CSB Bank’s deposits grow 21%, advances up 27% in FY21

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Thrissur (Kerala), headquartered CSB Bank recorded a 21 per cent year-on-year (YoY) increase in total deposits and a 27 per cent YoY rise in gross advances, as per its business updates for the year ended March 31, 2021.

As of March-end 2021, total deposits and gross advances stood at ₹19,140 crore (₹15,791 crore as at March-end 2020) and ₹14,645 crore (₹11,559 crore), respectively, the bank said in a disclosure to the exchanges.

Within total deposits, low-cost current account and savings deposits (CASA) were up 34 per cent YoY to ₹6,162 crore, and term deposits increased by 16 per cent YoY to ₹12,978 crore.

Advances against gold & gold jewellery soared 61.51 per cent YoY to ₹6,121 crore within gross advances.

The private sector bank said data in the business updates is provisional and is subject to audit by the Statutory Auditors.

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Mutual funds’ exposure to bank certificates of deposits declines 67%

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Mutual funds’ investment in bank certificates of deposits dipped sharply by 67 per cent last month to ₹53,000 crore against ₹1.59 lakh crore in same period last year, largely due to fall in interest rate on this debt instrument.

In fact, the overall mutual funds’ debt schemes’ investment in bank certificates of deposit has fallen to 3.2 per cent in February from 10.4 per cent logged in the same period last month, according to Care Rating research report.

The average rate of interest on CDs has fallen by 2 percentage points in last one year to 4.2 per cent last month against 6.2 per cent in February 2020 with the excess liquidity unleashed by the RBI to stimulate economy marred by the Covid pandemic.

G Pradeepkumar, Chief Executive Officer, Union Asset Management Company, said the issuance of certificates of deposit by banks has come down considerably in last one year as they are flush with funds and papers issued by few banks are also coming with lower interest. Debt funds, in general, are investing in the papers issued by corporates and government are the active borrowers in the market, he added.

Overall debt fund inflows last month was at ₹1,735 crore against outflow of ₹33,409 crore in January while debt fund AUM remained almost stagnant at ₹13.74 lakh crore.

Debt schemes accounted for the largest share of AUMs at 47 per cent, followed by equity at 31 per cent and hybrid schemes at 11 per cent while solution-oriented and other schemes accounted for the rest, said the report.

Most debt has taken fancy to corporate debt papers with investments increasing by ₹660 crore to ₹3.73 lakh crore. This segment includes floating rate bonds and non-convertible debentures, etc.

Debt fund exposure to NBFCs halved to ₹1.6 lakh crore in February against ₹2.3 lakh crore logged in September, 2018 when the series of default by corporates rattled the market. Mutual fund investment in commercial papers of NBFC dipped to ₹72,000 crore against ₹1.26 lakh crore.

Equity funds’ exposure

Among equity funds, the top six sectors accounted for over 61 per cent share of equity funds worth ₹8.9 lakh crore.

Deven Mistry, Research Analyst, Motilal Oswal, said mutual funds also showed interest in metals, oil and gas, utilities, cement, NBFC, capital goods, real estate, retail and infrastructure while they were underweight on technology, healthcare, consumer, telecom and automobiles.

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Bank loan growth likely to double next fiscal, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Bank loans are growing at a slower pace while deposits are clipping ahead fast.

The non-food bank credit grew at 5.7% in January 2021 as against an increase of 8.5 per cent in the same month last year, according to RBI data.

As on February 12, outstanding bank loans stood at over Rs 107 lakh crore, which was up 6.6% on year. However, on a fortnightly basis, outstanding loans fell by Rs 1,040 crore between January 29 and February 12.

The contraction

Loans to industry contracted by 1.3% in the reporting month as compared to 2.5%growth in the same period last year, mainly due to contraction in credit to large industries, the data showed.

Credit growth to the services sector decelerated year-on-year moderately to 8.4% in January 2021 from 8.9%.

However, credit to transport operators and trade continued to perform well during the month, registering accelerated growth.

Personal loans growth decelerated by 9.1% in January 2021 compared to 16.9% a year ago, the data showed.

Deposits

However, deposits are going strong as people tend to save money during uncertain times.

As on February 12, bank deposits stood at nearly Rs 148 lakh crore, up 11.8% on year, while investment by banks was 17.9% higher at close to Rs 45 lakh crore.

Due to lower credit demand, banks were forced to park their surplus deposits in investments such as government bonds and corporate debt papers.

Why the drop?

Experts say credit growth has been supported for the last few months by retail loans, especially home loans, along with disbursements to micro, small and medium enterprises under the government’s Emergency Credit Line Guarantee Scheme.

However, companies have restricted their borrowing from banks and some are tapping the bond market for their credit requirements.

Also, the availability of low-cost funds under the RBI’s targeted long-term operations has hit credit growth.

According to CRISIL Ratings, corporate credit growth is likely to contract this financial year as the companies have put capital expenditure on the back burner.

The silver lining

Bank credit is expected to grow at a higher pace during the next fiscal by at least 9% to 10%. This is in contrast to the bank credit growth which was seen rising at around 4% to 5%, despite the Covid-induced contraction.



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Deccan Urban Co-op Bank put under RBI ‘Directions’ as of Feb 19

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The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has issued Directions to Deccan Urban Co-operative Bank (Vijayapur, Karnataka), whereby, as from the close of business on February 19, 2021, deposit withdrawals have been capped at ₹1,000 per depositor.

“Considering the bank’s present liquidity position, a sum not exceeding ₹1000 of the total balance across all savings bank or current accounts or any other account of a depositor, may be allowed to be withdrawn, but are allowed to set off loans against deposits subject to the conditions stated in the above RBI Directions.

Also read: Banks under Directions: Govt, RBI working on allowing depositors withdraw up to ₹5 lakh

“However, 99.58 per cent of the depositors are fully covered by the DICGC insurance scheme,” the central bank said in a statement.

According to the Directions, the chief executive officer of the bank shall not, without prior approval of RBI in writing grant or renew any loans and advances, make any investment, incur any liability including borrowal of funds and acceptance of fresh deposits, among others.

“The issue of the above Directions by the RBI should not per se be construed as cancellation of banking license by RBI.

“The bank will continue to undertake banking business with restrictions till its financial position improves. The Reserve Bank may consider modifications of these Directions depending upon circumstances,” the central bank said.

Besides Deccan Urban Co-operative Bank, RBI has imposed directions on two other urban co-operative banks — Sarjeraodada Naik Shirala Sahakari Bank (Shirala, Sangli District, Maharashtra) with effect from close of business on February 3, and Independence Co-operative Bank (Nashik, Maharashtra) with effect from close of business on February 10 — since the beginning of 2021. .

According to the RBI’s report on Trend and Progress of Banking in India 2019-20 (released on December 29, 2020), since April 1, 2015, 52 UCBs have been placed under All Inclusive Directions by the RBI.

Of the total claims settled by the Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporation (DICGC) since inception, around 94.3 per cent of claims pertained to co-operative banks that were liquidated, amalgamated, or restructured.

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RBI puts Rs 1,000 withdrawal cap on Deccan Urban Co-op Bank; fresh loans, deposits restricted, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The Reserve Bank on Friday said it has barred Karnataka-based Deccan Urban Co-operative Bank Ltd from granting fresh loans or accepting deposits and customers cannot withdraw more than Rs 1,000 from their savings account for a period of six months. The lender has also been asked not to make fresh investments or incur any liability without its prior permission.

The RBI said it issued the directions to chief executive officer of the bank on Thursday (February 18).

It has also asked the lender to desist from disbursing any payment whether in discharge of its liabilities or otherwise, or dispose of any of its assets except as notified in the RBI direction.

“Considering the bank’s present liquidity position, a sum not exceeding Rs 1000 only of the total balance across all savings bank or current accounts or any other account of a depositor, may be allowed to be withdrawn,” RBI said in a release on Friday.

It said customers can set off their loans against deposits subject to conditions.

“However, 99.58 per cent of the depositors are fully covered by the DICGC insurance scheme,” said the regulator.

The Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporation (DICGC), a wholly-owned subsidiary of RBI, provides insurance cover on bank deposits.

The RBI further said putting the bank under restrictions should not be construed as cancellation of its banking license.

The bank will continue to undertake banking business with restrictions till its financial position improves.

The Reserve Bank may consider modifications of the directions depending upon circumstances.

The directions are set to remain in force for six months from the close of business on February 19, 2021 and are subject to review, it added.



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Yes Bank won’t dilute equity soon, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Yes Bank will not be raising capital via equity soon and the recent board approval is only part of an enabling provision to reduce its time-to-market in future, the bank’s MD & CEO Prashant Kumar, said. He added that the bank’s deposits will cover its loan book by end-March despite growth in advances.

“We expect the credit-deposit ratio to be 100% by the end of March from 116% at the end of December,” Kumar said. He said that the bank’s strategy is to use its digital capability to grow retail deposits and loans. According to its December quarter results, the bank’s capital adequacy ratio is 19.6%, while common equity tier I capital is 13.1%, “We are well-capitalised but we decided to go through the process, which will also require a shareholder approval, so that we are in readiness,” said Kumar.

The private bank, which was revived by an RBI-initiated resolution process, had seen a third of its deposits being withdrawn by wary customers before the central bank placed a moratorium on withdrawals. Since then, deposits have bounced back growing 36% in the first nine months of the fiscal. The bank on Friday reported a profit of Rs 151 crore in the third quarter as against a loss of Rs 18,560 crore in the year-ago period.

The bank also said that it has received more information on accounts linked to whistleblower allegations. “All the loans are fully provided for and there will not be any financial implication even if any more loans are declared as fraud,” said Kumar. He said that Cox & Kings, which has been in the news for action by authorities, has already been declared a fraud.

The bank had earlier sought approval from the RBI for a ‘bad bank’ that will take over troubled loans and is awaiting a response from the regulator. While the bank has a Rs 1,000-crore exposure to DHFL, it does not expect any major recovery this year. “I do not expect the resolution will be implemented before March 31. Besides, we are unsecured lenders and don’t know how much we will get,” he said.

“Our focus is on retail and MSME. We have disbursed almost Rs 12,000 crore in the third quarter and this path would continue,” said Kumar. He said the bank was rationalising expenditure with operating expenses reduced by 13% and more branch mergers in the offing. The bank has already converted some of its rural branches into business correspondent centres. To augment fee-income, the bank has tied up with HDFC Life and SBI Life for distribution on the life insurance side and ICICI Lombard and SBI General on the non-life insurance side.



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How to spot a shaky bank

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In the case of Lakshmi Vilas Bank (LVB), RBI has capped deposit withdrawals at ₹ 25000 for a 30-day period, while a merger is in the works. If you’re keen to avoid such episodes with your bank deposits in future, how do you spot the trouble signs in a bank?

Financial checks

Growth and profits in the banking business are fuelled mainly by leverage. For every ₹ 100 of assets in a bank’s balance sheet, it may have just ₹ 4 of its own capital, with deposits and borrowings making up the rest. This is what makes banks particularly fragile entities that can be tripped up by defaults, delays in loan repayments or funding constraints.

Four financial ratios can alert you early to brewing trouble. The first is the capital adequacy or capital to risk weighted assets (CRAR) ratio, which measures the amount of its own and supplementary capital held by a bank for every rupee of loans advanced by it.

A sub-set of this is the Tier I CRAR, which represents the bank’s permanent capital consisting of equity, reserves and other capital against which losses can be set off. Indian banks are required to maintain a minimum CRAR of 10.875 per cent and Tier I CRAR of 8.875 per cent. LVB had a CRAR of just 0.17 per cent as of June 2020, with a negative Tier I CRAR. SBI, in contrast, had a CRAR of 14.87 per cent and Tier 1 CRAR of 12.10 per cent as of September 30, 2020.

Then, there’s the quantum of doubtful loans in the bank’s books, as measured by its NPA (Non-performing asset) ratio. The gross NPA ratio measures the proportion of loans given out that are overdue for over 90 days.

The net NPA ratio measures bad loans after the bank has made provisions. Broadly, gross and net NPA ratios that are below 5 per cent signal reasonable health, but trends in this ratio are more important to watch. A more than 0.5 percentage point quarterly jump in the NPA ratio suggests problems escalating.

Leverage ratio captures the extent of a bank’s Tier I capital to its total loans. The RBI allows banks to run with a ratio of 3.5-4 per cent, but a ratio above 5 is a comfortable number. HDFC Bank boasted a leverage ratio of 10.71 per cent in September 2020 quarter.

To gauge if a bank has enough cash to meet its near-term dues, the Liquidity Coverage Ratio, or LCR, is your guide. Measured as the high-quality liquid assets held by the bank against its dues over the next 30 days, the higher this ratio is above 100 per cent the better placed it is on liquidity. LVB was comfortable on this score with an LCR of 294 per cent in June 2020.

These ratios are readily available for every scheduled commercial bank on a quarterly basis, in the document ‘Basel III-Pillar 3’ disclosures on the bank’s website.

RBI actions

If RBI believes that a bank is walking a tightrope on indicators such as NPAs, CRAR or return on assets, it can immediately subject it to Prompt Corrective Action (PCA). During PCA, RBI can impose a variety of business restrictions on a bank, induct new management, replace Board members or even merge it with another. Most PCA measures impact a bank’s financials and growth plans, until afresh capital infusion helps them pull out of PCA.

Indian Overseas Bank, Central Bank of India, UCO Bank and United Bank of India are under the RBI’s PCA framework. LVB was put under RBI’s PCA framework in September 2019. Depositors need to worry more about private sector banks being under PCA than public sector banks, as the latter can be quickly bailed out by the Government infusing new capital, while private banks will need to find bona fide investors.

Management churn

If a bank you’re invested with sees a string of top management exits before their term is done, it could be an indication of governance issues. The RBI actions to replace or remove the bank’s CEO or Board members or to supersede the Board are a red rag and provide early warning of suspected governance issues. Skirmishes between key shareholder factions or churn on top appointees are trouble signs, too.

LVB saw shareholders voting out the re-appointment of its MD and CEO along with a clutch of directors in its recent AGM. Yes Bank saw RBI refuse another term to its founder and a string of independent director exits before the moratorium.

Stock prices

When a bank share suffers a precipitous drop or trades at a fraction of reported book value, your antennae should be up for likely problems. A bank share trading at a fraction of its book value could mean that the stock market is under-valuing a good business. But more often, it could mean that it is sceptical about the reported value of the bank’s book. Stock markets, after all, were ahead of rating agencies in spotting problems at stressed NBFCs; they may not be far off the mark with banks.

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