Centrum Capital’s board approves ₹1,500-cr fund raise

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Centrum Capital is planning to raise funds aggregating up to ₹ 1,500 crore, possibly to fund the proposed small finance bank venture of its step-down subsidiary, even it reported a consolidated net loss of ₹ 5.54 crore in the fourth quarter ended March 31, 2021 against a consolidated net profit of ₹25.05 crore in the year ago period. .

The fund raising in the backdrop of Centrum Financial Services Ltd (CFSL) getting ‘in-principle’ approval from the Reserve Bank of India to set up a small finance bank, which in turn is expected to takeover the scam-hit Punjab and Maharashtra Co-operative (PMC) Bank.

NCD issue

Specifically, the board of directors of Centrum Capital on Tuesday approved an enabling resolution for raising funds through the issuance of non-convertible debentures, up to ₹1,000 crores, subject to the approval of shareholders.

Further, the board also approved an enabling resolution for raising of funds through issue of equity shares through qualified institutional placements up to ₹ 500 crore subject to approval of the shareholders/ regulatory and/or statutory authorities as applicable.

Jaspal Bindra, Executive Chairman, Centrum Group, last week said that CFSL and BharatPe will commit ₹900 crore to the SFB in the first year. As and when required, the partners will commit ₹900 crore more. CFSL and BharatPe will be equal partners in the proposed SFB.

The minimum paid-up net worth requirement for starting an SFB is only ₹200 crore. Once CFSL takes over PMC Bank, it would get a ready-made branch network of about 100 branches in Mumbai and in a few States.

In FY21, Centrum Capital reported a consolidated net loss of ₹41.8 crore against a net profit of ₹71.57 lakh in FY20.

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Centrum-Bharatpe joint venture to pump Rs 1,800 crore into PMC on merger, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The joint venture floated by Centrum Group and digital payments startup Bharatpe for launching a small finance bank will infuse Rs 1,800 crore capital into troubled Punjab & Maharashtra Cooperative Bank (PMC) on its merger with the proposed bank, a top Centrum official has said. Last Friday, the Reserve Bank gave an in-principle approval to Centrum Financial Services, a step-down arm of the diversified financial services group, to set up a small finance bank (SFB) provided it took over the troubled PMC Bank.

The in-principle approval has been in specific pursuance to Centrum Financial Services’ offer on February 1, 2021 in response to the expression of interest notification dated November 3, 2020 published by the PMC Bank, the RBI said.

This paves the way for ending nearly two anxious years for the PMC depositors whose over Rs 10,723 crore are still stuck in the crippled cooperative bank that has been under RBI administrator since September 2019.

To launch SFB, the Centrum Group has sewed up an equal joint venture with Resilient Innovations, an arm of Gurugram-based Bharatpe. But Centrum Capital will be the promoter of SFB, under the prevailing laws, the group said.

“We (the SFB joint venture) have set aside Rs 1,800 crore for the SFB, which eventually will be pumped into PMC once the government scheme for merger is notified. Of the Rs 1,800 crore, Rs 900 crore will be invested in the first year by the joint venture split equally between the two and the remaining capital in stages,” Jaspal Bindra, executive chairman of Centrum Group, told over the weekend.

Whether they will take over the more than Rs 6,500 crore of NPAs of PMC and also the over Rs 10,700 crore of its deposits, Bindra said that will be known only after the government notified the merger scheme.

“What terms and conditions the government will set in the merger scheme will decide the fate of huge bad loans and losses. In fact, this is the only little unknown we have as of now,” Bindra quipped.

That the groups have allocated nine-times more capital over the RBI mandate of Rs 200 crore for the SFB shows the seriousness of the promoters. If it succeeds, this will be the first SFB in nearly six years — the first set of SFB licences were issued in August 2016, when the monetary authority also made such licensing on-tap.

Bindra, who was the group executive director and chief executive for Asia Pacific at Standard Chartered Bank till 2015, joined Centrum in April 2016 as executive chairman and picked up around 25 per cent, also said they will surrender all their NBFC licences before launching the SFB.

“The RBI has given us 120 days to complete the other “fit and proper conditions” to seek the final licence, which I am very confident of meeting well in time. In fact, we will be seeking the final licence as soon as possible,” he said.

Asked he chose a startup to form an equal joint venture for its banking foray, Bindra said, for one, very few players have the technological edge that Bharatpe has. “For another, we’ve been having strong business relationships with the Gurugram startup since the very first day of its operations.”

“So we are known to each other since 2018 and moreover our businesses complement each other and the SFB will definitely be a tech-driven bank for sure. In fact, we have had a full joint agreement in place much before we sought the licence and we joint bided for the licence,” he added.

Asked if the focus on technology will lead to branch rationalisation of PMC, he said when it comes to lending it will be tech driven “but for deposit raising we have to have branches. So in effect we may have to retain the branches to a large extent”.

The city-based Centrum Group, founded by Chandir Gidwani and Khushrooh Byramjee in 1977, has a diversified fee business and a lending platform for institutions and individuals. It offers investment banking, mid-corporates & SME lending, and broking for institutions and retail. It also provides MSME credit, wealth management, affordable housing and micro lending, apart from private debt and venture capital.

Centrum Capital, which is listed on the exchanges, reported a net loss of Rs 16.02 crore in Q3 of FY21 as against a net profit of Rs 3.35 crore in Q3 of FY20 as its income declined 7.2 per cent to Rs 123.12 crore in the quarter.

On the other hand, 2.5-year-old Bharatpe closed FY21 with an operating income of over Rs 700 crore, up from Rs 110 crore in FY20, driven by its credit business that closed the year with a loan book of Rs 1,600 crore, its president Suhail Sameer had told last week.

As of March 2020, PMC’s deposits stood at Rs 10,727.12 crore, advances at Rs 4,472.78 crore and gross NPAs at Rs 3,518.89 crore and net loss of Rs 6,835 crore, with a negative networth of Rs 5,850.61 crore.

The PMC book was so bad that as much as 73 per cent of its assets worth over Rs 6,500 crore of the total Rs 8,880 crore loans were to the crippled developer HDIL and all of them had turned dud by September 2019.

A good portion of the deposits are of senior citizens and cooperative societies including an RBI officers association. Its share capital is Rs 292.94 crore.

Bindra said they are yet to finalise the name for the SFB but added it will not be PMC for sure. The board is more or less in place and I will certainly be a part of it, he said.



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PMC Bank receives 1,229 applications for deposit withdrawal

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The administrator of the scam-hit Punjab and Maharashtra Co-operative (PMC) Bank received 1,229 applications for withdrawal of deposits specifically for treatment of Covid-19 illness.

These applications were received since April 16, 2020, when the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) allowed withdrawals up to Rs 5 lakh for treatment of critical illness under medical hardship ground, including Covid-19.

As per the affidavit filed by the Administrator in the Delhi High Court in the matter relating to Bejon Kumar Misra versus Union of India and others, of the aforementioned applications, 419 were received from March 15, 2021 till May 24, 2021.

 

PMC Bank’s Administrator AK Dixit stated that all the applications have been duly processed and approved by him as per RBI’s directions.

The administrator submitted that extension of present directions (issued by RBI with effect from the close of the bank’s business on September 23, 2019) has been done for financial reasons, owning to prevailing conditions and to preserve scarce resources of the bank till the time its resolution is achieved.

As per the affidavit, the financial condition of PMC Bank continues to be precarious, with its liquidity position not improving enough to allow much room for enhancement of withdrawal limit.

Further, the bank also needs to maintain bare minimum liquidity to run as a going concern and to make itself viable for prospective investors for any takeover/ merger. The resolution efforts also are at advanced stages, the affidavit said.

By virtue of the enhanced withdrawal limit of Rs 1 lakh (upped from Rs 50,000 on June 19, 2020), more than 84 per cent of the depositors of the Bank will be able to withdraw their entire account balance, according to the administrator.

However, depositors have been allowed to withdraw up to Rs 5 lakh on hardship grounds for treatment of terminal illnesses, including treatment of Covid-19 .

The Centrum Capital and BharatPe combine are believed to be the front runners to takeover PMC Bank.

The Bank has been under RBI directions for over 20 months now and depositors, especially senior citizens, have been finding it difficult to make ends meet. Deposit withdrawal has been capped at Rs 1 lakh per depositor during the entire period the bank is under directions.

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