Amitabh Chaudhry, MD & CEO, Axis Bank, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


In an interview with ET Now, Amitabh Chaudhry, MD & CEO, Axis Bank, talks about surprise numbers post-COVID waves, the economy picking up, cash rich corporates, banking tech, partnering with fintechs, and more.

On one hand we are trying to understand the impact of COVID and on the other, we are trying to understand that how can one maximise in this low liquidity environment. In your last official communication to investors and the markets, you said that there is stress at the retail end of the book and it will continue for some time but recovery will also be equally sharp. Would like to change your guidance or you would like to stick to it?

The positive outcomes that we are seeing over the last couple of months are quite obvious and I think the market is talking about it as well. We think that if these trends continue the overall portfolio performance in terms of recovery efforts across the financial sector should be visible. And when we did out last earnings call, we said that June was way better than what we saw in May and April and July is trending better and so is August.

As far as outlook on pickup and capex cycle is concerned, there are reasonable indications that the private capex creation has started but is in select segments at this stage. We are certainly seeing lot more conversations around capex at this time than we have seen in the last couple of years. The private sector capex is robust in some segments like upstream refinery, steel, cement, chemical, pharma, renewable, storage systems.

The government has come out with a scheme asking for investments in electronics and industrial automation, logistics, export oriented industries. The government is also investing a lot in railways, roads and highways. There are other sectors which are still struggling a bit but one is hopeful that if we can contain the issues around COVID and it does not deteriorate from here, the economy will pick up.

The government and RBI are being very supportive, very accommodative, which is adding to the revival of the entire economy. The government’s monetisation plan will take time but I think the plan is to monetise and put it all back in the economy, so that should also help. Obviously, there are risks in the horizon which we all should be aware of. COVID has taught us a lot about risks and being prepared for them.

If we go back five quarters, Axis and other large banks came out with their numbers post-first wave. They surprised the market because retail delinquencies, which were expected to be high, were not that high. When the last quarter numbers came out post-second wave, the retail delinquencies were not supposed to be high but they were. What changed?Let us not forget that there were lot of retail customers who were supported in the first COVID wave through two specific moratoriums and restructuring. In the second wave, there was no moratorium. There was some restructuring which has been permitted but there are certain rules under which that restructuring has been allowed.

A lot of customers who took shelter in the first-COVID wave remain stressed and the second-COVID wave has pushed them further.

Also, in the second wave the health cost for a lot of people shot up sharply. People also kept some money away or were forced to spend that money, the savings which they were planning to apply towards repaying loans. A lot of people became careful, sat on the money and postponed EMIs.

All of us are worried about a potential third COVID wave but the recovery is also quite solid and it was evident in the first quarter calls.

In our case a lot of the slippages on the retail side were coming from secured assets and the loan-to-value against secured assets were low. We were never worried that the money will not come. It is just an issue of time. When money is not being paid, it goes into slippage but over a period of time we will be able to recover the money either way. Either the customer will repay or we will be able to sell those assets. So in that sense demand is good. It is moving in the right direction. Recoveries have gained momentum.

The general view is that lot of big companies are suddenly cash rich. So while capex has started. do you think that a lot of corporates are funding their balance sheets on internal accruals. They may not tap banks and capex may start but historical credit growth rate may not come back?
You are absolutely right. I mean the credit offtake from the system remains moderate, non-food credit growth as of end of July was 6.2% year on year and has averaged only 6% for this fiscal. So in that sense, the credit offtake is not picking up.

As you rightly pointed out, it is because the extraordinary stimulus has led to system liquidity surplus, resulting in lower market borrowing rates, larger and higher rated corporates are sitting on huge piles of cash. They have repaid their borrowings in the market. So the credit growth of the industrial sector has been driven by mid corporates and some refinancing.

We believe that there are considerable credit opportunities as the economy starts reviving. As some capex starts, we will get decent opportunities to grow. Our advances growth in the first quarter was 12%, although the credit growth in the first quarter was 6%, the SME book grew by almost 18% despite a pivoting to a more conservative approach on lending.

Highly rated corporates have relied on either the bond markets or they are generating so much cash. They are not spending enough on capex while sitting on huge piles of cash. They are repaying the debt in the system so the credit growth is quite tepid at this point in time.

Will I be correct when I say that banks historically have been a proxy to corporate growth but this time it may not translate into historical trends?
It is possible. The only hope is that as the large corporates start spending on capex and as that money flows to mid corporates and SMEs, we will see credit growth come back in some of those sectors. But yes, if they keep relying on the cash they are generating or some of other avenues which are non-banking, like equity, the corporate bond market or do foreign borrowings, then you might not see a direct correlation of that spend coming in through credit growth of the banking sector.

If I have to put the economic environment based on your market commentary and ROE of 15-15.5% you shared, will that be achievable in FY22 or could that get pushed?
If you look at our last year’s fourth quarter number, if you remove one off items, we had reached 15% number ROE. Because of Covid’s second wave, the impact on the retail portfolio has got pushed out in this financial year. I do not want to comment on quarter three or quarter four but we believe that if you take off the extraordinary items, which are coming through because of market situation, the bank is already operating in the zone of 15-16% ROE. Our ambition is to take it to 18% and getting to 18% from 15-16% is a tough battle.

How can we be best in class in terms of customer experience and how can we be best in class in terms of rigour and rhythm we bring to the system. It is a long journey and it will take us a couple of years for us.

The relative comparison for a shareholder would be ICICI Bank which is taking their subsidiaries public, State Bank of India is planning to take their subsidiaries public, you are now the promoter of Max, how are you planning to increase the importance of subsidiaries? The last quarter was a great quarter for you but how will you differentiate when other banks are ramping up their subsidiary businesses?

When I had joined the bank in 2018, I had said that one of the important pillars of our strategy would be to further focus on scaling of the subsidiaries so that they can gain higher market share in their respective businesses. If you analyse the quarter one earnings of our subsidiaries, it would be touching nearly Rs 1000 crore which is an important milestone for us.

We believe that it is very important for us to scale the subsidiaries further over the next couple of years. We will ask ourselves the benefit of listing these subsidiaries or should we continue to adopt the model we have now?

We want investors to look at Axis Bank as a group, which has the bank and various subsidiaries. We have a shareholder in Axis AMC, and today it is the seventh largest AMC. It is the largest player in the equity side of the investments which people are making, and the money people are putting in mutual funds, its AUM grew 55% year-on-year, PAT grew 90% year-on-year. Axis Capital continues to maintain its leadership position in the ECM League Table. if you look at Axis Finance, even though it was a wholesale NBFC, its asset quality is one of the best in the industry and their foray into retail is also working quite well.

If you look at Axis Securities, its profit went up 7 times last year. So in that sense, I think the subsidiaries are tracking well. We want them to focus on scaling up those subsidiaries. The people who work in those subsidiaries are getting stock options in Axis Bank. I think it is in the interest of everyone working throughout Axis Group.

A couple of years later we will see whether we need to reassess the strategy and decide whether we want to list or we want to continue with what we are doing at this point in time. Right now we will keep at it, we do not intent to list any subsidiaries at this time.

In Covid times we have enjoyed banking experiences sitting at home, there is a new fintech world which is getting created. Korea has got a bank which is a branchless bank, what happens in three to five years, how will you keep up pace, how will you transform from being a branch based bank to a bank which is digital/financial tech ready?

So with banking or any other industry that one can think of, be it auto or retail or even media, some of the so called old economy sectors, you cannot think of a world in the next three to five years where technology will not play an important role. Over the past five years, the acceleration towards embracing technology with rapid emergence of fintech and Covid has only hastened the space.

So whoever is unwilling to adopt these new ways of working, what technology is bringing in, will only fall by wayside and banking cannot be kept away from it. So from our perspective, we recognised a couple of years back, we have to scale up our investments in technology in a big way. For example, Axis technology spend has gone up by 78% in the last two years. We have setup a separate digital bank where we have 800 people working and we believe that we have to disrupt ourselves to ensure that we can compete with what is going to happen in the market and the fintechs which are going to come up.

Whoever brings convenience to customers is more than welcome because fintechs and payment companies have done a wonderful job over the years and that is why we made the acquisition FreeCharge in 2017. There is no doubt that they will continue to disrupt the market going forward and if we do not keep pace with them, if we do not partner with them, if we do not embrace what they are doing and their ways of working, we will suffer.

The entire strategy of Axis on the digital front is around changing ourselves, making significantly more investments than what we have done in the past and also at the same time work in partnership with these fintechs or these new ways of working to ensure that we not only benefit in terms of what they are doing but in some cases, we can provide the pipes or solutions which they never intended to invest in.

A partnership will become more effective in the marketplace and you will see Axis partnering with more fintechs going forwards in the future. So it is just us trying to ensure that we have enough things happening at the same time, that we do not miss any opportunity and at the same time we are disrupting ourselves so that we can compete head on with them and actually give them a tough time in the marketplace and get our fair share.

So what is the next growth frontier? If you look at banks between 2000 and 2020, retail was a growth frontier, financial inclusion started, everybody was able to get more fee based income which in a sense has been the differentiating factor. For next couple of years, what is the next growth frontier for you?

At a very simplistic level, if you look at our deposit market share it is only 4.5%, if you look at our advances market share, it is 5.7%, if you look at our RTGS, NEFT market share, it has been improving but it is still slightly below 10%. If you look at our share in UPI, it is close to 15%, if you look at our share in credit cards, it is 11%.

If you look at the deposit advances and where we are in terms of the highest market share, we still are a small part of the market. So even for a moment if I was to assume that the overall market growth will be limited, our opportunity to grow within this market or itself is huge and so as a bank as we transform ourselves and every business of ours.

There is are huge growth opportunities for the next five to seven years, which is not reliant on the market growing. The market itself is getting disrupted and we as a large bank with a strong balance sheet have only increased the pace of change.

We are laying the foundation for the future where we can capitalise business opportunities in almost every segment. You asked me retail was a way to go but what about the future? My view is that retail will continue to grow, we are one of the few banks which can support a corporate across its requirements on lending, borrowing, trade finance, cash management and everything.

SME is a business which Axis has always been strong in. I told you about our UPI market share, on the merchant acquisition side we are big, in the credit card market, we are a number four player, so we have an opportunity, the wherewithal, the management and the talent to be able to go across these businesses.

We are pressing the accelerator, keeping our risk framework intact, keeping conservative business intact, we believe enough opportunities exist across all our businesses.

How do markets value banks price to book, asset minus liability? Do you think the differentiation now will be not growth and balance sheet but growth and profitability?

If you look at the price to book as a measure, I think the market has been quite savvy in terms of differentiating across various banks based on the kind of growth they have delivered, the kind of asset quality they have had and so on so forth. I think yes, over the period of last couple of years, a couple of banks are moving into the kind of same zone, their balance sheet, their asset quality, their growth strategies at least in terms of output tends to look similar but India is large enough to be able to take in a number of banks which will do very well.

We are the third largest private bank in terms of asset size, we have crossed Rs 10 lakh crore in terms of our asset size, in terms of market cap, we are slightly behind and obviously our view is that we need to just keep doing the right things the right way and keep executing better than what we have done in the past and finally if the market recognises that there is more predictability about how we are going about things, it will get reflected in the price.

I also mentioned to you earlier that there is a clear move where these bigger banks have benefited at the cost of the smaller institutions and in a crisis like this that tends to happen even more or more pronounced. Let us see how this plays out but my view is that the bigger banks have the wherewithal, the balance sheet, the strength, the ability to invest in the future and the will continue to benefit from an Indian economy which should start seeing growth all over again. I think the Indian story remains intact. I not only believe Indian story remains intact there is a huge growth opportunity ahead of this Indian story and hopefully we will be able to capitalise on it.

You know this more than anyone else that when growth comes back, it surprises everybody positively. Barring the risk of a third wave, do you see any other risk on the horizon or do you think if there is no third wave, then we are in for a growth surprise?

Ultimately we are in the risk taking business. We have to be aware of the risks that exist out there and in that sense, we have to be cognisant of the third wave and be very watchful about that. Keeping that side, you know India has not seen capex to the extent given the size of the economy over the last couple of years. We have to be watchful as to when the economy really starts reviving so that is the second risk which we would be aware of.

Third, while all of us are talking about technology, digitisation and you know providing a seamless experience to the customers, we have to be aware of the risk in terms of cyber security, in terms of technology not working the way it should work, in terms of a bad digital experience.

There is that risk which you need to be aware of, your operating risk increase manifolds. It is not just about investing, we also have to be very fully aware of the risks which you are creating because you are moving towards a more digitised world in the future and everything is connected. You could get impacted because someone else did not do their job well and that is why the Reserve Bank of India very rightly so is coming after banks and the institutions in a big way to ensure that they have a very robust strong, scalable technology architecture.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Ezetap, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Customers are increasingly preferring to pay through EMIs while buying high-value consumer items, as affordability has become a key factor in the post-pandemic scenario, payments solution provider Ezetap said on Thursday. Buying ability of consumers across the country has been significantly reduced due to the pandemic. They are either avoiding a single big payment or entirely skipping to buy any new item, Ezetap said.

This has impacted sales across brands and created a vast need for affordable solutions for customers across different sectors.

Ezetap has recorded a steep increase of 220 per cent in the transactional volume of equated monthly instalments (EMI) in July 2021, compared to February 2020. EMI volume as part of total transactions has increased to 18 per cent in the mobile and consumer durables segment, compared to 9 per cent in the pre-pandemic period of March 2020, it said.

“This indicates a growing inclination of consumers towards affordability solutions, which help increase their purchasing power. This also indicates that EMI or affordability presents a massive opportunity for brands to grow their sales across diverse product segments,” it added.

Delhi led metro cities with an increase of 258 per cent in total EMI volume followed by Bengaluru, clocking a growth of 206 per cent.

There has been a significant increase in the adoption of EMI transactions in non-metro cities with a combined contribution of 59 per cent in the total EMI volumes. Ahmedabad and Pune registered growth figures of 230 per cent and 210 per cent, respectively.

“This shows that affordability solutions play a positive role in impacting sales…This may be partially attributed to the fact that a large portion of the working population have moved back to their hometowns due to work from home models, and have contributed to EMI sales in their respective hometowns” it added.

According to Ezetap, a surge in debit card EMIs is one of the main reasons behind the steep increase in such transactions and it has increased significantly with nearly 25 per cent contribution in the total EMI volumes.

Through a tie-up with several banks, Ezetap offers instant EMIs via credit and debit card. The average ticket size of EMI transactions recorded by Ezetap has increased from Rs 18,000 in February 2020, to Rs 32,000 in July 2021.

In a move to expand the benefits of EMIs, Ezetap has also tied up with ZestMoney to provide NBFC EMIs.

Another factor for large-scale uptake of EMIs is no-cost EMIs and vouchers available to customers by various brands. Nearly 50 per cent of Ezetap EMI transaction volume can be attributed to no-cost brand EMIs, it said.

On the mobile and consumer durable space, there is at least one card offer being rolled out by various brands to drive more sales. Ezetap has also partnered with Xiaomi to provide EMIs to customers.

Customers are avoiding bulk payments and preferring affordable payment options to reduce the monetary burden, and some non-metro cities have growth of over 200 per cent in EMI transactions, Byas Nambisan, CEO, Ezetap, said.

“We have been able to reduce the transaction time by nearly 80 per cent and eliminate the manual errors with EMI integrated into the merchant’s billing POS. We will continue our efforts to provide the retail businesses with robust and integrated Buy Now Pay Later solutions, like EMIs, to improve the purchasing power of their end customers,” he said.

Ezetap has forged tie-ups with banks such as Axis Bank, HDFC Bank, Citibank, State Bank of India, American Express, Yes Bank and ICICI Bank. PTI KPM KPM BAL BAL



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Planning for son’s education, own retirement

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Nishant is 36 and works with an IT company in Pune. He has a 5-year-old son. Until now, he has focussed his energies on repaying the home loan, which he repaid completely 2 months back. Thus, he does not have many investments. In addition to this house, he has Rs ₹ 5 lakh in fixed deposits and ₹13 lakh in employees’ provident fund.

His net take-home monthly salary is ₹80,000. He can invest about ₹35,000 per month. Besides, his monthly contribution to EPF account, including employer contribution, is ₹11,500.

He wants to invest for his son’s higher education, for which he thinks he will need about ₹20 lakh (present cost) after 12 years. Besides, he wants to save for this retirement. He has not bought any insurance plan yet.

Buying insurance

Insurance is the first pillar of financial planning. In his case, getting insurance portfolio right is even more critical since he is the sole earning member in the family. There are three broad types of insurance plans that every earning member must buy: Life, Health and Accidental Disability Insurance.

While there are many ways to calculate life insurance cover requirement, a simple thumb rule is to buy a cover for 10-15 times the annual income. With his level of income, he can go for a life cover of ₹ 1.25-1.5 crore.

A term insurance plan is the best way to purchase a life insurance. This will cost him about ₹18,000-20,000 per annum. He can choose to pay annual premium in monthly installments too.

He has a health cover of ₹3 lakh from his employer. The coverage is clearly not sufficient for a family of three. He must buy a family floater health insurance plan of ₹10 lakh. That will cost him about ₹15,000 per annum.

He can buy accidental disability cover as a rider with a term plan or as a standalone plan. A rider with the term plan is cheaper because the scope of coverage is limited to total and permanent disability.

A standalone plan is more expensive, but it covers both partial and total permanent disability, temporary disability, and accidental death.

These insurance plans (life, health and accidental cover) will cost about ₹5,000 per month or Rs 60,000 per annum.

He has a fixed deposit of ₹5 lakh that can be considered towards medical and emergency fund.

Son’s education

For son’s education, he needs ₹20 lakh (present cost) in 12 years. At the inflation rate of 6 per cent per annum, the target nominal corpus will be ₹40 lakh in 12 years.

Assuming a return of 10 per cent on the portfolio over 12 years, he needs to invest ₹15,000 per month.

He can put this money into a hybrid fund or a multicap fund by way of SIP. He must gradually shift this money to debt as he moves closer to the goal.

For his retirement, he mentions that only 2/3rd of his current expenses will continue into retirement.

His current expense is ₹45,000 per month but that includes conveyance and school and tuition fee for his son.

His expected expenses during retirement will be ~ ₹30,000 per month (cost). Assuming a post retirement life of 30 years, inflation of 6 per cent per annum and that he can earn inflation matching returns during retirement, he needs to accumulate ₹4.3 crore in 24 years.

His current EPF corpus will grow to ₹80 lakh in 24 years . At assumed pre-retirement return of 10 per cent per annum, he needs to invest ₹32,000 per month.

He is already putting ₹11,500 per month by way of EPF. After accounting for regular expenses, insurance payments and investment for son’s education, he can invest an additional ₹15,000 per month (35,000 – 5,000 – 15,000).

His retirement portfolio is already debt heavy. He can split this amount between a largecap fund and a midcap fund, with heavier allocation to the former. He is investing less than he should. He must invest more when his cashflows permit. This should not be a problem since his best earning years are ahead of him.

He must understand all the goal calculations above are based on heavy assumptions about inflation and expected returns.

He must keep revisiting these assumptions and portfolio growth and make adjustments accordingly.

The writer is a SEBI-registered investment advisor and founder of personal financeplan.in

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Soon, PSBs may appoint specialists to manage NPAs, professionalise boards, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


After the mega mergers, it’s time for an overhaul at public sector banks.

The government is looking to measures to strengthen corporate governance and human resource practices in nationalised

banks. It plans a diversified board structure, strengthening of board-level committees and a robust performance management system for employees.

The government wants to further professionalise the boards of PSBs and bring experts in risk management, information technology and human resource management.

The key proposals include longer tenure for executive directors, hiring of specialists in areas such as NPA management and fast track promotion for high performers.

Leadership plan

These discussions may be further taken up with the Banks Board Bureau to formulate a long-term strategy.

One of the key mandates of BBB is to help banks to develop a robust leadership succession plan for critical positions and advise the government on evolving suitable training and development programmes for management personnel.

BBB will also maintain a database on performance of the officers of PSBs. This will have information regarding postings, placements, promotions and vigilance of senior officers.

Ease 4.0

Banks through Ease 4.0 may also take up these issues at their board level. Launched in January 2018, Enhanced Access and Service Excellence (Ease) is the common reform agenda for all public sector banks aimed at institutionalising clean and smart banking.

State-run banks will focus on co-lending with non-banking firms, digital agriculture financing, synergies and technological resilience for 24×7 banking as part of their reforms agenda for this fiscal.

This year PSBs will focus to introduce and promote new analytics-based offers to existing retail customers like pre-approved car loans, EMI offers on e-commerce purchases and also for existing MSME customers.

Such offers will be based on bank transactions, income tax and GST returns, transactions on e-commerce portals, and other operational data.

As per the reform agenda, banks will leverage partnerships with third parties, including agritech firms and strive to automate processing and sanction of agricultural loans based on field visits, borrower interaction, and risk assessment in states with digitised land records.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

ICICI Bank launches cardless EMI facility

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Private sector lender ICICI Bank has introduced an instant cardless EMI facility for online purchases on e-commerce platforms. The facility is available to the bank’s pre-approved customers across 2,500 e-commerce brands.

“Customers can convert the transactions up to ₹5 lakh into easy monthly installments by entering their registered mobile number, PAN and OTP at the check-out section of the e-commerce website or app,” said ICICI Bank in a statement on Monday.

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Godrej Housing Finance launches ‘design your EMI’ home loan product

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Godrej Housing Finance (GHF) has launched a ‘design your EMI’ home loan product to enable customers to customise their equated monthly installments (EMIs). This is aimed at optimising their cashflows and bring down the cost of home ownership.

Manish Shah, MD & CEO, Godrej Housing Finance said EMIs can be tailored to suit customers’ requirements —a customer might want to start with a smaller EMI and gradually increase it or start with a bigger EMI (since expenses are down in Covid-19 times) and normalise it.

For example, when a customer puts down money to buy a home, with the possession date being 12-24 months later , the finances can be challenging —if he is currently staying in a leased accommodation, rent needs to be paid and there is EMI for the new house, he said.

Also read: Home finance firms to comply with risk-based internal audit norms

“Suppose, EMI for a ₹50 lakh loan is about ₹40,000. So, the customer can start with small EMIs — ₹10,000 a month in the first year; ₹20,000 a month in the second year…The EMI can go up slowl,” he said.

“There can be another scenario where the customer feels that since some of his expenses have come down in the pandemic, he wants to increase the EMI to, say, ₹60,000 a month. Later on when the expenses go back to normal, the EMIs can get normalised to ₹40,000 a month,” explained Shah.

Launch of customised EMIs

The GHF chief emphasised that his company, which started its operations in November 2020 and is seeking to build a balance sheet of ₹10,000 crore in three years, offers an assisted journey for designing EMI for customers.

“The whole team is trained to handhold the customer for trying various permutations and combinations. They will customise it (EMIs). We have launched this in Pune. Now we are rolling it in all our markets (Mumbai, National Capital Region and Bengaluru),” he said.

On the service front, the company has piloted an end-to-end digital home loan sanction process, whereby the loan sanction process is completed without the customer and GHF employee coming face-to-face. This ensures that both are not put at risk in the current pandemic times.

“We have initiated this (end-to-end sanction) process with over 100 customers between May and now,” Shah said.

According to ICRA, GHF is currently owned by the Godrej family through Anamudi Real Estates LLP (AREL). The entire shareholding of GHF is proposed to be taken over by Godrej Industries (GIL) through Pyxis Holdings (PHPL).

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

‘Phone pe loan’ bringing credit revolution to hinterland India, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Banks and NBFCs have struck gold in digital lending, which is driving huge volumes through small loans.

Loans of below Rs 25,000 have grown 23 times since 2017, according to a joint report by Transunion CIBIL and Google.

The report identifies the significance of small ticket less than or equal to Rs 25,000 loans, characterized by searches for “phone on loan”, “laptop on EMI“, and “mahila loan 30,000”.

The share of these loan disbursals amongst all personal loans has gone up from 10 per cent in 2017 to 60 per cent in 2020.

With disbursal speed and convenience being the hallmarks of these loans, the digital-first sellers have the largest share in this category with 97 per cent of all personal loans disbursed by them being under Rs 25,000.

According to TU Cibil in 2020, 38% of loans disbursed to the ‘prime’ credit tier was through fintech NBFCs (non-banking financial companies).

The data shows that those who avail small loans are not less creditworthy.

Additionally, these fintech NBFCs no longer have only ‘urban youth’ as their primary audience — 70% of disbursals are outside tier-1, with 78% of customers being millennials (between 25-45 years of age).

The shift is set to accelerate as reflected by online trends which show that searches outside cities are growing 2.5 times faster as compared to cities.

Searches for loans grew the most in tier-3 cities at 47%, followed by tier-2 (32%) and tier-4 (28%). Indian credit industry stood at $613 billion (Rs 44 lakh crore), which reflects an 18% compounded annual growth rate (CAGR) since 2017. While home loans at $290 billion (Rs 21 lakh crore) form the largest chunk, loan against property and business loans are growing the fastest.

Who is the new borrower?

In 2020, 49 per cent of first-time borrowers were less than 30 years old and 71 per cent were based in non-metro locations, while 24 per cent were women, according to a joint report by Transunion CIBIL and Google titled “Credit Distributed”.

Further, these profiles vary when analyzed at credit product level based on credit appetite, credit experience, credit discipline, and channel of consumption, and have made segmentation increasingly nuanced and complex.

Overall, growth in searches for car loans between the two halves of 2020 grew the fastest at 55 per cent with home loans following with 22 per cent growth.

Loyalty factor pays for fintech NBFCs

Small loan borrowers demonstrate higher loyalty with 42X growth in repeat customer base amongst lenders in CY 2020 versus CY 2017. Moreover, this growth is as high as 64X for digital-first lenders i.e FinTech NBFCs indicating higher stickiness driven by convenience, over the same time period.

Ticket sizes on loan products like personal loans, auto loans and consumer durable loans are geo-agnostic.

In line with the geographical expansion of new digital users in tier 2/3/4 locations and rural India, and a preference for the mother tongue, local language searches for credit showed an exponential increase. Searches in local languages and for translations of terms such as ‘Credit’, ‘Term loan’, and ‘Moratorium‘ have also witnessed an uptick.

Customers rate trust in the brand higher than other traditional parameters like low interest rates, which came second, before recommendations, disbursal time, and online process, all considered to drive value perception with customers.

Sixty-four per cent of credit buyers say that brand is a major factor in choosing their loan provider. Considerable time and effort goes into choosing the lender brand with 76 per cent of borrowers taking a minimum of two weeks between exploration and finally choosing the lender.

Almost a third (32 per cent) of borrowers consider over five providers before proceeding to apply.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Auto-debit EMI failures set to rise in May as Covid hits incomes, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


The financial distress due to the Covid pandemic is leading to borrowers defaulting on monthly retail payments.

The rise in cheque bounce cases, which was first reported by HDFC Bank during its fourth-quarter results, is now seen at other payment avenues.

More borrowers missed equated monthly instalments (EMIs) in April, according to the data from the National Payments Corp. of India (NPCI).

In April, about 34.1% of auto-debit transactions on the National Automated Clearing House (NACH) failed, mainly due to insufficient funds.

The percentage of failure was 32.8% in March, when the second wave of Covid hit.

While in the value terms, 27.9% of transactions were unsuccessful in April against 27.5% in the previous month, the rise in the number of failures has alarmed experts, who see more drop in retail payments this month due to the spread of lockdowns to many other states.

This data is only for inter-bank mandates, which means a transaction between a bank and a non-bank lender.

HDFC Bank

HDFC Bank, the top private sector bank in India, first saw a spurt in cheque bounce cases in April, coinciding with the second lethal Covid wave in the country.

Check bounce rates for HDFC Bank were improving up to March 2021. However, bounce rates increased in April, returning to January 2021 levels. Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh, Punjab, and Telangana were seeing higher check bounce rates.

With the resurgence of Covid cases, the bank continues to make additional contingent provisions to further strengthen the balance sheet. Although, overall asset quality remains stable, with total restructuring at 0.6% of loans and net NPA at 0.4%.

Moratorium demand rises

While the RBI has announced loan recast measures, demand is rising for loan moratorium due to renewed financial stress.

Transporters’ apex body AIMTC has requested the government for a blanket loan moratorium for the sector till August 31, 2021, in the prevailing scenario to help in maintaining business continuity.

In a statement, the All India Motor Transport Congress (AIMTC) pointed out that around 70 per cent of the country is under lockdown and more than 85 per cent of the transporters are small operators having one to five vehicles (both cargo and passenger segment).

“We have requested the government for blanket loan moratorium in the prevailing scenario to help in maintaining business continuity and tackling stressed sectors like the transport sector and help in the survival of crores of these hapless Indian citizens associated with the road transport sector,” it said.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Kotak Mahindra Bank customers can pay overdue EMI through payment app

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Kotak Mahindra Bank customers can now pay a missed EMI or an overdue loan instalment using any payment app such as Google Pay, PhonePe, Paytm.

“Kotak Loans is now live on the Bharat Bill Payment System (BBPS) platform and customers have to simply choose ‘Kotak Mahindra Bank Loan’ as the biller name on the payment app of their choice,” the private sector lender said in a statement on Saturday, adding that details of any EMIs that are past the due date will be displayed and the payment will reflect in the customer’s loan account on a real-time basis.

“This repayment facility is available on all KMBL terms loans such as Personal Loan, Home Loan, Consumer Durable Loan, Business Loan, Gold Loan, Loan against Property as well as Commercial Vehicle Loan, Tractor Finance Loan, Construction Equipment Loan,” it further said.

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

ICICI Bank launches instant EMI facility on internet banking, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Private lender, ICICI Bank has launched an instant EMI facility on its internet banking platform. called ‘EMI @ Internet Banking’, the facility aims to offer increased affordability to millions of pre-approved customers, as it enables them to convert their high-value transactions up to Rs. 5 lakh into easy monthly instalments.

It also brings in enhanced customer experience as customers get the benefit of EMIs instantly and in a fully digital manner.

ICICI Bank is the first in the industry to introduce instant EMI facility on its internet banking platform. The Bank has tied up with BillDesk and Razorpay, leading online payment gateway companies to offer this facility.

Presently, the ‘EMI @ Internet Banking’ has been enabled for over 1000 merchants in categories like online shopping portals, insurance, travel, education- school fees and electronic chains.

The Bank endeavours to partner with more payment gateway companies, merchants and add categories under this facility in the near future.

Sudipta Roy, Head- Unsecured Assets, ICICI Bank said, “We have observed that many of our customers undertake high-value transactions for payments of insurance premiums, school fees, purchasing electronics, or paying for vacations through the Bank’s internet banking platform. Our latest offering of ‘EMI @ Internet Banking’ brings in enhanced affordability for customers by providing them with flexibility of EMIs for high value transactions.”

He added, “It also offers immense convenience to the customers as the entire experience is completely digital and instant. We believe this facility will empower millions of our pre-approved customers to purchase or shop for their needs in a completely contactless, instant, digital and secure manner.”

Ajay Kaushal, Co-founder and Director BillDesk said, “This will help ICICI Bank customers easily finance their online purchases using convenient monthly instalment payments across merchants supported by BillDesk.”

Khilan Haria, Head- Payments Product, Razorpay said, “This EMI on internet banking feature will be a major value-add to our partner businesses by providing them with higher conversion rates and benefit end-consumers by now making large payments easier and affordable.”



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

1 2 3