India’s banking sector survives covid scare but needs to address these challenges now

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


The Indian banking sector is resilient, sufficiently capitalized and well-regulated segment.

By Brajesh Kumar Tiwari

In the last parliament session, the Union Cabinet cleared changes (Deposit Insurance & Credit Guarantee Corporation Bill 2021) to the deposit insurance laws to provide funds up to Rs 5 lakh to an account holder within 90 days in the event of a bank coming under the moratorium imposed by the RBI. The government has also permitted raising the deposit insurance premium by 20 per cent immediately, and maximum by 50 per cent. 

The Indian banking sector is resilient, sufficiently capitalized and well-regulated segment. Over the last 7 years the NDA government has been infusing capital into the public sector banks using recapitalization bonds. However, following COVID and the expectations from the Union Budget 2021-22, liquidity has become a huge issue. Since the last few years, several European banks have confirmed certain disposal operations of impaired loans. This has largely contributed to a significant reduction of the NPL ratio. However, the birth of a huge secondary market for bad debts and the unification of standardized large-ticket assets in order to construct a ‘single-name’ portfolio has given way to newer problems. In fact, the banking sector is silently reeling under the challenges thrown towards it, which are:

Maintaining Capital Adequacy:  The capital a bank sets aside for its rainy day or to undertake lending activities acts more like the bank’s risk threshold.  However, in the post-COVID world banks are facing fresh ambush of NPAs on unsecured loans. Earlier RBI has offered moratorium on loans and has also announced the two-year restructuring on loans to safeguard weak borrowers, but this situation hints at the NPAs increasing from 7.5 per cent in September last year to 13.5 per cent by September this year, putting a lot of stress on banks. Unless the government pumps in money externally, banks will be in severe loss creating massive capital adequacy problems. Bad loans and in failing with maintaining the minimum RBI prescribed Capital Adequacy Ratio, banks will have to face severe challenges in due course. Moreover, the Basel IV standards that limit the reduction in capital is due to be formalized in January 2023. Earlier, following the global financial crisis of 2007-08 the international implementation of Basel III was formalized and that has already raised the capital adequacy quotient for banks in order to mitigate risks. Now, Basel IV, according to global banks will raise the bar of capital further, which is definitely a sign of worry for India, given its present state. 

Maintaining Asset Quality: Bad loans are a big problem for the Indian banking sector, especially the PSBs. As per an IMF report 36.9% of the total debt in India is at risk and banks have capacity to absorb only 7.9% loss. Add the COVID crisis to this and the banks are struggling to recover loans from small businesses, which have been severely affected by COVID. The pandemic has put a halt in business all across, so loan recovery is a big question mark, which definitely hurts the banking sector as they struggle to maintain the quality of their assets.   

Maintaining Growth: The overall economic growth of the country is shunted at the moment and an outward push can only help every contributing sector of the economy –corporates, retail, and rural prominently. The growth impetus is financial at the moment and the sooner the sectors recover, the healthier it will be for the banking sector. As of now, the banking sector has no way of fulfilling its growth aspirations and is barely struggling to stay on ground. 

Keeping these top 3 challenges in mind, here are a few suggestions for the banking sector in India, which will help them revive their status.

Things to work out in short term

  • Restructuring: RBI’s restructuring guidelines on loans for individuals and businesses not only work as a relief for the borrowers, but it also gives a scope to banks to maintain their status quo. Banks should use this relief period to improve their asset quality while continuing being a pillar of support to the MSMEs. This restructuring is RBI advised and the framework keeping in mind the benefit of the banks and customers have been specially devised and has come in to effect since April 1, 2021. Since the regulatory guidelines for the loan restructuring are RBI directed so the implications of customers delaying payments will not come harshly on the banks. This gives the financial institutions a chance to reorient themselves. 
  • Lower interest rates on loans: The COVID crisis has pushed the economy to go off track and financial shortages is an evident problem all across. Constant cash flow is a problem with both the service sector and as well as individuals. Indian banking sector should use this premise to their credit and begin offering lower interest rate loans to individuals and MSMEs. This will encourage lending, which will stimulate overall economic growth and give banks a chance to improve on their CAR. Reform has already started in the home loan finance space, interest rates for home loans in India at present have fallen to historic lows. What was around 8.40% during September 2019 is now at 6.49-6.95% range.
  • Improved diligence: While it is necessary to pump in more money in to the system to help sustain businesses and to boost the economy, it is also equally a necessity to keep bad loans at bay. Bad loans lead to higher NPAs over time, so due diligence has to be observed when offering funds. This will help keep frauds and unscrupulous people at distance and the banks will then be able to extend money to rightful and needy businesses or individuals. Proper scrutiny and stringent application measures will help avoid wrongdoings. Moreover, banks should be cautious when giving loans to Indian companies who have heavily borrowed abroad. This is because according to RBI, this will put banks under unnecessary exposure to dollar and will further add to their existing pool of problems. 

Things to work out in long term

    • Technology upgradation: Digitalization is the buzz word for businesses and banking, especially PSBs should adapt to the concept of digital to make banking operating seamless. Technology will make or break the way people look at services in the coming time, so banks should ride the bus before it leaves the stop. From adding top-notch technology to upgrade services to upgrading existing set-up, a lot of opportunities lies in technology and harnessing the same will help bringing in a big change in approaches. 
    • Technology reach: Tech inclusion and tech literacy campaigns should be undertaken to ensure that paperless banking or basic tech services are so easy to use that it is available/accessible and usable to all. This is not undoable. If people can order products on Amazon, use Facebook, why not banking services. Of course, with appropriate security measures in place. 

 

  • Focus on MSMEs: Banks, including PSUs are primarily keeping their attention on retail advances or corporates today. The banking sector mostly chooses to ignore the MSME advances. This trend is not healthy for the economy and will not help banks grow in the days to follow. MSMEs are the backbone of Indian economy and creates employment for 70 million people. This sector has a 16% contribution to the Indian GDP, which as per reports is to become 25% by 2022. Certainly, the prosperity and growth of this sector will help leverage the economy and give it a prosperous enrichment. 

 

  • Customer-centric Innovation: Innovation is key to customer loyalty in today’s day and age and in order to win customer loyalty in long term, banks should focus more on innovation. Keeping pace with the changing environment and other industry practices the banking sector should invest in innovation that will help them serve their customers with ease. The more agile the services and banking practices, the easier it will be for the customer to bank with the partner. 

The pandemic has been an eye opener for everyone in some way or other. However, counting in the positives of the pandemic there is a chance to relook at the economy. This is the right time to repair and reorient as we prepare for a better tomorrow. 

(Brajesh Kumar Tiwari is the Author of “Changing Scenario of Indian Banking Industry” Book; Associate Professor Atal Bihari Vajpayee School of Management & Entrepreneurship (ABV-SME); Member (Innovation Council, JNU); Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU). Views expressed are the author’s own.)

Get live Stock Prices from BSE, NSE, US Market and latest NAV, portfolio of Mutual Funds, Check out latest IPO News, Best Performing IPOs, calculate your tax by Income Tax Calculator, know market’s Top Gainers, Top Losers & Best Equity Funds. Like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter.

Financial Express is now on Telegram. Click here to join our channel and stay updated with the latest Biz news and updates.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Should you invest in the latest Sovereign Gold Bond issue?

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


The latest Sovereign Gold Bond Scheme 2021-22 – Series VI will be open for subscription from August 30 to September 3, 2021. The issue price is ₹4,732 per bond (equivalent to one gram of gold). Those applying online and paying digitally get a discount of ₹50 on the issue price.

SGBs can be bought from banks, designated post offices, stockbrokers and the NSE and the BSE.

Why invest

The latest SGB issue price of ₹4,732 is lower by ₹45 to ₹157 per bond than in the preceding five issues in 2021-22. The price is a simple average of the price of gold (999 purity) for the last three business days preceding the subscription period.

Gold prices have fallen around 13 per cent rice (in rupee terms) since the August 2020 high.

Those with a long-term investment horizon can consider buying SGBs in this issue to add to their long-term gold allocation. As of now, no further SGB issues have been announced for this year.

Gold does well when other asset classes such as equity fare poorly and can form part of your portfolio (around 10 per cent) as a hedge against underperformance in other assets.

Given that returns from gold can be lumpy – long periods of poor return followed by short periods of high return – having a longer holding period helps. Over the last 30 years, gold has offered an average 5-year return (CAGR) of 9.4 per cent with the possibility of these returns being negative 13 per cent of the time.

Over the same period, the average 7-year gold return (CAGR) has been 9.7 per cent with the possibility of negative returns being only 1 per cent.

However, investors are advised to keep some powder dry for possible future tranches, which may come at lower prices.

Fears of the US Fed unwinding its ultra-loose monetary policy to rein in inflation have been weighing on gold.

The brass tacks

You can buy a minimum of 1 gram and up to a maximum of 4 kilograms during a financial year.

The limit includes bonds bought in the primary issues as well as those from the secondary market.

The investment tenure of these bonds is eight years. However, early redemption with the RBI is allowed from the fifth year. Both interest and redemption proceeds will be credited to the bank account provided by you at the time of buying the bond.

For this, you can approach the concerned bank or whoever you bought them from, 30 days before the coupon payment date (half-yearly). Request for premature redemption will be accepted only if you approach the concerned bank/post office at least 1 day before the coupon payment date. While you can also sell the SGBs in the secondary market any time before maturity, the lack of adequate trading volumes can be an impediment.

If interested in a more liquid option, consider gold ETFs that can be bought/sold anytime. However, gold ETFs involve an expense ratio while there is no purchase cost for SGBs. ETFs are also subject to capital gains tax, while capital gains on SGBs are tax exempt in certain cases.

Returns and taxation

Apart from the possibility of capital gains (appreciation in gold price between the time of purchase and redemption), SGBs offer investors interest of 2.5 per cent per annum (paid semi-annually) on their initial investment. The interest income is taxed at your relevant slab rate.

If you hold the bonds until maturity (eight years), then the capital gain, if any, is exempt from tax. Capital gains on SGBs sold prematurely in the secondary market are taxed at an individual’s income tax slab rate, if held for 36 months or less, and at 20 per cent with indexation benefit if held for more than 36 months.

This is a free article from the BusinessLine premium Portfolio segment. For more such content, please subscribe to The Hindu BusinessLine online.)

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Banks to see 15% plus credit growth in FY22-25 period: ICICI Securities

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


India Inc, after undergoing a phase of deleveraging over the past few years, is now better positioned and confident to embark on the path of re-leveraging, according to ICICI Securities.

Indian financiers, too, have fortified themselves with ample liquidity/ capital buffer to tap the emerging opportunity, said research analysts Kunal Shah, Renish Bhuva and Chintan Shah.

They observed that Year-To-Date (YTD) growth of 2.2 per cent suggests bank credit growth in FY21 will settle upwards of 5 per cent (at least 3-4 per cent accretion is witnessed in February/March historically).

Post that, the analysts expect 9-10 per cent credit growth in FY22. Recovery in economic activity and derivative effect of increased investments and corporate/government spending on consumption will sustain the momentum of 15 per cent plus growth over FY22-25

Gold loans shine

In a report, ICICI Securities said Banks’ gold loan portfolio has seen 67 per cent compounded annual growth rate (CAGR) growth over the past 2 years and is also up 65 per cent YTD and 132 per cent YoY to ₹43,100 crore.

The report attributed this largely to focus of banks towards secured lending products post loan-to-value (LTV) relaxation.

NBFCs

The analysts said service segment credit (led by lending to non-banking finance companies/NBFCs and financial services) is now gathering pace – up 1.6 per cent YTD/8.4 per cent YoY.

Lending to NBFCs and financial services was up 2.6 per cent MoM/10 per cent YoY.

Loans to public financial institutions have jumped 79 per cent YTD/151 per cent YoY, while lending to housing finance companies (HFC) has shrunk 31 per cent YTD (flat YoY).

“This clearly shows banks’ lending preference more towards public institutions than HFCs.

“NBFCs, after having consolidated for almost 2 years now, significantly deleveraging the balance sheet by running down high risk profile assets, are now more confident to pursue growth opportunities in a risk-calibrated manner,” the analysts said.

Consequently, bank lending to NBFCs should stabilise in FY22 rather than decelerate like FY21.

Retail credit

Retail credit is now inching closer towards double-digit mark (6.7 per cent YTD/9.1 per cent YoY) – housing, credit card, vehicle have picked up buoyancy over the past couple of months, per the report.

It assessed that one of the key segments that has retraced faster than anticipated is credit card – outstanding up 5 per cent YoY, now up 7.6 per cent YTD building over almost 14 per cent YTD decline in May 2020.

ICICI Securities noted that despite strong real estate sales and spike in registrations in housing projects, there has not been much traction in housing portfolio till January 2021.3.7

Housing (including priority sector lending) is up 7.7 per cent YoY and 1.7 per cent MoM, while YTD growth stands at 5.9 per cent which is not significant considering the strong traction seen in real estate deals, it added.

Vehicle loans led by improved sales amidst festive demand is up 2.5 per cent MoM, 6.9 per cent YTD and 7.0 per cent YoY.

MSME sector

The report said the MSME (micro, small and medium enterprise) sector was under a prolonged downcycle of credit growth over the past few quarters.

The sector saw momentum July 2020 onwards, post the introduction of the Emergency Credit Line Guarantee Scheme (ECLGS) by the government as an aid to MSMEs, which were in trouble, it added.

Banks, in particular Public Sector Banks, extended full support to MSMEs which resulted in MSME credit book jumping 33 per cent in a period of seven months to ₹1.27 lakh crore from ₹96,000 crore in June 2020. In terms of YoY growth, it is up 19.1 per cent and up 20.5 per cent YTD.

The report said the agriculture sector is leading the credit growth momentum with 9.5 per cent YTD/10 per cent year-on-year (YoY) growth (1.8 per cent month-on-month/ MoM).

Industry credit

Industry credit is still lagging with YTD decline of 4.3 per cent (down 1.3 per cent YoY). However, downward trajectory in industry credit (particularly large industries) has been arrested since past three quarters and there is a marginal MoM uptick since November.

The analysts underscored that the key sectors that are deleveraging continuously include telecom and other infra, construction, metals and petroleum. On the other hand, textiles, chemical, plastics, paper products have gathered credit momentum.

“However, with revival in consumer demand and rise in government spending, we believe industry growth can emerge as a key driver for credit growth in coming years.

“We believe industry growth can emerge as a key driver for credit growth with 6 per cent growth in FY22 and 13-15 per cent growth over FY23-25,” the analysts said.

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Max Bupa Health Insurance targets ₹5,000 cr by FY25

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Max Bupa, a leading standalone health insurance, which has been growing at a CAGR of over 30 per cent, expects to close 2020-2021 at about ₹1,700 crore of gross written premium (GWP). It is targeting ₹5,000 crore of GWP by 2024-2025.

In an underpenetrated private heath insurance segment in the country, the company sees itself playing a much bigger role as it spreads its reach in the market by inducting agent advisors and networking with more hospitals.

The country’s private health sector’s business size, estimated at about ₹56,798 crore in 2020, is expeced to grow to about ₹1,00,000 crore by 2025. To address the growing demand, Max Bupa is expanding its presence in over 45 additional cities this year, and plans to take the total count to over 200 offices in two years.

Krishnan Ramachandran, MD and CEO, Max Bupa Health Insurance, said: “Covid-19 has made people cognizant of the fact that health insurance can go a long way in ensuring good medical care and maintaining one’s financial health. Post the Covid-19 pandemic, the health insurance industry witnessed conversion of demand translating into purchase.”

“As a trusted health partner, Max Bupa’s goal is to sustain this awareness and reach out to maximum markets in the next two years to get more people under the ambit of health insurance. Max Bupa is opening offices across 45 additional cities this year, and we plan to take the total count toover 200 offices across India in the next two years.”

Interacting with the media here today, the MD said: “The company is strengthening its presence in the country and in Telangana by opening new branches.” Max Bupa is opening two additional branches in Hyderabad, and aims to provide health coverage to over 2.5 lakh people in the next five years in Telangana. It plans to on-board more than 8,000 agents by 2024-25 and targets to clock ₹150 crore gross written premium over the next 5 years.”

The Covid-19 pandemic has made people realise the importance of health insurance in safeguarding against exorbitant medical expenditure while availing appropriate treatment. This has helped generate new business.

Bhabatosh Mishra, Director of Claims, Underwriting and Products, Max Bupa Health Insurance, said: “Max Bupa is betting big on the emerging Tier II and III markets for its expansion journey. As we expand to newer markets, our plan is to increase penetration of health insurance and significantly raise awareness about its benefits.”

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY