Equitas Small Finance Bank ties up with HDFC Bank to offer co-branded credit cards, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Equitas Small Finance Bank on Tuesday announced its partnership with HDFC Bank, for a co-branded credit card. Equitas said that the partnership will draw on HDFC Bank’s strengths in the credit card market and its substantial reach.

“As India’s largest card issuing and acquiring bank we are committed to accelerating the adoption of digitization in the country by engaging with all players in the banking and payments ecosystem,” said Parag Rao, Group Head – Payments, Consumer Finance, Digital Banking & IT, HDFC Bank said. “This first-of-its-kind partnership for HDFC Bank will enable us to extend our best-in-class offerings in the cards segment to Equitas Small Finance Bank’s customers and provide them with a highly rewarding credit card experience.”

HDFC Bank has a dominant share in both card issuing and acquiring business. With over 5.1 crore credit cards, debit cards and prepaid cards, every third rupee spent on cards in India happens on HDFC Bank cards. HDFC Bank also has over 21 lakh acceptance points, making it among the largest facilitators of cashless payments in the country.

The credit card can be availed in two categories. The first category is the ‘Excite Credit Card’ which offers a credit limit from Rs 25,000 to Rs 2 lakh and the second category is the ‘Elegance Credit Card’ which offers credit of over Rs 2 lakh.

“Over the last five years, we have witnessed a transformation sweeping the industry,” said Murali Vaidyanathan, Senior President and Country Head – Branch Banking – Liabilities, Products & Wealth – Equitas Small Finance Bank Limited. “There have been countless success stories of people borrowing small amounts of money while building financial assets and creating a formal financial footprint.”



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Equitas SFB ties up with HDFC Bank for co-branded credit cards

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Equitas Small Finance Bank had HDFC Bank have partnered for co-branded credit cards.

“The credit cards will be available for Equitas Small Finance Bank’s customers, with an aim to provide them with the facilities of the banking ecosystem,” they said in a statement on Tuesday.

The credit card can be availed in two categories. The first category is the ‘Excite Credit Card’ which offers a credit limit from ₹25,000 to ₹2 lakh and the second category is the ‘Elegance Credit Card’ which offers credit limit of over ₹2 lakh.

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Equitas Small Finance Bank eyes 25% growth in advances this fiscal

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Equitas Small Finance Bank (Equitas SFB) is hopeful of clocking at least 25 per cent growth in its loan book from this fiscal, a top official said.

This is likely to happen provided there is no further disturbance in the coming days such as any third Covid wave, PN Vasudevan, Managing Director & CEO, Equitas SFB, told BusinessLine.

Equitas SFB’s advances growth target of 25 per cent is higher than the 17 per cent clocked during 2020-21, but lower than the pre-pandemic growth level of 35 per cent, he noted.

He highlighted there was no situation of any low-base effect playing out given that the Equitas SFB advances growth was 17 per cent last fiscal.

“I am assuming that if life returns to being reasonably normal, we should clock 25 per cent growth even this fiscal. Going forward we should be able to deliver annual credit growth of 25 per cent on a consistent basis,” Vasudevan said.

In the last five years since its formation, Equitas SFB balance sheet has grown from ₹9,000 crore to ₹25,000 crore. Advances have tripled to ₹18,000 crore from ₹6,000 crore. The number of branches doubled from 400 to about 850. “While the branches have doubled, the volumes have tripled,” Vasudevan said.

Equitas SFB, which has completed five years of existence, expects its non-performing assets to come down from 4.5 per cent last year (pandemic times) to normal level of 2.5-2.7 per cent over next 2-3 quarters. “We have never had an issue on the asset quality front in 14 years ( five years as a bank and about nine years as NBFC). We expect our NPA level to come back to absolutely normal level in next 2-3 quarters,” he said.

On capital raising to support growth, Vasudevan said that Equitas SFB is not projecting any capital requirement for next 2-3 years and is quite comfortable on this front.

On the proposed merger of its parent Equitas Holding with Equitas SFB, Vasudevan said that an application has been made to the RBI for the merger. “This proper merger of the holding company with SFB won’t have any impact on the operations of the bank as the holding company is a non-operating company,” he added.

Digital banking

Going forward, Equitas SFB intends to leverage digital to expand the customer base and would not go in for any large scale physical branch expansion. “This does not mean we will not set up new physical branches in the next few years. It will be a modest increase,” he noted.

He highlighted that the bank had opened 5.5 lakh new savings accounts in the first quarter this fiscal as against 4.8 lakh in the entire previous fiscal and this has been largely aided by the digital channel of the bank. In 2019-20, Equitas SFB had opened 1.6 lakh new savings bank accounts.

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Google’s push into Indian retail banking is a threat to traditional lenders, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Will banking meet the sorry fate of newspapers? With the tech industry creeping up on licensed deposit-taking institutions in India, it’s time to take the question seriously.

Alphabet Inc.’s Google already provides one of the two most popular payment wallets in the country. But now Google Pay wants to push time-deposit products of small Indian banks that don’t have much of a retail liability franchise of their own. According to a press release, Equitas Small Finance Bank will offer Google Pay customers up to 6.85% interest on one-year funds as part of a “branded commercial experience” on the platform. The Mint newspaper, which has reviewed the application interface built by Setu, a Bangalore-based fintech, says other lenders may also sign up.

The move has global significance. It shows the tenuous nature of the hold financial institutions have on a core operation like deposit-taking, and their vulnerability to an assault from online search, social media and e-commerce behemoths. Alphabet, Facebook Inc. and Amazon.com Inc. may pose a far bigger challenge to brick-and-mortar lenders than fintech startups that don’t have the scale of platform businesses. Just like in India, deposit-strapped challenger banks might throw the keys to tech intermediaries with hundreds of millions of active users. When the giants storm the fortress, even larger banks will lose control of banking.

China’s homegrown tech titans have already shown how easy it is to dislodge traditional lenders from lending. In a growing network of users, real-time nonfinancial data can be a more powerful predictive tool than credit scores relied upon by banks. Adding a layer of financial activity to an online platform brings in yet more information. Before Beijing stepped in to clip its wings, Jack Ma’s Ant Group Co. pursued this advantage to the hilt.

Silicon Valley never had a chance in China. However, it’s in a stronger position in the world’s second-most-populous nation, where everything to do with money is increasingly about plugging into an open network. Banks’ historic moat has been breached by tech innovation.

For instance, the government’s digital identification system for 1.3 billion people has made paper trails and physical presence redundant, and turned the banks’ cumbersome know-your-customer processes (verifying an address or being introduced by another account holder) into a cheap utility with standard protocols. A wallet can establish customer identity as easily as a bank and manage the process of seeking her consent.

Nor do India’s deposit-taking institutions have any special advantage left in moving retail money. Yes, they still hold the accounts for sending or receiving funds. But rather than transacting on their bank apps or cards, customers prefer to use Google Pay or Walmart Inc.’s PhonePe to pay one another and merchants. The two wallets were used to transfer 5 trillion rupees ($70 billion) last month, giving the duo an 85% share of a market that has more than 50 apps, including from banks.

That’s the power of platforms’ data-network-activity, or DNA, loop, as researchers at the Bank for International Settlements describe it. When Facebook’s WhatsApp Pay is fully ready, the half a billion Indian users of the messaging service are bound to give it a leg-up in financial businesses.

The environment is ripe for Silicon Valley to encroach into banking. Equitas doesn’t have a pre-existing relationship with the Google Pay customer to whom it’s marketing fixed-term products. Even after getting the money, the lender might not get to build long-term association with the saver. Once the deposit matures, the money will simply get swept back into whichever bank’s account it came from. Since it won’t even take two minutes for a platform to book deposits from scratch, if another lender offers a better deal, idle funds might go there next. Customer loyalty, which is often just plain inertia, will no longer ensure stickiness. Savers will gain.

If the playbook is successful, the likes of PhonePe and WhatsApp Pay might also want to copy it. For a fee, platforms can easily extend their insights into consumer behavior and payment flows to influence deposit mobilization. The higher the commission, the lower the banks’ profit. India’s state-run lenders, in particular, will need to become more efficient. Or they’ll have to lobby with regulators to rein in the tech giants. Amazon, Google and Facebook were all competing to build a brand-new payment network in India, But the central bank has put the license on hold because of data safety concerns, according to a separate report in Mint last week.

Globally, banks and regulators have been bracing themselves for the challenge from Diem, a Facebook-backed project that promises to replicate major global currencies to broaden financial inclusion. But lenders can be on a slippery slope even without new payment instruments. As Big Tech asserts control over the flow of yield-seeking savings, an imposing high-street presence will no longer serve as a ticket to cheap funding.

Regulated institutions may be left holding a license to take deposits — and a thick rule book accompanying that privilege — but platforms will decide if a bank’s promotional offer is to be displayed prominently or buried in an obscure corner. The same slow, painful decline that gutted the print media after readers and advertisers moved online and publishers lost their sway over them may be waiting in the wings for banking, too.

(Disclaimer: The opinions expressed in this column are that of the writer. The facts and opinions expressed here do not reflect the views of www.economictimes.com.)



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Equitas Small Finance Bank’s Q1 net profit drops 79%

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Equitas Small Finance Bank has reported a 79 per cent drop in net profit to ₹11.93 crore in the first quarter as against a net of ₹57.67 crore for the same quarter last year. The bank said the Profit After Tax was affected due to provisions made on restructured accounts.

The Bank has restructured loans amounting to ₹400.48 crore as of June 30, 2021; ₹496.52 crore in July 2021 and has made a provision of ₹110.51 crore against these restructuring under Resolution Framework 2.0

“The Bank primarily caters to small retailers and transporters engaged in daily use products. During the quarter due to lockdowns and other Covid related restrictions, cash flows of these small retailers had been significantly impacted,” said PN Vasudevan, MD and CEO of Equitas Small Finance Bank.

Net Interest Income for Q1FY22 stood at ₹461 crore (₹404 crore) while net interest margin stood at 7.87 per cent. Total income of the bank grew by 23 per cent to ₹922.59 crore ( ₹750.96 crore).

Total advances as of Q1FY22 stood at ₹17,837 crore, growing at 15 per cent Y-o-Y while deposits (excluding CDs) stood at ₹17,021 crore with a Y-o-Y growth rate of 48 per cent.

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Equitas resumes works on merger of promoter company into small finance bank, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The banking regulator has allowed the bank to put an application toward this end.

RBI vide its communication dated July 09, 2021 has permitted the bank to apply to RBI, seeking approval for scheme of amalgamation,” Equitas said in a regulatory filing.

“We would be initiating steps to finalise the scheme of amalgamation, submit to the boards of the bank and EHL for approval and take further action thereafter in accordance with applicable regulations and guidelines,” the bank said.

The Equitas group since 2018 was looking for the reverse merger of the holding company with the bank but could not take it forward as the sector regulator did not allow it to do so.

Under the licensing agreement, a promoter of a small finance bank can exit or cease to be a promoter after the mandatory initial lock-in period of five years. In case of Equitas, the initial promoter lock-in expires on September 4, 2021.



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RBI’s nod to SFBs and holding companies merger can unlock value for Ujjivan, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Ujjivan Small Finance Bank said it would initiate steps for the amalgamation of the holding company Ujjivan Financial Services Ltd with the bank after RBI’s nod. Samit Ghosh, Founder, Ujjivan Financial Services, helps us understand how it may be good news for shareholders.

Now that, RBI has given nod to SFBs and respective holding companies to apply for a merger, help us understand how really does this help in unlocking share value for you?
This is extremely good news which we were expecting for quite some time and the first in the line of course is Equitas. Equitas and us, we worked earlier on this and we are very glad, it has come through. Basically, there is a holding company structure in which is the Ujjivan Financial Services Ltd. which owns the bank Ujjivan Small Finance Bank and we own 83% of the bank so, what the RBI has committed is that the holding companies can reverse merge into the bank and there will be one entity. Before that, there was the uncertainty of this and consequently, we are the holding company stock– UFSL stock was anywhere between 40% to 50% discount. Now, this discount will gradually narrow, so, there is a tremendous upside on the Ujjivan Financial services stock.The bank stock depends on how the bank actually performs in terms of business, but this is extremely good news for the Ujjivan Financial Services stock- the holding company stock, and that was the original shareholders. We have about 80,000 retail shareholders out of which there are at least 10,000-15,000 employee shareholders, who originally invested in the bank and this is extremely good news for them.

Our fifth year is in February 2022, and we can apply three months before that -for the reverse merger—with the RBI as per its new direction. RBI will evaluate the proposal and see whether we can go ahead, chances are that things are normal, we will be allowed to reverse merge. There is one issue which was there, by the fifth year the shareholding of the holding company was required to come down to 40% but we are quite confident that since RBI is allowing us to totally reverse, much of it- at the end of five years, going to be waved, so we do not think that is an issue at all. It is good news for the holding company shareholders.

When will this merger process be completed?
We will apply late October-early November and then RBI will give us the approval, I think the process cannot start before our fifth anniversary, which is early February 2022 and the whole legal and all that clauses NCLT etc. can take anywhere between eight to 12 months, so, that is the kind of time frame we are looking at.

Post the merger which entity will remain listed?
The bank will remain, the holding company will completely disappear so all the shareholders of the holding company will then become shareholders of the bank.

What has been the impact of the second wave on your business, are you now seeing faster recovery as compared to what we have witnessed last year and in light of that what would be the outlook on your growth disbursements for FY22?
I am not part of the bank, I think this question you should raise with Nitin Chugh, who is the managing director of the bank but what I can tell you overall in the industry-the second wave has receded to a certain extent, things are much better now, but this kind of crisis, which we are facing is an unprecedented crisis. We had faced an earlier crisis, demonetisation, which was like one shock kind of crisis and we overcame, but here, because of the multiple waves of the COVID crisis–it hits our customer and business in waves and the ultimate solution getting the population of India 70% or 80% vaccinated. Unfortunately today, the vaccine availability is still an issue, hopefully, in a couple of months from the production of the vaccine to the scheduling of the production in India, there will be abundant supply. There was a hesitancy even among our customer base before the second wave, but post the second wave that hesitancy has also gone. As as soon as the vaccines are available and we are able to vaccinate all our customer base or the entire population in India, then there is going to be a solution to this problem.

So, the most important thing to do is proactively help our customer base to get vaccinated, meanwhile RBI has given a lot of restructuring, opportunities for good customers and also to provide them additional cash, which is very important because people have either exhausted their savings or their working capital, and not only the restructuring but providing them the extra cash would help them but this has to be carefully done only for our good customers and that process is sort of a lengthy process. So, I think there is time till September, the bank is undertaking that and most micro finance institutions are undertaking that, it has to be done very carefully and I think that will help us to get out of the crisis.



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Equitas seeks to merge holding company with small finance bank

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Both the promoter entity EHL and Equitas Small Finance Bank are listed on the stock exchanges and EHL holds a 81.98 % stake in the bank.

Equitas Small Finance Bank (ESFB) on Saturday said the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has permitted the Chennai-headquartered bank to apply to the banking regulator for approval of its scheme of amalgamation, that will facilitate the merger of the promoter entity Equitas Holdings (EHL) with the bank.

In accordance with the RBI small finance bank licensing guidelines and the RBI clarification issued on January 1, 2015, a promoter of small finance bank can exit or to cease to be a promoter after the mandatory initial lock-in period of five years, depending on the RBI’s regulatory and supervisory comfort and market regulator Sebi regulations in this regard at that time.

In the case of ESFB, the said initial promoter lock-in expires on September 4, 2021, and the bank had requested RBI if a scheme of amalgamation of the promoter and holding company, EHL, with the bank, resulting in exit of the promoter, could be submitted to RBI for approval, prior to the expiry of the said five years.

Both the promoter entity EHL and Equitas Small Finance Bank are listed on the stock exchanges and EHL holds a 81.98 % stake in the bank.

“Accordingly, we would be initiating steps to finalise the scheme of amalgamation, submit to the boards of the bank and EHL for approval and take further action thereafter in accordance with applicable regulations and guidelines,” it said.

ESEB, in a regulatory filing said that RBI in a communication on July 9, 2021, has permitted the bank to apply to RBI, seeking approval for scheme of amalgamation. RBI had also conveyed that any ‘no-objection’, if and when given on the scheme of amalgamation, would be without prejudice to the powers of RBI to initiate action, if any, for violation of any licensing guidelines or any terms and conditions of license, or any other applicable instruction.

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Niyo plans to apply for mutual fund licence; aims to double user base by end of FY22, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Niyo, a neobank, is keen to enter the asset management space and mulling to apply to Sebi for a mutual fund licence, a company official said on Thursday. The Bengaluru-based fintech firm, which started off with prepaid instruments, is targeting to more than double its user base to 5 million by the end of FY22 from the present 2 million on the back of new tie-ups with players in the financial services space.

“We are keen to enter the AMC space and are in the process of exploring the idea of applying for a licence,” its co-founder and Chief Technology Officer Virender Bisht told .

In December, Sebi had allowed fintech firms to apply for MF licences.

Niyo had had last year announced the acquisition of Goalwise, an MF distribution platform. The company already distributes insurance policies, has a presence in wealth management through an acquisition and also offers stock buying.

Niyo on Thursday announced a tie-up with Equitas Small Finance Bank, wherein it will be launching a co-branded digital first savings accounts platform initially aimed at the millennial segment.

Its founder and chief executive Vinay Bagri said the platform has features like an interest rate of over 7 per cent, and explained that savings account and wealth management offerings, when given together, can get stickiness to a relationship and make an account last for over a decade.

Niyo, which already has a presence on the wealth management side through an acquisition and also allows users to trade in equities through it, is targeting to add 1 million users from the partnership with Equitas by the end of 2021.

Equitas’ Chief Digital Officer Vaibhav Joshi said the lender has 8 lakh savings accounts at present and is aiming to more than double the number through the partnership.

Bagri said it is a savings account and wealth management proposition to start with, but eventually Niyo will be looking at offering lending solutions to the same segment as well.

Initially, there is no revenue generation possibility, but eventually once the user starts availing mutual funds or loans, it will help in revenue booking, Bisht added.

Bisht also said Niyo is also looking at a newer funding round later in 2021 to fuel its expansion, but stressed that the saving account opening partnership, its most ambitious business initiate yet, is not capital intensive.

The fintech company will get another 0.5 million users from a blue collar workers-focused offering for which it has tie-ups with other lenders, Bisht said, exuding confidence that the target of 5 million users is achievable.

At present, Niyo is a “growing” company with some of its offerings reporting operating profits, he said.

The biggest hindrance for the company for growing users was the inability to offer interest on deposits and also lack of UPI gateway, which gets sorted with the partnership with Equitas, Bisht said.



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