Depositors of 16 stressed cooperative banks to get up to Rs 5 lakh, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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New Delhi, Nov 28 (PTI) Customers of 16 stressed cooperative banks will get up to Rs 5 lakh deposit insurance cover on Monday by Reserve Bank of India’s subsidiary DICGC as part of its mandate under a new law. The Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporation (DICGC) had earlier prepared a list of 21 banks but five, including Punjab & Maharashtra Co-Operative Bank (PMC Bank), are out of the list as they are either in merger process or out of the moratorium.

Parliament in August passed the Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporation (Amendment) Bill, 2021 ensuring that account holders get up to Rs 5 lakh within 90 days of the RBI imposing a moratorium on the banks.

Following enactment, the government has notified September 1, 2021 as the date on which the provisions of the Act would come into force. The mandated 90 days from the notified date comes to an end on November 29, 2021.

The depositors of these banks, who have not yet submitted their claims, are advised to contact the respective banks, a public notice from DICGC said.

“The claims should be supported by officially valid documents of identity and written consent to receive the amount lying in credit of their deposit account (willingness declaration) subject to a maximum of Rs 5 lakh along with alternate bank account details into which the said amount may be credited,” it said.

Depositors submitting valid documents, as mentioned above, will be paid by credit to the alternate bank account specified by depositors or on their consent, to their Aadhaar linked bank account, it said.

For the second phase, the last date for submission of documents is December 10, 2021 while date of payment is December 31, 2021, it added.

Besides PMC Bank, depositors of Hindu Co-Op Bank Ltd, Pathankot of Punjab, Rupee Co-Operative Bank Ltd and Needs Of Life Co-Operative Bank Ltd from Maharashtra and Bidar Mahila Urban Co-Op Bank Ltd of Karnataka are out of this.

It is to be noted that the RBI had in June given in-principle approval to a consortium of Centrum Financial Services and fintech startup BharatPe to acquire the stressed PMC Bank.

Clearing decks for the takeover, the RBI in October gave licence for small finance bank to the consortium. Recently, the DICGC said there may be a need to invoke the provisions of Section 18 A (7) (a) of the Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporation (Amendment) Act, 2021.

As per the Section 18 A (7) (a) of the Act, if a stressed bank is under the resolution process, the period for disbursement of Rs 5 lakh can be further extended by 90 days.

Last year, the government increased the insurance cover on deposits by five times to Rs 5 lakh. The enhanced deposit insurance cover of Rs 5 lakh came into effect from February 4, 2020.

Every bank used to pay 10 paise as an insurance premium per Rs 100 of deposit. It was raised to 12 paise per Rs 100 in 2020. It cannot be more than 15 paise at any point in time per Rs 100 deposit.

It is to be noted that the enhanced deposit insurance cover of Rs 5 lakh is effective from February 4, 2020. The increase was done after a gap of 27 years as it has been static since 1993. PTI DP MKJ



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Rupee Bank notifies refund scheme, relief for depositors of up to Rs 5 lakh, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Pune: The stressed Rupee Cooperative Bank has notified the scheme of the Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporation (DICGC) to refund account holders up to Rs5 lakh.

The DICGC announcement is valid for 21 insured banks operating under all-inclusive directions (AID), including Rupee Bank. Rupee Bank administrators said they will forward all claims made under the scheme to DICGC by October 15, 2021, after which approved claims will be settled by the DICGC within 90 days.

Rupee Bank administrator Sudhir Pandit said it is “premature” to say what will happen in case of depositors holding amounts exceeding Rs5 lakh. “The DICGC told us to maintain expenses to run the bank for the next six months, within which hopefully there will be a resolution plan for the bank; be it merger with a larger bank, or its revival. We even met Union finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman,” said Pandit.

“A resolution plan or revival will ensure that larger depositors do not lose most of their money, because if the bank is liquidated, large depositors may collectively lose Rs 375 crore,” added Pandit.



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Rupee Coop Bank depositors oppose DICGIC decision to pay Rs 5 lakh to account holders of stressed coop banks

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Rupee Cooperative Bank, headquartered in Pune, has been under strict banking restrictions because of mounting debt.

A group of people claiming to represent the interests of account holders and depositors of Rupee Cooperative Bank has opposed the decision taken by the Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporation (DICGC) to pay depositors of 21 stressed cooperative banks a sum of Rs 5 lakh within 90 days.

The DICGC has said that, following the amendment of the DICGC Act, it will make payments to depositors within 90 days. Besides PMC, the large banks include Rupee Cooperative Bank, Kapol Cooperative Bank, Maratha Coop Bank, and City Coop Ban, all from Maharashtra. Depositors in these banks have been waiting for years for their money. RBI had placed the banks under its all-inclusive directions, which included restrictions on withdrawal of deposits.

Dhananjay Khanzode, one of the depositors of the Rupee Cooperative Bank, said that depositors should be given their entire amounts and not just Rs 5 lakh since they have been waiting for years for their money. He asked depositors to wait for a month since the decision of the Bombay High Court is still awaited. The Rupee Cooperative Bank depositors had filed a civil writ petition with the Bombay High Court, seeking release of their deposits and action against the current administrators of the bank.

Khandzode said that he would approach depositors of the other stressed banks as well to jointly tackle this issue.

DICGIC has said that banks will have to submit a claim list by October 15 and update the position as of November 29 with principal and interest in a final updated list.

Rupee Cooperative Bank, headquartered in Pune, has been under strict banking restrictions because of mounting debt.

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DICGC to announce revised date for submission of claims by PMC Bank depositors

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The Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporation (DICGC) has clarified that it will separately communicate the revised date for submission of claims and the procedure to be followed in respect of payment of deposits in the case of the scam-hit Punjab and Maharashtra Co-operative (PMC) Bank.

This clarification comes even as big depositors of PMC Bank were on tenterhooks about submitting a form that requires them to declare the “willingness of depositors to receive insurance claim amount (up to ₹5 lakh) from DICGC.”

The “willingness” clause was interpreted by some of the depositors to mean that they may not receive deposits above ₹5 lakh. Hence, PMC Bank depositors, with deposits above Rs 5 lakh, were reluctant to submit the form.

Now, the Corporation has stated that in the case of PMC Bank, there may be a need to invoke the provisions of Section 18 A (7) (a) of the DICGC (Amendment) Act, 2021.

Also read: Banking venture of Centrum Financial Services christened Unity SFB

As per the aforementioned section, “the Reserve Bank finds it expedient in the interest of finalising a scheme of amalgamation of the insured bank with other banking institution or a scheme of compromise or arrangement or of reconstruction in respect of such insured bank, and communicates to the Corporation accordingly, the date on which the Corporation shall become liable to pay every depositor of such insured bank may further be extended by a period not exceeding ninety days.”

Chander Purswani, President, PMC Depositors Forum, said: ”Our fight was never for ₹5 lakh but for the entire money. We stand by that. We are confident that the RBI and the Centrum-BharatPe combine will not let us down.”

Need for a roadmap

Purswani emphasised that RBI should give a roadmap as to how and when PMC Bank depositors with deposits above ₹5 lakh will get their money back along with accrued interest.

He said PMC Bank has about one lakh depositors with deposits up to ₹5 lakh and about 43,000 depositors with deposits above ₹5 lakh.

RBI had accorded “in-principle” approval to Centrum Financial Services Ltd (CFSL), which is a wholly owned subsidiary of Centrum Capital Ltd, on June 18, 2021, to set up a small finance bank (SFB). This approval was in specific pursuance to CFSL’s February 2021 offer in response to PMC Bank’s November 2020 Expression of Interest (EoI) notification.

Unity Small Finance Bank

CFSL has christened its proposed banking venture as Unity Small Finance Bank.

Under the “in-principle” approval, CFSL will first operationalise Unity SFB in 120 days. Thereafter, RBI will place in public domain a draft scheme of amalgamation of PMC Bank with the SFB. The last step will be government’s sanction for the scheme.

DICGC had, on September 21, 2021, asked the depositors of 21 urban co-operative banks (UCBs), including PMC Bank, Sri Gururaghavendra Sahakara Bank, Rupee Co-operative Bank and Kapol Co-Operative Bank, which are currently under the Reserve Bank of India’s All-Inclusive Directions (AID), to contact their banks and submit the declaration of willingness to enable DICGC to make payments.

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DICGC asks depositors of 21 UCBs to submit relevant documents to enable it process claims

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The Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporation (DICGC) has asked depositors of 21 urban co-operative banks (UCBs) currently under the Reserve Bank of India’s All Inclusive Directions (AID), to contact their banks and submit the declaration of willingness to enable DICGC to make payments and also update any other documents/ information, including KYC, if needed by the bank.

This is to ensure that depositors’ claims can be included in the list being prepared by UCBs for submission to DICGC by October 15, 2021.

The 21 UCBs include 11 from Maharashtra, 5 from Karnataka, one each from Kerala, Punjab, Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan and Madhya Pradesh.

 

With the DICGC (Amendment) Act, 2021, coming into force with effect from September 1, 2021, the Corporation will pay the depositors of the insured banks placed under AID (with restrictions on withdrawal of deposits), an amount equivalent to the deposits outstanding (up to a maximum of Rs 5 lakh) within a period not exceeding 90 days.

“Necessary instructions have been issued to these banks to submit the claims within 45 days after obtaining the willingness of depositors to claim deposit insurance,” DICGC said in a statement.

The verification and settlement of the claims on submission by the banks in the aforesaid list should be done within the next 45 days by DICGC (November 29, 2021).

“These banks shall submit a claim list by October 15, 2021, and update the position as on November 29, 2021 (with principal and interest), in a final updated (second) list, to enable DICGC to settle the claim and discharge its insurance liability in full as per norms,” the statement said.

Unpaid (updated willingness list) / difference in amount of deposits up to eligible amount (as per final updated list submitted by November 29, 2021) will be paid within 30 days of receipt (that is by December 29, 2021).

 

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Depositors of scandal-hit PMC Bank, 20 others to get up to Rs 5 lakh within 90 days, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corp will pay depositors of 21 insured banks, which includes scandal-hit PMC Bank, the amount equivalent to the deposits, up to a maximum of Rs 5 lakh, within 90 days.

Necessary instructions have been issued to the banks to submit the claims within 45 days after obtaining the approval from depositors to claim deposit insurance. The verification and settlement of the claims should be done by November 29, 2021, DICGC said in a a release.

These banks shall submit a claim list by October 15 and update the position as on November 29, with principal and interest, in a final updated list, which will enable DICGC to discharge its insurance liability in full as per norms.

Unpaid or the difference in amount of deposits up to Rs 5 lakh, as per final updated list, will be paid within 30 days of receipt, that is by December 29.

The Parliament in August passed the Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporation (Amendment) Bill, 2021, ensuring account holders get up to Rs 5 lakh within 90 days of the RBI imposing a moratorium on the banks.

In 2019, the Reserve Bank of India imposed restrictions on PMC bank after observing financial irregularities, including under-reporting of bad loans. From the findings of the probe, it was discovered that Rs 250 crore worth of fake deposits were shown in the system, and that the bank had manipulated its net time and deposits using HDIL and DHFL cheques.

Here’s the list of the 21 banks:

> Adoor Co-Operative Urban Bank, Kerala
> Bidar Mahila Urban Co-Op Bank, Karnataka
> City Co-Op Bank, Maharashtra
> Hindu Co-Op Bank, Punjab
> Kapol Co-Op Bank, Maharashtra
> Maratha Sahakari Bank, Maharashtra
> Millath Co-Op Bank, Karnataka
> Needs of Life Co-Op Bank, Maharashtra
> Padmashree Dr. Vithal Rao Vikhe Patil, Maharashtra
> People’s Co-Op Bank, Kanpur, Uttar Pradesh
> Punjab & Maharashtra Co-Op Bank (PMC Bank), Maharashtra
> Rupee Co-Operative Bank, Maharashtra
> Shri Anand Coop Bank, Pune, Maharashtra
> Sikar Urban Co-Op Bank, Rajasthan
> Sri Gururaghvendra Sahakara Bank Niyamitha, Karnataka
> The Mudhol Co-Operative Bank, Karnataka
> Mantha Urban Cooperative Bank, Maharashtra
> Sarjeraodada Naik Shirala Sahakari Bank, Maharashtra
> Independence Cooperative Bank, Nashik, Maharashttra
> Deccan Urban Co-Operative Bank, Vijaypur, Karnataka
> Garha Co-Operative Bank, Guna, Madhya Pradesh

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DICGC moves to engage CA firms to complete depositor verification at 55-odd UCBs

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The Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporation (DICGC) has set in motion the process of engaging Chartered Accountant (CA) firms to complete the Herculean task of verification/ certification of claims list and books of records of about 55 insured urban co-operative banks (UCBs), which are currently under the Reserve Bank of India’s All Inclusive Direction (AID).

This is aimed at ensuring that the first list of depositors get paid by the corporation within the stipulated time frame of 90 days from the date (September 1, 2021) when the provisions of the Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporation (Amendment) Act, 2021 came into force.

The DICGC Act was amended last month with a provision in Section 18A allowing depositors access to up to ₹5 lakh within 90 days of a bank being placed under moratorium/ AID.

So, depositors of UCBs such as Punjab & Maharashtra Co-operative (PMC) Bank (Mumbai), Sri Guru Raghavendra Sahakara Bank (Bengaluru), Rupee Co-operative Bank (Pune) and Kapol Co-operative Bank (Mumbai) can hope to receive payments up to the insured deposit amount of ₹5 lakh on or before November 29, 2021.

Before the amendment to the DICGC Act, the Corporation would pay depositors the deposit insurance amount, subject to a maximum of Rs 5 lakh, only in the event of the winding up or liquidation of an insured bank. This process would take a few years.

Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, in her Union Budget 2021-22 speech, had said amendments to the DICGC Act will streamline its provisions so that if a bank is temporarily unable to fulfil its obligations, its depositors can get easy and time-bound access to their deposits to the extent of the deposit insurance cover. This would help depositors of banks that are currently under stress.

Claim verification: Racing against time

Claim verification/ certification of depositors, including KYC (know-your-customer) verification, by the CA firm is to ascertain their traceability for payment of claims by DICGC and verifying their willingness to receive insurance claim amount from DICGC.

After the first list is cleared, the Bank, which is under AID, will submit a second and final list, following the above procedure. This list will be verified within a maximum of 15 days of receipt from the bank by CA and certified.

“As the payments to depositors who are willing to receive the insured amount have to be made within statutory time limits, it is emphasised that time is of the essence and verification and the ascertainment process has to be completed within the period specified by the Corporation at the time of giving the claim lists.

“As such, the CA firms while applying, must ensure that they have the adequate manpower to carry out the task in a timely manner,” DICGC said.

Satish Marathe, Founder-Member, Sahakar Bharati, and Director, Central Board of RBI, emphasised that the five-fold increase in the deposit insurance amount to ₹5 lakh (with effect from February 4, 2020), coupled with the amendment to the DICGC Act will provide much-needed relief to depositors of UCBs under Directions.

However, revival of such UCBs may become difficult as their deposit base would have dwindled substantially due to settlement of deposit insurance claim by DICGC and the banks would have to repay to DICGC the amount disbursed by it out of the amount realised from their assets.

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Institutions need separate deposit insurance cover: Sahakar Bharati

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The Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporation (DICGC) needs to carve out a separate deposit insurance limit for institutions to help them overcome the difficulty in placing deposits with multiple banks, according to Sahakar Bharati.

Institutional depositors such as educational institutions, charitable and religious trusts, co-operative credit and housing societies park their deposits with various banks to get the benefit of deposit insurance cover. However, management of funds can become onerous once their corpus starts growing.

Higher cover

Sahakar Bharati, the all-India body of co-operative institutions, wants the Finance Ministry to consider modifying DICGC’s deposit insurance scheme so that institutional depositors get a separate and higher deposit insurance cover of ₹25 lakh and management of funds becomes easier.

DICGC (a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Reserve Bank of India), with the approval of Government of India, had upped the limit of insurance cover for depositors in the insured banks five-fold to ₹5 lakh per depositor with effect from February 4, 2020.

Also read: Sahakar Bharati seeks Sec 80C benefit for term deposits of 5 years and above with UCBs

With the revised deposit insurance cover, the proportion of bank deposits (by amount) with insurance cover, rose to 50.9 per cent of assessable deposits as of March-end 2020 vis-a-vis 27.4 per cent without increase in the cover.

Satish Marathe, Founder-Member, Sahakar Bharati, and Director, Central Board, Reserve Bank of India, observed that if a co-operative credit society wants to deploy surplus funds of, say, ₹1 crore, then to get the benefit of deposit insurance cover it will have to park the monies in at least 20 banks.

He emphasised that if institutional depositors have a separate and higher deposit insurance limit of ₹25 lakh, the number of banks they will be required to park their deposits with will come down drastically, making fund management less cumbersome.

This demand assumes significance as the funds of institutional depositors are stuck in some of the urban co-operative banks, which have either been placed under RBI directions or are getting liquidated.

For example, in scam-hit Punjab and Maharashtra Co-operative (PMC) Bank, fixed deposits of institutional depositors such as the Reserve Bank Officers’ Co-operative Credit Society Ltd (₹105 crore) and the Reserve Bank Staff & Officers Co-operative Credit Society Ltd (₹86.50 crore) are stuck.

Given that about 49 per cent of the assessable deposits do not have insurance cover, Marathe felt that banks should be permitted to obtain additional deposit insurance cover on such deposits of individuals and institutions by payment of additional premium.

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DICGC can now fix risk-based deposit insurance premium

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The Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporation (DICGC) can usher in a differential premium system (DPS) for banks, based on their risk profile, following an amendment to the DICGC Act.

A sub-section inserted in the Act allows the corporation to increase the deposit insurance premium for a bank. Currently it charges a flat rate premium of 12 paise per ₹100 deposit.

According to the amendment, “the Corporation may, having regard to its financial position and to the interests of the banking system of the country as a whole, and with previous approval of the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), from time to time, raise the aforesaid limit of fifteen paisa per annum for every hundred rupees of the total amount of the deposits in that bank.”

Prior to the amendment, Section 15(l) of the Act had said: “…Provided that the premium payable by any insured bank for any period shall not exceed fifteen paise per annum for every hundred rupees of the total amount of the deposits in that bank at the end of that period…”

Empowering the DICGC

The amended DICGC Act replaces the “shall not exceed fifteen paise per annum for every hundred rupees” clause with “raise the aforesaid limit of fifteen paisa per annum for every hundred rupees”.

Though the corporation currently has a one-size-fits-all approach to collecting deposit insurance premium, the amendment empowers it to create a differential premium system based on the risk profile of banks.

The flat rate premium had been upped from 10 paise to 12 paise per ₹100 of assessable deposits since April 1, 2020, to mitigate the impact of the hike in insurance cover on the corporation’s Deposit Insurance Fund (DIF).

All you wanted to know about the new changes in deposit insurance

DICGC, a wholly-owned subsidiary of RBI, had upped the limit of insurance cover for bank deposits fivefold to ₹5 lakh per depositor with effect from February 4, 2020.

D Krishna, former advisor and chief executive of the National Federation of Urban Co-operative Banks and Credit Societies, said the amended DICGC Act empowers the corporation and RBI to prescribe higher rates of premium for co-operative banks vis-a-vis commercial banks.

Flat rate premium: The moral hazard

To address the moral hazard inherent in flat rate premiums irrespective of risk profile, DICGC is examining the recommendations of an internal committee on risk-based premium.

Of the total claims settled by DICGC since inception, around 94.3 per cent pertained to co-operative banks that were liquidated, amalgamated, or restructured, according to RBI.

As per the report of the RBI committee on DPS, the categories for assigning premium rates should be limited to four or five. Further, the ratings system, as far as possible, should be ownership-neutral.

DPS: Level playing field needed

Krishna observed that public sector banks, which have implicit government guarantee and/or backing, get recapitalisation support and private sector banks are not allowed to fail when they get into trouble as they are either revived or merged with another bank.

Exempt public sector and commercial banks from Deposit Insurance Scheme: AIBEA

In contrast, a number of urban co-operative banks have been liquidated as there was no support from any quarter.

“Therefore, it would be unfair for RBI to think of differential premium without having a level playing field or to allow DICGC to hike the premium just because the Act now permits them to do both,” Krishna said.

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All you wanted to know about the new changes in deposit insurance

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Last week the Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporation (Amendment) Bill 2021 was passed by both the houses of the Parliament. In the wake of the PMC Bank and YES Bank debacles, these amendments are a move in the right direction. In light of the proposed changes, we help you understand how deposit insurance works.

The bill, which is pending until it gets the President’s assent, proposes to change the time at which the DICGC becomes liable to pay the bank depositors. Earlier the liability kicked in only when the order of liquidation was passed against a bank.

Now the DICGC is liable to pay depositors when any direction, order or scheme is passed such that it prohibits the depositors of the insured bank from accessing their deposits. The DICGC is required to pay the depositors the insured amount (of up to ₹5 lakh – inclusive of principal and interest) within 90 days from which such order/direction/ prohibition takes effect. Once, the bill is enacted into law, depositors of the crisis hit PMC Bank will also be automatically covered.

Will the DICGC pay the depositor directly?

Earlier, the DICGC was required to settle dues to the liquidator, who in turn would ensure the distribution to each depositor. Now, per the amendment, DICGC is required to pay the depositors either directly, or get the amount credited in the account of the depositors through the insured bank.

Do I have to pay a premium for this insurance?

Depositors are not required to pay anything. Banks pay DICGC a premium of up to 15 paise per ₹100 of deposits with them, every year. An amendment has also been proposed to permit DICGC to hike the maximum limit of the premium to be collected from time to time with the prior approval of the RBI.

Are all bank deposits covered under this insurance?

No primary co-operative societies are not. However, all commercial banks (including branches of foreign banks functioning in India, local area banks and regional rural banks) all state, central and primary cooperative banks (which are known as urban cooperative banks) are insured by the DICGC.

What is the limit on the insured amount? Does this cover every deposit I hold in a bank?

Each depositor in a bank is insured for up to a maximum of ₹5 lakh (hiked from the earlier ₹1 lakh in the 2020 Budget) for both principal and interest amount held by him/her in the same right and same capacity. This means that all accounts (savings, current, fixed and/or recurring deposit accounts) held by the depositor in all branches of the bank in her individual capacity will be aggregated. The insurance cover is available for up to a maximum of ₹5 lakh.

However, if the depositor opens other deposit accounts in her capacity as a partner of a firm, or guardian of a minor, or director of a company, or trustee of a trust, or a joint account, in one or more branches of the bank, then such accounts are considered as held in a different capacity and different right. Such deposits will hence enjoy the insurance cover of up to ₹5 lakh each.

What if I have multiple joint accounts with the same bank? Will the ₹5 lakh insurance limit apply to each of these accounts?

If multiple accounts are jointly held by individuals in a bank in which their names appear in the exact same order, then these are considered to be held in the same capacity and in the same right. Hence these shall be aggregated for the purposes of the ₹5 lakh insurance limit.

Depositors are hence better off in changing their order of names, while holding multiple joint accounts in the same bank. These will be treated as held in different capacity and different right. Accordingly, insurance cover will be available separately up to ₹5 lakh for every such joint account where the names appear in different order or where the names are different.

Say, you wish to open multiple joint accounts with your spouse in the same bank, it would be wise to name her / him as the first holder in at least one of the accounts. You can also consider adding another family member as the third joint account holder to maximise your safety net under the deposit insurance.

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