Indiabulls Housing Finance sells stake worth Rs 251 cr in OakNorth, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Indiabulls Housing Finance has sold stake worth Rs 251 crore in OakNorth Holdings, and the proceeds from the sale will be added to its equity capital, according to a regulatory filing. “Indiabulls Housing Finance Ltd has sold a portion of its stake in OakNorth Holdings Ltd (the wholly owning parent company of OakNorth Bank plc) for approximately Rs 251 crore.

“The sale proceeds will be accretive to the regulatory net worth and the CRAR (capital-to-risk weighted asset ratio) of the company and will be added to the regulatory equity capital of the company,” Indiabulls Housing Finance said in a regulatory filing on Friday.

During the same month last year, the company had sold stakes in the UK-based OakNorth in two portions, and raised Rs 1,070 crore.

OakNorth Bank was launched in September 2015, in which Indiabulls Housing Finance had invested Rs 663 crore in November 2015 for a 40 per cent stake in the bank.

Shares of Indiabulls Housing Finance Ltd on Friday closed at Rs 225.70 apiece on BSE, down 1.76 per cent from the previous close. PTI KPM HRS hrs



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RBI proposes changes in fund raising norms of urban co-operative banks, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has proposed changes in rules for fundraising by primary (urban) co-operative banks. On Wednesday, the central bank released a draft circular for issue and regulation of share capital and securities of primary (urban) co-operative banks.

“UCBs are permitted to raise equity share capital, as hitherto, by way of issue of equity shares to persons within their area of operation enrolled as members, in accordance with the provisions of their bye-laws, and issue of additional equity shares to the existing members,” it said.

The RBI has proposed that any refund of share capital to members, or their nominees, should be subject to the certain conditions — the bank’s capital adequacy ratio is 9 per cent or above, both as per the latest audited financial statements and the last CRAR as assessed by the RBI during statutory inspection.

Such refund should not result in the bank’s capital adequacy falling below regulatory minimum of 9 per cent. The RBI has directed cooperative banks to ensure their investors are educated on the risk characteristics of regulatory capital requirements.

It has also asked cooperative banks to have a specific sign-off from the investors to ensure they have understood the features and risks of the instruments. The urban co-operative banks have been asked to not benchmark floating rate instruments to the fixed deposit rate.



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Banks’ exposure to better-rated large borrowers declining, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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New Delhi, The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has said that exposure of banks to better-rated large borrowers is declining, while signs of stress are being witnessed in the MSME and retail sectors.

Within the domestic financial system, credit flow from banks and capital expenditure of corporates remains muted, said a report by the central bank.

“While banks’ exposures to better rated large borrowers are declining, there are incipient signs of stress in the micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs) and retail segments,” said the recently released Financial Stability Report for July 2021.

Further, the demand for consumer credit across banks and non-banking financial companies (NBFCs) has dampened, with some deterioration in the risk profile of retail borrowers becoming evident.

As per the report, macro stress tests indicate that the gross non-performing asset (GNPA) ratio of scheduled commercial banks (SCB) may increase from 7.48 per cent in March 2021 to 9.80 per cent by March 2022 under the baseline scenario.

In case of a severe stress scenario, the GNPA may rise to 11.22 per cent, although SCBs have sufficient capital, both at the aggregate and individual level, even under stress.

Further, the capital to risk-weighted assets ratio (CRAR) of scheduled commercial banks (SCBs) increased to 16.03 per cent and the provisioning coverage ratio (PCR) stood at 68.86 per cent in March 2021.

In his foreword for the report, RBI Governor Shaktikanta Das said that the sustained policy support along with further strengthening of capital buffers by banks and other financial institutions remain vital amid the Covid-19 pandemic.



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Bank of Baroda posts net loss of Rs 1,047 cr in Q4, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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State-run Bank of Baroda reported a standalone net loss of Rs 1,047 crore in the quarter ended March 2021, as it shifted to a new tax regime.

The lender had reported a standalone profit-after-tax of Rs 507 crore in the year-ago period.

For the full year, net profit grew 52 per cent to Rs 829 crore from Rs 546 crore in FY20.

The bank booked a profit before tax (PBT) of Rs 2,680 crore during the quarter against a loss of Rs 1,723 crore in the year-ago period. PBT stood at Rs 5,556 crore for FY21 against a loss of Rs 1,802 crore in FY20.

“Given the fact that we had a PBT of Rs 5,556 crore (in FY21), we thought this is the right time to transit to a lower tax rate regime. But the movement to the new tax regime means we have to make a DTA (Deferred Tax Assets) adjustment, which was of the order of Rs 3,500 crore for the full year. Because of that, we are reporting an accounting loss of around Rs 1,000 crore in Q4 FY21.

“But for the DTA impact, we would have a profit after tax of Rs 2,200 crore in the last quarter,” the bank’s managing director and CEO, Sanjiv Chadha, told reporters.

Net interest income (NII) rose by 4.54 per cent to Rs 7,107 crore compared to Rs 6,798 crore a year ago.

Global net interest margin (NIM) improved to 2.72 per cent from 2.63 per cent in Q4 FY20 led by margin expansion in international business to 1.57 per cent in Q4 FY21.

Domestic NIM declined to 2.73 per cent as against 2.76 per cent in the fourth quarter of FY20.

Gross NPA ratio fell to 8.87 per cent as against 9.40 per cent and net NPA ratio to 3.09 per cent from 3.13 per cent.

Fresh slippages during the quarter stood at Rs 11,656 crore in the fourth quarter of FY21.

The lender’s slippage ratio declined to 2.71 per cent in FY21 from 2.97 per cent in FY20. Credit cost decreased to 1.68 per cent in FY21 from 2.35 per cent in FY20.

“Slippages will come down very significantly during the current year (FY22) despite the second wave. I would believe that we should be trending towards 2 per cent or lower in FY22,” Chadha said.

He expects credit costs to be in the range of 1.5-2 per cent in FY22.

Total provisions and contingencies declined 46.03 per cent to Rs 3,586 crore in the fourth quarter of FY21 from Rs 6,645 crore in the year-ago period.

Domestic advances increased by 4.91 per cent year-on-year led by domestic organic retail and agriculture loans which grew by 14.35 per cent and 13.22 per cent respectively.

Within retail loans, auto loans increased by 27.79 per cent year-on-year and personal loans grew at 27.21 per cent year-on-year.

Chadha said collection efficiency of the bank improved to 93 per cent during the March quarter. He expects some impact on collections during the April-June quarter of FY22.

He said despite the impact of the second wave, the bank’s corporate book is likely to remain strong.

“Last year, we were not confident about what would happen to the corporate sector. This time we can say with confidence that the second wave has largely left the large corporate businesses untouched. Even in terms of accounts which were relatively weaker and had got restructured, I do not believe we would need to revisit restructuring in most cases,” Chadha noted.

He, however, said the area of concern for the bank remains the MSME sector and to a lesser extent, the retail sector.

“What we have experienced is people, particularly in the retail segment, may fall back on some instalments but ultimately they pull through. Our assessment is that a very large percentage of our retail borrowers will pull through and, for a minority, we may need to do some kind of restructuring. But when it comes to MSME, the impact is larger and restructuring will also be larger,” he added.

Chadha expects a credit growth of 7-10 per cent in FY22 for the bank, if the economy witnesses a double-digit growth.

On capital raising plans for the current fiscal, he said a major portion of the funding requirement will get done through internal accruals.

The bank’s capital to risk (weighted) assets ratio (CRAR) stood at 14.99 per cent in FY21 against 13.30 per cent.

Speaking about the RBI’s announcement on an on-tap liquidity window of Rs 50,000 crore to support healthcare infrastructure, he said the lender has received a board approval on this and it is engaging with the companies.

The bank is targeting a 50 per cent growth in its loans to the healthcare sector.

“Our current exposure to the sector is Rs 7,000-8,000 crore. I would believe we should be looking at targeting a growth between Rs 3,000-5,000 crore there,” Chadha said.



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IDBI Bank has transformed into a retail bank: Samuel Joseph, Dy MD

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During the four years that IDBI Bank was under prompt corrective action (PCA), it transformed itself from a predominantly corporate bank to a retail bank. And the Bank, which exited PCA on March 10, 2021, would like to keep it that way, according to Samuel Joseph J, Deputy Managing Director. In an interaction with BusinessLine, he emphasised that it had aggressively accelerated provisioning, over and above the regulatory requirement, in the past to strengthen its balance sheet. So, write back to profits in the next two to three years, whenever the recovery from stressed assets happens, will be about ₹7,500 crore. Excerpts:

Now that your bank is free from the shackles of PCA, how does it plan to grow business?

During the period that we were under PCA, we were consolidating our position. We completely revamped our risk management policies, especially concerning corporate credit. So, everything was ready (for growing business) before we exited PCA. But unfortunately, the exit coincided with lockdown and related economic uncertainty. However, we will be able to expand our book in FY22. We propose to grow our corporate loan book by 8-10 per cent and our retail book by 10-12 per cent.

There is an impression that our Bank is a corporate bank. But if you look at our March 2021 numbers, our corporate to the retail ratio in the overall loan book was 38:62. This is a significant shift from where we were three-four years ago when the ratio was 60:40.

Going forward, we would like to keep the corporate book at about 40-45 per cent and the retail book at about 55-60 per cent.

And even on the liabilities side, we have transformed our liabilities franchise, and today our CASA (current account, savings account) is 50.45 per cent of total deposits. Even within term deposits, our reliance on bulk deposits is less than 15 per cent. Three years back, CASA was at about 37 per cent.

So, we have used the PCA period well to completely transform our business mix and strengthen the balance sheet.

How did you strengthen the balance sheet?

The first thing was recognition of non-performing assets (NPAs). We made aggressive provisioning for the NPAs and took the hit upfront on our Profit & Loss (P&L) account. So, today, our provision coverage ratio is at 96.9 per cent. The huge losses in 2019-20 were all because of aggressive accelerated provisioning. This was not required as per the regulatory norms, which give banks a gliding scale (for provisioning). Going by this, 96.9 per cent provisioning is not required at all. But we made accelerated provisioning to absorb the pain upfront. So, though the Gross Non-Performing Assets (NPA) ratio is slightly elevated at 22.37 per cent, the net NPA ratio is only 1.97 per cent as of March-end 2021.

We have not aggressively written off NPAs in the past because of the uncertainty relating to future profitability. But now that we have made five quarters of profit, we are fairly certain. Of course, we will wait for the Covid uncertainty to clear up, promoter change and all that and then we should be able to bring down GNPA by writing off 100 per cent provided for accounts.

How much provision write-back can you get from recoveries?

Our Gross NPAs are at about ₹36,000 crore. Technically written off (TWO) accounts already in our book aggregate to about ₹43,000 crore. So, both put together is about ₹79,000 crore. And this is about 97 per cent provided for….On average, let us say, we recover about 15 per cent. So, on ₹79,000 crore, we will be able to recover about ₹11,850 crore. Now, let us take a more conservative estimate — say, we recover only about ₹10,000 crore. Our net NPAs are only ₹2,500 crore because of aggressive provisioning. So, provision write-back to profits in the next two to three years, whenever the recovery happens, will be about ₹7,500 crore. The future (profit) potential of this aggressive past provisioning will at least be ₹7,000 crore to ₹7,500 crore going forward in the next two to three years.

Our Capital to Risk-weighted Assets Ratio (CRAR) is 15.59 per cent. So, from now on, we will be able to recoup our capital and increase CRAR much further. So, this is what we have done — on the P&L part, we have absorbed the pain upfront, and we have strengthened our balance sheet to recoup our capital through recovery and write-back to profits in the next two to three years.

Did you zero in on the stressed assets you will transfer to the National Asset Reconstruction Company Ltd?

We have identified the stressed assets for the transfer. The criteria for the transfer is that they should have been 100 per cent provided for, not be categorised as fraud, and it should not be very close to a resolution or recovery. Using these filters, we have identified the assets. We have a list of 11 accounts aggregating about ₹12,000 crore to be transferred to NARCL.

The immediate visual impact of this transfer on our balance sheet will be by way of a reduction in our Gross NPA ratio. Out of this ₹12,000 crore, some of the accounts may even be TWO accounts. The impact of TWO accounts is already reflected in our books. So, if out of ₹12,000 crore, Gross NPAs and TWO accounts amount to ₹6,000 crore each, then the GNPA could come down about 3.50 per cent.

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RBI’s new draft on dividends to make NBFCs balance sheet strong, create surplus for fresh loans

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As the risk profile of NBFCs is changing at a fast pace, there was a need for a regulatory framework for dividend declaration.

RBI’s latest draft on the declaration of dividends by non-banking financial companies (NBFCs) may help them in strengthening their balance sheet by improving leverage ratios and creating a buffer and surplus for fresh lending. RBI’s move will also help NBFCs in creating better provisioning against the delinquent assets, said a report by India Ratings. As the risk profile of NBFCs is changing at a fast pace, there was a need for a regulatory framework for dividend declaration, the report added. The draft circular said that non-deposit and systemically-important NBFCs with capital-to-risk weighted assets ratio (CRAR) below 15 per cent and net NPAs above 6 per cent will not be able to pay any dividend.

NBFCs emerged as a crucial segment during the pandemic as demand for credit has substantially increased in NBFCs. In order to infuse greater transparency and uniformity in practice, it has been decided to prescribe guidelines on the distribution of dividends by NBFCs, RBI said. 

However, the RBI draft circular does not commensurate with the guidelines issued by the Department of Investment and Public Asset Management (DIPAM) on dividend payments. According to DIPAM, PSUs are required to pay a minimum annual dividend of 30 per cent of profit after tax or 5 per cent of net worth, whichever is higher. The rating agency further said that this anomaly will have to be resolved and either the RBI will modify its draft circular or come up with a special provision for the government-owned NBFCs, or DIPAM will have to revisit their guidelines for dividend payments.

Meanwhile, it is believed that draft provisions on dividend payments will nudge NBFCs to accelerate the resolution of their stressed assets, otherwise their dividend payments will remain constrained. The NBFCs have received various support as India struggled through the coronavirus pandemic. From TLTRO 2.0 to additional liquidity, the NBFCs have been at the centre of government policies in recent months. 

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