP Paribas Arbitrage, Bofa Securities Europe SA, Societe Generale, Integrated Core Strategies (Asia) Pte Ltd.

The shares were also picked up by a host of mutual funds including Kotak Mahindra Mutual Fund, Pioneer Investment Fund, Nippon Indian Mutual Fund, Franklin Templeton Mutual Fund, SBI Mutual Fund and ICICI Prudential Mutual Fund, among others.

On the BSE, SBI Life Insurance Company on Friday opened the counter at Rs 1,147 and had ended at Rs 1,134.85 on Thursday.



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Visa to acquire Currencycloud at 700 million pounds valuation, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Visa Inc said on Thursday that it had agreed to buy British cross-border payments provider Currencycloud at a valuation of 700 million pounds ($962.01 million).

Visa has been a Currencycloud shareholder since 2020, and the financial consideration will be reduced by the equity that the card network company already owns in the startup, the company said.

Launched in 2012, Currencycloud facilitates cross-border payments for nearly 500 banking and technology companies, including well-known European fintechs Klarna, Monzo, Starling and Revolut. Since its launch it has moved more than $75 billion in payments to over 180 countries.

The deal comes less than a month after Visa announced it had agreed a 1.8 billion euro ($2.2 billion) takeover of European open banking platform Tink.

The aggressive acquisition strategy is part of Visa’s push to diversify revenues beyond credit card payments, where it is one of the world’s dominant players. Card companies have been facing increased pressure from regulators on fees, especially in Europe.

“The acquisition of Currencycloud is another example of Visa executing on our network of networks strategy to facilitate global money movement,” Colleen Ostrowski, Visa’s Global Treasurer, said in a statement.

Currencycloud will maintain its management team and continue to operate from its London headquarters. The transaction is subject to regulatory approvals and other customary closing conditions.

Other Currencycloud backers included BNP Paribas SA, SBI Group, Siam Commercial Bank, Sapphire Ventures, Notion Capital and GV, formerly Google Ventures. ($1 = 0.7276 pounds)



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Rupee slips by 2 paise to close at 74.20 against US dollar, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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MUMBAI: The rupee weakened by 2 paise to end at 74.20 (provisional) against the US dollar on Friday as higher crude oil prices weighed on forex market sentiment.

At the interbank foreign exchange market, the rupee opened at 74.15 per dollar as against its previous close of 74.18.

It hovered in the range of 74.14 to 74.25 during the day before ending at 74.20 against the greenback.

“The Indian rupee remained under pressure on Friday on firm crude oil prices and as market participants remained vigilant ahead of US Core PCE Price Index data,” Saif Mukadam, Research Analyst, Sharekhan by BNP Paribas.

Meanwhile, the dollar index, which gauges the greenback’s strength against a basket of six currencies, fell 0.08 per cent to 91.74.

“Dollar is showing weakness amid Fed officials differing view on how long inflation is likely to stay high and when to tighten monetary policy. Market Sentiments improved on news that US President Joe Biden and a group of senators agreed on roughly USD 1 trillion infrastructure plan securing bipartisan deal,” he noted

The rupee may gain as number of COVID-19 cases in India continued to decline. Rupee may trade in the range of 73.55 to 74.50 in next couple of sessions, he added.

On the domestic equity market front, the BSE Sensex ended 226.04 points or 0.43 per cent higher at 52,925.04, while the broader NSE Nifty rose 72.55 points or 0.46 per cent to 15,863.00.

Brent crude futures, the global oil benchmark, declined 0.34 per cent to USD 75.30 per barrel.

Foreign institutional investors were net sellers in the capital market on Thursday as they offloaded shares worth Rs 2,890.94 crore, as per exchange data.



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Green’ to be soon the colour of money for European banks, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The European Union is working on new rules where banks will have to state the “greenness” of their activities, or what share of their business is financing climate-friendly activities — a move that would impact profitability in an increasingly environmentally conscious world.

The so-called green asset ratio (GAR) measure is meant to help inform stakeholders — including investors, employees and depositors — of a bank’s commitment to disinvesting from fossil fuels by revealing what proportion of its assets are environmentally sound.

How would it work

Depending on its relative shade of green, a lender’s funding costs could be at stake, as well as its ability to retain talent and its attractiveness to customers. Unlike banks’ other complex financial metrics, a green label may resonate with a much broader public that’s increasingly conscious of companies’ role in society.

However, there is a lot of uncertainty around what will be included in the GAR. If too many banking activities are included it may unnecessarily hit some lenders, and if only a few are included there is danger of “greenwashing.” Also, the banks may shift dirty business to where it isn’t captured in the GAR.

While the European Union proposed measuring green assets against banks’ entire activities, including derivatives, the European Banking Authority has a different view. It favours excluding derivatives entirely from the calculation and reporting so-called “capital markets indicators” separately.

The EBA’s proposal could let banks off the hook on climate change by possibly flattering their green asset ratios. Derivatives are a significant and somewhat risky part of investment banking so their inclusion in the GAR would make a difference. Worse, some lenders might take on greater risk by structuring non-green deals as derivatives to keep them out of the GAR calculations.

Where do European banks stand?

French banks are known for dominating their home market, but they’re considered also-rans on the global stage when compared with US lenders. That’s not the case in the world of green banking. Credit Agricole is the leading underwriter of green bonds, three places ahead of the much larger JPMorgan since the end of 2015, according to an analysis on activity from almost 140 banks around the world by Bloomberg. Two other Paris-based banks, BNP Paribas and Societe Generale, rank in the top 10 in the league table.

French banks were early in identifying green lending as a way to differentiate themselves from their rivals, said Maia Godemer, a London-based researcher at BloombergNEF, a clean-energy think tank. Green debt offerings have been steadily increasing for the past five years, and 2021 is shaping up to be the biggest yet. Issuers have sold more than $187 billion of green bonds so far in 2021, almost triple the pace from the year-earlier period.

A renewable energy market

The underwriting market for renewable-energy companies is minuscule when compared with the funds that fossil-fuel companies are raking in. Since the start of 2016, renewable-energy producers have raised less than $160 billion in the debt markets, compared with the $3.6 trillion for non-renewable energy producers, according to Bloomberg data. This year, when one would expect the spread to be narrowing, green energy providers have received less than $10 billion from bond sales and loans, while fossil-fuel companies got almost $190 billion. The leading lenders to renewable-energy companies since 2016 include Japan’s Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group, BNP Paribas and Australia & New Zealand Banking Group. Bank of America was the top U.S. bank, placing 11th in the league table.



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BNP Paribas appoints Aymar de Liedekerke Beaufort as head of India operations, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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French bank BNP Paribas has elevated Aymar de Liedekerke Beaufort as head of territory, India which includes the bank’s back office operations and retail brokerage arm Sharekhan.

This is in addition to Beaufort‘s current responsibility as the head of the bank’s eight branches and chief of corporate and institutional banking (CIB) in India. Beaufort will take over his additional responsibilities from September 1, the bank said in a statement.

Beaufort has been with BNP Paribas for 30 years and in charge of the bank’s India branches and CIB since December 2019.

His has previously headed the bank’s operations in Vietnam, Czech Republic, Slovakia, Hungary and South Eastern Europe.

He succeeds Franciska Decuypere, who was head of territory for India since 2018. Decuypere will relocate to Europe to take on another senior role within BNP Paribas, the bank said.

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