Canara Bank home loan interest rates to start from 6.65%, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Canara Bank announced on Saturday that it has a limited period offer wherein home loans interest rates will start from 6.65% per annum. “This offer is applicable to all customers irrespective of the loan amount. Along with the attractive rate of interest and quick & hassle free sanction, the Bank has waived processing and documentation charges. This is a great opportunity to get home loan from Canara Bank to derive the benefits of this limited period offer,” stated a press release from the bank.

Adding to the customer convenience, the Bank is providing facility wherein the request for home loan can be made online by scanning the QR code and instant approval can be obtained. ‘Scan & apply’, ‘get instant approval’ is available for car loan, education loan, gold loan and personal loan also.

Till the end of November many banks were offering low home loan rates as part of their festive season offers. Already at really low levels, it was a good time for prospective borrowers to avail of a home loan. Although, the festive season offers are over, interest rates on home loans are still are low levels. Many banks had also waived off processing and documentation charges just like Canara Bank as for its latest home loan offer.

Click here to get the full list of repo-rate linked home loan interest rates

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Canara Bank raises ₹1,500 crore via AT1 bonds

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Public sector lender Canara Bank has mobilised ₹1,500 crore in Basel III-Compliant Additional Tier 1 (AT1) bonds Series II, at a coupon rate of 8.05% per annum.

The issue received an overwhelming response from investors, with bids for more than ₹4,699 crore against a base issue size of ₹500 crore. Based on the response, the Bank has decided to accept ₹1,500 crore at a coupon rate of 8.05% per annum, according to a statement.

The AT1 instrument is perpetual in nature. However, the issuer can call back after five years or any anniversary date thereafter.

The Bank’s AT1 bonds are rated AA+ by CRISIL and India Ratings & Research Ltd.

This is the Second AT1 bond issuance of the Bank post the new SEBI regulations, During October 2021 bank has raised Basel III Compliant Additional Tier I bonds of ₹1,500 crore.

The Bank’s CRAR stood at 14.37% as of September 30, 2021 as compared to 12.77% as of September 30, 2020. The Bank had raised QIP to the tune of ₹2,500 crore during Q2FY22.

Canara Bank had indicated that its capital raising plans for FY22 included ₹4,000 crore via AT1 bonds and ₹2,500 crore in Tier 2 bonds.

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Canara Bank raises Rs 1,500 crore via Basel-III compliant bond, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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New Delhi, State-owned Canara Bank on Thursday said it has raised Rs 1,500 crore by issuing Basel-III compliant bonds. “Our bank came out with issuance of Rs 1,500 crore of additional tier I bonds on 30th November 2021.

“The bank received total bid amount of Rs 4,699 crore, out of which full issuance of Rs 1,500 crore was accepted at 8.05 per cent,” Canara Bank said in a regulatory filing.

To comply with Basel-III capital regulations, banks globally need to improve and strengthen their capital planning processes.

These norms are being implemented to mitigate concerns on potential stresses on asset quality and consequential impact on performance and profitability of banks.

Shares of Canara Bank closed at Rs 207.10 apiece on BSE, up 0.15 per cent from the previous close.

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CARE Ratings revises ratings of AT I Bonds of 4 public banks

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CARE Ratings has revised the ratings of AT I Bonds of four public sector banks including Canara Bank, Indian Bank, Punjab National Bank and Union Bank of India. It considered the strengthening in the overall credit profile of the banks including improvement in capital cushions over the minimum regulatory requirement, improvement in both profitabilities as well as the distributable reserves position.

While rating instruments are issued by public sector banks (PSB), CARE Ratings assigns high weightage to support from the Government of India (GoI) due to its majority shareholding and the systemic importance of these banks in the Indian financial system.

Considering the significant size and financial franchise of the banks, a default by a PSB would have material economic consequences for the government as well as regulators, hence, the importance of PSBs for GOI and the economy as a whole cannot be undermined. Additional Tier I (AT I) Bonds are perpetual debt instruments that banks are allowed to raise under the Basel III capital framework and form a part of Tier I capital for banks. These instruments have several unique features, which make them very different from other types of debt instruments and provide them equity.

The issuing bank has full discretion over coupon payments at all times on these instruments. Therefore, if a bank does not have sufficient distributable reserves to service the coupon on AT I Bonds, it may not pay the coupon. These bonds also have loss-absorption features through conversion/writedown/ write-off on breach of pre-specified trigger on capitalisation requirement or at the point of non-viability (PONV) which may be decided by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI).

As per CARE Ratings’ criteria for rating of hybrid instruments issued by banks, CARE Ratings has been notching down the AT I Bonds issued by the banks by one to several notches below the Tier II Bonds rating depending on the expected adequacy of eligible reserves, cushion over minimum regulatory capital and other credit risk assessment parameters of the individual bank to factor in the additional risk in these instruments on account of several unique features.

In the last few years, PSBs have received significant government as well as regulatory support. GOI has initiated consolidation of the sector by amalgamation of relatively weaker and smaller banks into anchor banks which have gained significant scale increasing their economic and systemic importance and has further recapitalised these banks.

“With the strengthening of the resolution of NPAs under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC) process, the banks have seen recoveries in some of the large NPAs. The banks also have made higher provisioning on bad assets and additional provisioning in anticipation of expected losses due to Covid-19 which has increased the provision coverage ratio (PCR) and provided strength to the balance sheets of these banks,” the rating agency said.

“Further, instances of GOI and regulatory support by way of broadening of the definition of distributable reserves to include more categories of reserves as distributable reserves and allowing accumulated losses to be set-off against the share premium account which has increased the ability of PSBs to service the coupons of AT I Bonds, reiterate that the stance to extend support even to hybrid instruments. PSBs are expected to receive capital support well in advance so that the coupon payment trigger is not breached in future,” it added.

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PSBs line up local AT-1 bonds issues, but private-sector lenders stay away, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Public sector banks have started issuing AT-1 bonds in the domestic market more than a year after wriding down of such bonds of Yes Bank spooked the market

However, private sector banks are still keeping away and raising money via the instrument overseas, where interest rates are low.

At present, nearly three-four state-owned including SBI, Union Bank, Canara Bank and Bank of Baroda are looking to raise funds through AT-1 bonds.

In March this year, prodded by the Finance Ministry, the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) had relaxations in valuation norms. However, the main issues that AT1 bonds will continue to be treated as 100-year bonds stayed. The deemed residual maturity of Basel-III AT-1 bonds would be 10-year until March 31, 2022. Sebi said from April to September 2022, it would be valid at 20 years, and from October 2022 to March 2023, it would have a life span of 30 years. From April 2023, the residual maturity will be 100 years from the date of issuance of the bond.

In September SBI Rs 4,000 crore via additional Tier 1 bonds at a coupon rate of 7.72%, the first such issuance in the domestic market after Sebi issued new rules.

The plan

SBI is weighing options to raise money either through local additional tier-1 securities for the third time in this financial year or rupee-denominated ‘masala’ bonds for overseas investors. Bank of Baroda has approved the issuance of AT1 and AT11 bonds worth Rs3000 crore. Capital Raising Committee of our Bank has today approved the issuance of Basel III Compliant Additional Tier 1 (AT1) / Tier II Bonds for an aggregate total issue size of Rs3000cr in single or multiple tranches,” the bank said earlier this month.

What are AT1 bonds?

These are unsecured bonds which have perpetual tenure — or no maturity date. They have a call option, which can be used by the banks to buy these bonds back from investors. AT1 bonds are subordinate to all other debt and only senior to common equity. Mutual funds are among the largest investors in perpetual debt instruments, and hold over Rs 35,000 crore of the outstanding additional tier-I bond issuances of Rs 90,000 crore.

The mutual fund position

Mutual funds, which once used to buy heavily in AT1 bonds, are lukewarm about this asset class after the banking regulator last year ordered that these instruments be written off in Yes Bank’s state-sponsored bailout. Also, on March 10, Sebi had ordered mutual funds to cap ownership of bonds with special features at 10% of the assets of a scheme and value them as 100-year instruments from next month, potentially triggering a redemption wave. Later, the capital markets regulator eased valuation rules but with some riders after the finance ministry asked it to withdraw the directive to mutual funds.

The muted response by MFs had prompted the lenders to tap the overseas market.

Perpetual bond sales by banks have nearly halved to Rs 18,772 crore in FY21 from Rs 34,860 crore three years earlier.



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Indiabulls Housing Finance Q2 net profit down 11% to Rs 286 cr, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Mumbai, Mortgage financier Indiabulls Housing Finance on Thursday reported an 11 per cent dip in its net profit at Rs 286 crore in the quarter ended September due to a decline in its loan book. The lender’s profit after tax stood at Rs 323 crore in the same quarter of the previous fiscal.

Its deputy managing director Ashwini Kumar Hooda attributed the fall in profit to a 12 per cent decrease in the loan book in the second quarter of the financial year 2021-22 compared to the year-ago period.

It disbursed retail loans of Rs 325 crore in the month of September 2021 through its co-lending tie-ups, the lender said in a release.

This will scale up to Rs 500 crore of monthly disbursals by December 2021 and Rs 800 crore of monthly disbursals by March 2022, it said.

The company is on track to disburse Rs 1,000 crore of retail loans through co-lending in the third quarter of the financial year 2021-22. It has a total of seven co-lending partners- HDFC Ltd., Central Bank of India, Yes Bank, RBL Bank, Canara Bank, Punjab &Sind Bank, and Indian Bank.

Total loans disbursed as of September 30, 2021, under the Emergency Credit Line Guarantee Scheme (ECLGS) stood at Rs 176 crore, amounting to only 0.27 per cent of the loan book.

Gross NPAs have stood to 2.69 per cent in the second quarter of the financial year 2021-22 from 2.21 per cent in the previous quarter of the year-ago period.

“Balance sheet has been strengthened by shoring up provisions on the balance sheet to Rs 3,153 crore, which is 4x times of the regulatory requirement and equivalent to a healthy 4.9 per cent of our loan book and 152 per cent of Gross NPAs,” the release said.

Stage 3 provision coverage ratio stood at 43 per cent of gross NPAs (Non-performing assets).

The lender restructured loans of Rs 96.7 core, equivalent to 0.15 per cent of its loan book, under the Reserve Bank of India’s Restructuring Frameworks 1.0 and 2.0 combined.

In H1 of the financial year 2021-22, it has raised monies of Rs 12,186 crore across instruments and tenors. The company also raised Rs 792 crore through NCDs (non convertible debentures) in September 2021.

Hooda said the lender is looking to raise around Rs 10,000 crore through bank borrowings and NCDs during the second half of the current financial year.

The company’s scrip closed at Rs 237 apiece, down 3.42 per cent on BSE. PTI HV SHW SHW



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Canara Bank Q2 net jumps 200% to ₹1,333 crore

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Canara Bank reported a 200 per cent year-on-year (y-o-y) jump in second quarter net profit at ₹1,333 crore against ₹444 crore in the year-ago period, supported by healthy growth in other income and lower loan loss provisions.

Net interest income (difference between interest earned and interest expended) was down a shade at ₹6,273 crore (₹6,305 crore in the year ago period).

Non-interest income, comprising fee-based income, trading income, recovery in written-off accounts, and others, was up 37.54 per cent y-o-y at ₹4,268 crore (₹3,103 crore).

Loan loss provisions declined 24 per cent y-o-y at ₹2,678 crore (₹3,533 crore).

Slippages and recovery

Fresh slippages during the quarter increased by ₹6,525 crore (₹4,253 crore in the preceding quarter). This includes ₹3,200 crore exposure to the SREI Group.

The public sector bank made higher cash recovery of ₹3,002 crore (₹1,598 crore in the preceding quarter). Upgradation and write-offs amounted to ₹2,671 crore (₹2,292 crore) and ₹1,585 crore (₹2,574 crore), respectively.

Gross non-performing assets (NPAs) position improved 8 basis points to 8.42 per cent of gross advances against 8.50 per cent as on June-end 2021.

Net NPA position improved 25 basis points to 3.21 per cent of net advances against 3.46 per cent as on June-end 2021.

LV Prabhakar, MD & CEO, observed that going forward, the bank’s balancesheet will strengthen further, with gross non-performing assets (excluding transfer of stressed assets to the National Asset Reconstruction Company) expected to decline to at least 7.5 per cent by March-end 2022 and credit growth (global) projected at 7.5 per cent for FY22, seen picking up steam from third quarter onwards.

The bank recovered about ₹1,700 crore from DHFL’s corporate insolvency resolution process (CIRP) and made 50 per cent provision towards its exposure to the SREI Group, which has become a non-performing account, Prabhakar said.

Net interest margin declined to 2.72 per cent from 2.82 per cent as on September-end 2020.

Global (domestic plus overseas) gross advances grew about 6 per cent y-o-y to ₹6,86,813 crore.

Within domestic advances (which were up 5.71 per cent yoy), Agriculture & Allied advances grew by 13.92 per cent; retail (10.46 per cent); MSME (0.31 per cent); and corporate and others (2.23 per cent). Overseas advances increased by 9.36 per cent yoy.

Global Deposits rose about 9 per cent to ₹10,32,536 crore. Domestic deposits and overseas deposits increased by 7.61 per cent and 38.15 per cent, respectively.

The proportion of low-cost CASA deposits improved to 34.11 per cent in total domestic deposits as at September-end 2021 against 32.77 per cent as at September-end 2020.

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Canara Bank Q2FY22 net profit triples

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Canara Bank reported a 200 per cent year-on-year (yoy) jump in second quarter net profit at ₹1,333 crore against ₹444 crore in the year ago period, supported by healthy growth in other income and lower loan loss provisions.

Net interest income (difference between interest earned and interest expended) was down a shade at ₹6,274 crore (₹6,305 crore in the year ago period).

Non-interest income, comprising fee based income, trading income, recoery in written-off accounts, and others, was up 37.54 per cent yoy at ₹4,268 crore (₹3,103 crore).

Loan loss provisions declined 24 per cent yoy at ₹2,678 crore (₹3,533 crore).

Fresh slippages during the quarter increased by ₹6,525 crore (₹4,253 crore in the preceding quarter).

The public sector bank made higher cash recovery of ₹3,002 crore (₹1,598 crore in the preceding quarter). Upgradation and write-offs amounted to ₹2,671 crore (₹2,292 crore) and ₹1,585 crore (₹2,574 crore), respectively.

Gross non-performing assets (NPAs) position improved 8 basis points to 8.42 per cent of gross advances against 8.50 per cent as at June-end 2021. 

Net NPA position improved 25 basis points to 3.21 per cent of net advances against 3.46 per cent as at June-end 2021. 

Net interest margin declined to 2.72 per cent from 2.82 per cent as at September-end 2020.

Global (domestic plus overseas) gross advances grew about 6 per cent yoy to ₹6,86,813 crore. 

Within domestic advances (which were up 5.71 per cent yoy), Agriculture & Allied advances grew by 13.92 per cent; retail (10.46 per cent); MSME (0.31 per cent); and corporate and others (2.23 per cent). Overseas advances increased by 9.36 per cent yoy.

Global Deposits nudged up about 9 per cent to ₹10,32,536 crore. Domestic deposits and overseas deposits increased by 7.61 per cent and 38.15 per cent, respectively.

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Net profit jumps over two times to Rs 1,333 crore, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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New Delhi: State-run Canara Bank on Tuesday reported over two-fold jump in its net profit at Rs 1,332.61 crore in second quarter ended September of this fiscal. The bank had posted net profit of Rs 444.41 crore in the same period of the previous fiscal year.

Total income of the bank also rose to Rs 21,331.49 crore during July-September period of 2021-22, as against Rs 20,793.92 crore in same period of 2020-21, Canara Bank said in a regulatory filing.

Bank’s gross non-performing assets (NPAs) were a tad up at 8.42 per cent of the gross advances as of September 30, 2021, as against 8.23 per cent by end of September 2020. However, it fell sequentially from 8.50 per cent by end of June 2021 quarter.

In value terms, the gross NPAs stood at Rs 57,853.09 crore, up from Rs 53,437.92 crore.

Net NPAs (bad loans), however, fell to 3.21 per cent (Rs 20,861.99 crore) from 3.42 per cent (Rs 21,063.28 crore).

Provisions for bad loans and contingencies for the reported quarter fell to Rs 3,360.23 crore from Rs 3,974.02 crore in the same period a year ago.

On a consolidated basis, there was a net profit of Rs 1,100.59 crore in September 2021 quarter, up by over two-times from Rs 465.88 crore in year ago period.

Total consolidated income was up at Rs 23,876 crore, from Rs 22,638.26 crore.

Canara Bank stock traded 3.74 per cent down at Rs 194.40 apiece on BSE.



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Canara Bank raises Rs 1,500 cr through bonds, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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New Delhi, State-owned Canara Bank on Monday said it has raised Rs 1,500 crore by issuing Basel-III compliant bonds. The bank has issued and allotted Basel-III compliant additional tier I bonds amounting to Rs 1,500 crore, Canara Bank said in a regulatory filing.

The bank said as many as 16 allottees have been issued the non-convertible, perpetual, taxable, subordinated bonds bearing a coupon of 8.40 per cent, it said.

Stock of Canara Bank closed 1.71 per cent up at Rs 201.95 on BSE. PTI KPM RUJ RUJ

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