RBI report shows decline in bank credit post festival season pick-up

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


The outstanding credit of all scheduled banks declined by ₹5,034 crore in the fortnight ended November 19, indicating the festival season credit pick-up witnessed in the preceding fortnight has lost steam.

In the preceding fortnight ended November 5 the outstanding credit of all scheduled banks had increased by ₹1,25,262 crore, according to Reserve Bank of India’s data on “Scheduled Banks’ Statement of Position in India”.

Sluggish loan growth

“Loan growth continues to be sluggish with no sharp recovery in any specific segment barring Small and Medium Enterprise.

“A low interest rate environment continues but spreads remain elevated. With asset quality issues gradually receding, we should see spreads decline but loan demand issues remain,” Kotak Securities Analysts’ MB Mahesh, Nischint Chawathe, Abhijeet Sakhare, Ashlesh Sonje and Dipanjan Ghosh, said in a report.

Deposits during the reporting fortnight declined by ₹2,67,623 crore against an increase of ₹3,38,451 crore in the preceding fortnight.

Deposit rates flat

As per the latest data from RBI, deposit rates were flat month-on-month at about 5.1 per cent.

“Both private and PSBs have reduced their term deposit rates by about 50 basis points (bps) over the past 12 months. Wholesale deposit cost (as measured by Certificate of Deposit rates) has seen a much sharper decline. It has been broadly stable in FY2022,” the Analysts said.

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

OkCredit report, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


– Anushka Sengupta

More than 30 lakh customers came forward to settle their credit this festive season. Credit given per active merchant went up by 23%, a report by OkCredit revealed.

The oldest form of ‘Buy Now Pay Later‘ has been a part of the small and medium sized businesses space, where customers who buy from local stores do not pay upfront, but pay later. These merchants usually keep an account for their customers, and the customers repay the bills later.

Such merchants added 1 million customers during the period, repayments were up 12% than average, and merchants booked 15% growth during the two-week festive period, it said.

Digital payments have played a huge role in helping mom and pop stores recover credit. As per the report, the number of credit lines settled digitally have gone up by 100% since last year, showing adoption of online payments in digital book keeping. There has been a 70% increase in retail small and medium sized businesses adopting a digital solution to manage their books.

Merchants in eateries, school supplies, travel, jewellery and kirana shops saw the highest growth. On an overall basis, transactions have grown by 20% compared with the festive season a year ago.

Each merchant category on OkCredit has seen an increase in customers. The most significant growth has been witnessed by retailers in the following categories :-
1) School supplies and stationary – 39%
2) Travel agencies – 26%
3) Eateries – 25%
4) Gold & Jewellery – 17%
5) Electronics – 12%

BNPL sees surge in repayments this Diwali season : OkCredit report

The increased repayments and growth in retail small and medium sized businesses (SMBs) also point to a healthy recovery in the economy, especially in tier-2 and tier-3 towns, as these towns account for a significant chunk of OkCredit’s merchant base, the report said.

Gaurav Kunwar, Cofounder & CPO at OkCredit says, “We wanted to measure category-wise impact of the Diwali shopping season among retail SMBs.
It was heartening to see credit recovery being high, in places such as Kerala, Tamil Nadu, Manipur, it was 30% higher than rest of the country.”

BNPL sees surge in repayments this Diwali season : OkCredit report

Merchants in states such as Kerala and Karnataka have seen 8% growth in business. The North-Eastern states have seen the highest growth, topped by Manipur where transactions per merchant increased by 22%.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

RBI, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


In the fortnight ended November 6, 2020, bank loans stood at Rs 104.19 lakh crore and deposits at Rs 144.03 lakh crore, according to the RBI‘s Scheduled Banks’ Statement of Position in India as on November 5, 2021, data released on Wednesday.

In the previous fortnight ended October 22, 2021, bank credit had grown by 6.84 per cent and deposits by 9.94 per cent. In FY2020-21, bank credit had risen by 5.56 per cent and deposits by 11.4 per cent.

Follow and connect with us on , Facebook, Linkedin



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Fino Payments Bank to expand product offering

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Fino Payments Bank, which has begun offering credit through NBFCs to its customers, plans to expand its product offering but is not looking to convert to a small finance bank.

“We are already offering credit to our customers through a tie up with KreditBee. We are also offering insurance. We plan to have a much bigger bouquet of products including mutual funds, recurring deposit, fixed deposit and international remittances,” said Rishi Gupta, Managing Director and CEO, Fino Payments Bank.

The payments bank is also looking at deposits, for which pilots are going on at the moment.

The bank has launched products including subscription current accounts, AEPS cash deposit, Aadhaar Pay, PPI cards, Gift cards and UPI P2M in the first half of the fiscal.

But conversion to a small finance bank is not on the cards anytime in the near future though the bank’s personal loan offering is doing well.

“We don’t want to get into credit business on our own books as of now. Credit is a completely different area. We don’t have the expertise. We don’t have the team,” Gupta told BusinessLine.

Fino Payments Bank was recently listed on the bourses. It also announced its second-quarter results reported a 74.5 per cent increase in its net profit at ₹7.89 crore.

Asset-light model

The bank remains upbeat about its business model despite many of its peers facing pressures in maintaining profitability.

“Growth and profitability are built into the Fino model. We don’t need to compromise on one to focus on another,” Gupta said, adding that the bank has been able to set up a very asset-light ecosystem.

“We are focused on the business. We have a good mix of profit, good mix of high margin as well as low margin products model,” he further said, adding that the bank is confident of being able to maintain its growth trajectory.

The capital raised as part of the listing is being used on building a bigger technology stack as well as for marketing and branding.

“We are investing in infrastructure, on software and digital ecosystem. We have already started to build a team. There is a lot of products on the digital side as well,” Gupta said.

As of September 30, 2021, the bank has 8.1 lakh merchants and 34 lakh, customers.

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Real capex will revive in 9-12 months. says Axis Bank CEO Amitabh Chaudhry, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Even as large corporations firm up greenfield and brownfield investment plans, Amitabh Chaudhry, CEO, Axis Bank, believes that real capex will revive in the next 9-12 months and will signal the revival of credit offtake. Chaudhry, who was reappointed as MD of the bank for another three years, tells Saloni Shukla that he had pivoted the bank toward a better quality franchise and the bank would soon catch up with the NIMs and RoAs reported by the likes of ICICI Bank and HDFC Bank. Edited excerpts:

What’s your view on the Indian economy? Is it on the mend?
The festive season has been better than what was expected. Optimism is returning, there have been a lot of conversations around incremental capex which will take place soon. Some of them have announced investment plans but the real capex will start coming in only in the next 9-12 months when the credit offtake will start. On the government side, earlier only a couple of areas were spending like defence and infrastructure but I am now told other departments are also being pushed to spend. The GST and tax collections are looking good, so the government has some spare money to spend.

What are the signs of concern for you?
Yes, there are signs of worry. While the third Covid wave has not come as expected after the festive season, some concerns remain on that front. On the upside, 57% of the population has got at least the first dose of vaccination. But we do see the fourth wave in Europe, so you cannot ignore that fact. We are hearing of shutdowns for unvaccinated people.

Plus there are supply chain issues, this is impacting India also especially the car industry. My impression is it could go on for another 12 months. Commodity prices remain high. Geo-political issues are worrisome, especially what is happening between the Western world and China.

What kind of capacity utilisation are you seeing and which sectors would see capex pick up?
The capex conversations are coming from infrastructure sectors and those supporting them. India’s exports are up 55%, so some of the industries which are reliant on exports also have a lot of capex coming through. Generally, as capacity utilisation starts touching 70-75%, they do need to start planning for capex as it doesn’t come overnight. My view is that once the supply chain issues in the auto industry go away that will also see demand pick up. On the service side, the bigger players have raised a lot of capital; so when things open up they could acquire assets at cheaper rates.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Bank credit picks pace as economy revives, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Lenders are seeing a pick-up in loan demand with demand from medium sized firms and retail borrowers as the economy is slowly coming back on track as COVID restrictions ease.

Bank credit rose 6.8 per cent in October compared to 5.1 per cent in the same period a year ago, according to the latest figures released by the Reserve Bank of India on Wednesday. Outstanding credit amounted to Rs 110.5 lakh crore as of October 22, up Rs 7 lakh crore over a year.

The pick up in loan demand is largely due to the push from government schemes even as large corporates and top rated borrowers continue to rely on capital markets and the overseas markets where they manage to raise funds at much cheaper rates. India’s Weighted Average Lending rates were at 7.20% in September, according to the RBI data. At the same time, the average rates for triple-A rated five-year corporate bonds were at 6% and at 5.29% for three-year maturity, show Bloomberg data compiled by ETIG

The latest data on sectoral flow of credit offtake that lending to Medium sized firms rose 49 per cent year-on-year to Rs 1.75 Lakh crore as of end September compared to the same period a year ago. Much of the lending is reckoned to be under the government’s Emergency Credit Line Guarantee Scheme (ECLGS) MSME sector, under which the government provides 100% Guarantee to banks in respect of eligible credit facility extended by it to its borrowers.

In addition consumer durable loans have risen by 40 per cent compared to 14.9 per cent in the same period a year ago, with borrowers taking advantage of the reduced interest rates. With the government’s renewed thrust on the social sector, lending to infrastructure more than doubled to Rs 1323 crore in September from Rs 1081 crore a year ago.

On the liability side, the pace of deposit pick-up has slowed down to 9.9 per cent compared to 10.1 per cent in the same period a year ago. But deposit growth still continues to outpace the credit growth. In absolute terms banks raised almost double the amount of deposits at Rs 14 lakh crore than the amount they lent during the period.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

SBI Report, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Mumbai, The digitisation drive and pandemic-induced emergence of the gig economy have led to a faster formalisation of the economy, with the share of the informal sector shrinking to just 15-20 per cent in 2021 from 52.4 per cent in 2018, according to an SBI Research report. Share of the informal economy has fallen drastically to 15-20 per cent of the gross value added (GVA) or the formal GDP in 2020-21 from 52.4 per cent in 2017-18 due to digitisation and the rapidly expanding gig economy, said Soumya Kanti Ghosh, the group chief economic advisor at SBI.

The share of the same had stood at 53.9 per cent in 2011-12.

According to Ghosh, many measures since the note-ban in November 2016 have accelerated digitisation of the economy, and the pandemic-induced emergence of the gig economy has facilitated higher formalisation of the economy, at rates possibly much faster than most other nations.

The note ban hit hardest the informal sector which then constituted 93 per cent of the workforce. The second blow to the informal economy was the GST and the final and the hardest hit came from the pandemic.

At least Rs 13 lakh crore has come under the formal economy through various channels over the past few years, including the recent scheme on the E-Shram portal, the report said.

Real GDP was estimated at Rs 135.13 lakh crore in FY21 but lost 7.3 per cent of that in FY22 after the worst economic contraction on record due to the pandemic.

The 2011 Census pegged the size of the informal sector in trade, hotels, transport, communication and broadcasting at 40 per cent; in construction at around 34 per cent; 16 per cent of public administration; and 20 per cent of manufacturing and almost 100 per cent formalisation in finance, insurance and utilities, and to a large extent in real estate and agriculture.

The formal financial sector has even expanded by 10 per cent post-the pandemic, with the DBT transfers gaining traction and that of formalised utility services size expanded by 1 per cent during the pandemic, according to the report.

The report, quoting the monthly EPFO payroll data, said that since FY18, almost 36.6 lakh jobs have been formalised till July 2021 and the report expects that this fiscal formalisation rate will be higher than FY20 but lower than the FY19 level.

Since FY18, the agriculture sector has been formalised by 20-25 per cent due to the increasing penetration of KCC credit and now the informal agriculture sector is 70-75 per cent.

Over the years, usage of Kisan credit cards has also increased significantly as the per card outstanding has gone up from Rs 96,578 in FY18 to Rs 1,67,416 in FY22, an increase of Rs 70,838. And there are 6.5 crore such cards, the amount formalised is Rs 4.6 lakh crore, the report noted.

It also said payments worth Rs 1 lakh crore have been made at petrol pumps alone in the past five years.

A sizeable informal economy is not just an emerging and developing economy feature, and according to the IMF, 20 per cent of the European GDP is an informal economy.

On the impact of the just-launched E-Shram portal, a first-ever national database of unorganised workers, on the formalisation of the economy, the report said as much as 5.7 crore unorganised workers have registered in the first two months after its launch in August, with 62 per cent of workers belonging to the 18-40 age-group and 92 per cent of the registered workers having monthly income of under Rs 10,000.

Ghosh considers the E-Shram portal to be a big step towards employment formalisation as to date the rate of formalisation of unorganised labour due to E-Shram is around 17 per cent or Rs 6.8 lakh crore, which is 3 per cent of GDP in just two months.

He also called for more rationalisation of indirect taxes like GST and excise, saying just 11.4 crore tax-paying households or 8.5 per cent of the total population contribute Rs 75 lakh crore or 65 per cent of the private final consumption expenditure and cross-subsidies to 91.5 per cent of the population.

As of the 2014 NSSO survey, as much as 93 per cent of the workforce earned their livelihoods as informal workers, who were hit the hardest by the pandemic too.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Bank credit grows 6.48%; deposit by 10.16%, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Mumbai, Bank credit grew by 6.48 per cent to Rs 110.13 lakh crore and deposit by 10.16 per cent to Rs 157.56 lakh crore in the fortnight ended October 8, RBI data showed. In the year-ago fortnight ended October 9, bank advances were at Rs 103.43 lakh crore, and deposits were at Rs 143.02 lakh crore, according to RBI’s Scheduled Banks’ Statement of Position in India as on October 8, 2021 data, released on Thursday.

In the previous fortnight ended September 24, 2021, bank credit had grown by 6.67 per cent and deposit by 9.34 per cent.

In FY2020-21, bank credit had grown by 5.56 per cent and deposit by 11.4 per cent.

Follow and connect with us on , Facebook, Linkedin



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Trade credit insurance norms to kick in from Nov 1

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Companies are gearing up for trade credit insurance covers, for which the guidelines come into effect from November 1. This is expected to improve liquidity for micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs).

A number of insurance companies are said to be working on the draft agreements and products.

“The new trade credit insurance (TCI) guidelines have come at the right time. The Factoring Regulation (Amendment) Act, 2021 allows NBFCs [non-banking financial companies] as factors. Once the RBI [Reserve Bank of India] amends the TReDS [trade receivables discounting system] guidelines to allow an NBFC as a financier on the platform, it will increase liquidity and financiers will have a risk-sharing partner,” said Ketan Gaikwad, Managing Director and CEO, Receivables Exchange Of India Limited (RXIL).

SME IPOs pack a punch on the returns front

RXIL had earlier initiated a TCI-backed transaction with Tata AIG General Insurance Company as the insurer and ICICI Bank and Yes Bank as financiers in a sandbox environment.

Gaikwad said RXIL has applied to the RBI for approval and will also seek board approval soon.

The Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority of India had in September announced guidelines for TCI cover to enable general insurance companies to offer it to suppliers as well as licensed banks and other financial institutions to help businesses manage country risk, access new markets and manage the non-payment risk associated with the trade financing portfolio.

Gujarat to have 10 model MSMEs to showcase use of AI, IoT

General insurers can also offer TCI with customised covers for small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) and MSMEs.

Arun Poojari, CEO, Cashinvoice, a digital supply chain finance marketplace, noted that several pilots were on for these covers.

“There is a testing with an insurance company on the Cashinvoice platform. By nature, this is a very powerful proposition and bound to be accepted in a big way,” he said.

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Moody’s upgrades outlook for Indian banking system

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Moody’s Investors Service has revised the outlook for the Indian banking system to “stable” from “negative” on the back of stabilising asset quality and improved capital drive.

The global credit rating agency, in its Banking system outlook for India, observed that the deterioration of asset quality since the onset of the coronavirus pandemic has been moderate, and an improving operating environment will support asset quality.

Moody’s upgrades India’s rating outlook to ‘Stable’ from ‘Negative’

Declining credit costs as a result of improving asset quality will lead to improvements in profitability. The agency assessed that capital will remain above pre-pandemic levels.

Moody’s expects India’s economy to continue to recover in the next 12-18 months, with GDP growing 9.3 per cent in the fiscal year ending March 2022 and 7.9 per cent in the following year.

The agency opined that the pick-up in economic activity will drive credit growth, which it expects to be 10-13 per cent annually. Weak corporate financials and funding constraints at finance companies have been key negative factors for banks but these risks have receded.

Asset quality will be stable

According to Moody’s, the deterioration of asset quality since the onset of the pandemic has been more moderate than it expected despite relatively limited regulatory support for borrowers.

The agency noted that the quality of corporate loans has improved, indicating that banks have recognised and provisioned for all legacy problem loans in this segment.

Covid second wave raises asset risks for banks: Moody’s

“The quality of retail loans has deteriorated, but to a limited degree because large-scale job losses have not occurred. We expect asset quality will further improve, leading to decline in credit costs, as economic activity normalises,” Moody’s said.

Raising equity capital

Capital ratios have risen across rated banks in the past year because most have issued new shares, per the agency.

Moody’s said public sector banks’ ability to raise equity capital from the market is particularly credit positive because it reduces their dependence on the government for capital.

However, further increases in capital will be limited because banks will use most of retained earnings to support an acceleration of loan growth, according to the agency.

The agency estimated that banks’ returns on assets will rise as credit costs will decline while banks’ core profitability will be stable.

If interest rates rise, net interest margins will increase, but it will also lead to mark-to-market losses on banks’ large holdings of government securities, it said.

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

1 2 3 5