As loan growth slows, other income comes to banks’ rescue, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Other income has come to the rescue for banks even as they grapple with weak loan growth, in the first quarter of the fiscal year, bank results show.

All banks have seen a year on year growth in other income led by fees and recovery in large written off accounts like the defunct Kingfisher Airlines as a result of which the contribution of other income to total income has increased.

The trend is the same for both large and small banks. For example, State Bank of India (SBI) reported a 24% rise other income to Rs 11,803 crore led by a 21% rise in fees and a Rs 1,692 crore recovery from the written off Kingfisher Airlines’ account which has increased the proportion of other income to 15% of total income from 11% last year.

The story is similar in the large private sector bank’s as well which traditional have a larger proportion of fee income. HDFC Bank‘s other income grew 54% led by fees and commission and income from foreign exchange and derivative transactions, increasing the share of other income to total revenues to 17% from 12% a year earlier. HDFC’s peer ICICI Bank also reported a 53% rise in other income led by fees despite a fall in treasury income.

Analysts say higher proportion of other income though legitimate is driven mostly by lumpy income streams which are not sustainable. However, they expect banking core incomes to rise as loan growth picks up later this year.

“Other income has increased through two main heads namely income from treasury and income from written off accounts. Both of these are very volatile and depend on market conditions and can be called one offs. Banks are sitting on excess SLR and have booked profits this quarter which is reflected in treasury gains. Having said that they are both legitimate income streams and there need not be a concern though for the quality of earnings to be sustainable revival of credit growth is important,” said Asutosh Mishra, head of research at Ashika Stock Broking.

Other income has risen for even smaller lenders as banks dug deep for new income streams faced with twin challenges of depressed loans demand and slow recovery of loans in light of the second wave of the pandemic.

RBL Bank’s other income doubled to Rs 695 crore led by a 137% growth in retail fee income even as total advances fell marginally to Rs 56,527 crore from Rs 56,683 crore a year earlier. Even public sector Bank of India reported a 39% rise in other income due to recovery from a written off aviation account and foreign exchange income even as loan book fell 0.18%.

“This quarter there also has been a increase in forex trading income as forward premiums came down during the quarter, allowing banks to book profits.
Along with the repricing the bond investments this has helped other income,” said Anil Gupta, vice president financial ratings at ICRA.

Gupta expects credit growth to revive later this fiscal as corporate working capital requirements will increase due to higher commodity prices. “We expect credit growth of 8% next fiscal which will bring higher core income and also fees so there is no reason to worry on the outlook,” he said.



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Rupee gains 14 paise to 74.44 against US dollar in early trade

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The Indian rupee strengthened by 14 paise to 74.44 against the US dollar in early trade on Tuesday, tracking a firm trend in the domestic equity market.

At the interbank foreign exchange, the domestic unit opened at 74.49 against the dollar, then inched higher to 74.44, registering a gain of 14 paise over its previous close.

On Monday, the rupee had settled at 74.58 against the US dollar.

Pressure on risk currencies subside, US inflation in focus

Meanwhile, the dollar index, which gauges the greenback’s strength against a basket of six currencies, was trading 0.08 per cent down at 92.18 ahead of key CPI data tonight.

On the domestic equity market front, BSE Sensex was trading 240.87 points or 0.46 per cent higher at 52,613.56, while the broader NSE Nifty advanced 70.30 points or 0.45 per cent to 15,762.90.

Forex traders said foreign fund outflows and firm crude oil prices could weigh on investor sentiment and cap the appreciation of the local unit.

Foreign institutional investors were net sellers in the capital market on Monday as they offloaded shares worth ₹745.97 crore, as per exchange data.

Rupee slides toward year’s low as India’s trade deficit widens

Global oil benchmark Brent crude futures advanced 0.25 per cent to $75.35 per barrel.

On the domestic macro-economic front, retail inflation remained above the RBI’s comfort level for the second consecutive month despite slipping slightly to 6.26 per cent in June, while the factory output recorded a growth of 29.3 per cent in May, mainly on account of the base effect.

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Pressure on risk currencies subside, US inflation in focus

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Risk currencies hovered above their recent lows against the dollar and the yen on Monday, as fears about slowdown in the global economic recovery appeared to have subsided for now.

The outlook for US inflation and the speed of the Federal Reserve‘s future policy tightening are back in focus ahead of Tuesday’s consumer price data and Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s testimony from Wednesday.

“If we see strong data, the Fed could bring forward their projection for their first rate hike further from their current forecast of 2023. That would also mean they have to finish tapering earlier,” said Shinichiro Kadota, senior FX strategist at Barclays.

The euro traded at $1.1873, edging back from its three-month low of $1.17815 set on Wednesday while against the yen the common currency stood at ¥130.87, off Thursday’s 2-1/2-month low of ¥129.63.

Sterling also ticked up to $1.3900, while the Australian dollar bounced back to $0.7487 from Friday’s seven-month low of $0.7410.

ALSO READ Rupee slides toward year’s low as India’s trade deficit widens

Risk currencies slipped earlier last week as investors curtailed their bets on them, in part as economic data from many countries fell short of the market’s expectations.

Concerns about the Delta variant of the novel coronavirus also added to the cautious mood although few investors thought the economic recovery would be derailed.

Chinese eonomy

Selling in risk currencies subsided by Friday, however, and sentiment was bolstered further after China cut banks’ reserve requirement ratio across the board, to underpin its economic recovery that is starting to lose momentum.

On Monday, the Chinese yuan was flat at 6.4785 per dollar, off Friday’s 2-1/2-month low of 6.5005.

A recovery in risk sentiment hampered the safe-haven yen on Monday. The Japanese currency stood at 110.17 yen per dollar, off Thursday’s one-month high of 109.535.

With the data calendar on Monday relatively bare, many investors are looking to Tuesday’s US consumer price data for June.

Economists polled by Reuters expect core CPI to have risen 0.4 per cent from May and 4 per cent from a year earlier after two straight months of sharp gains in prices.

Any signs that inflation could be more persistent than previously thought could fan expectations the Fed may exit from current stimulus earlier, supporting the dollar against other major currencies.

Conversely, more benign data could lead investors to think the US central bank can afford to maintain an easy policy framework for longer, encouraging more bets on risk assets,including risk-sensitive currencies.

Cryptocurrencies were little moved, with bitcoin at $34,267and ether at $2,137.

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SBI YONO crossed 70.5 million downloads and a registered user base of 37.09 million, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Country’s largest lender, State Bank of India‘s flagship digital offering YONO (You Only Need One) has crossed 70.5 million downloads, with a registered user base of 37.09 million and averages daily logins of around 10 million.

The bank laid out the details in its annual report and said it has been operating its analytical potential through AI/ML to increment efficiency, procuring new business and for risk management.
Post retail it added the service for its corporate customers too with five applications viz Corporate Internet Banking, Cash Management Product, Supply Chain Financing Unit, e-Trade and e-Forex. Currently, SBI is functioning to avail an entire digital trade finance solution to business clients on YONO platform.

The bank said, a digital journey has also been initiated for Forex rate booking and document upload facility to enhance customer convenience, which will help the bank increase income from Forex business.

The bank had also launched YONO offering in the UK, Mauritius, Maldives, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and Canada. As of March 31, 2021, over 40,000 overseas customers have been onboarded on the YONO platform. SBI anticipation to inaugurate YONO in the countries such as Singapore, Bahrain, South Africa, and the USA by the end of FY2022.

The bank said it will continue accelerate its digital agenda as the scope and reach of YONO will be expanded further.



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Rupee slips by 2 paise to close at 74.20 against US dollar, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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MUMBAI: The rupee weakened by 2 paise to end at 74.20 (provisional) against the US dollar on Friday as higher crude oil prices weighed on forex market sentiment.

At the interbank foreign exchange market, the rupee opened at 74.15 per dollar as against its previous close of 74.18.

It hovered in the range of 74.14 to 74.25 during the day before ending at 74.20 against the greenback.

“The Indian rupee remained under pressure on Friday on firm crude oil prices and as market participants remained vigilant ahead of US Core PCE Price Index data,” Saif Mukadam, Research Analyst, Sharekhan by BNP Paribas.

Meanwhile, the dollar index, which gauges the greenback’s strength against a basket of six currencies, fell 0.08 per cent to 91.74.

“Dollar is showing weakness amid Fed officials differing view on how long inflation is likely to stay high and when to tighten monetary policy. Market Sentiments improved on news that US President Joe Biden and a group of senators agreed on roughly USD 1 trillion infrastructure plan securing bipartisan deal,” he noted

The rupee may gain as number of COVID-19 cases in India continued to decline. Rupee may trade in the range of 73.55 to 74.50 in next couple of sessions, he added.

On the domestic equity market front, the BSE Sensex ended 226.04 points or 0.43 per cent higher at 52,925.04, while the broader NSE Nifty rose 72.55 points or 0.46 per cent to 15,863.00.

Brent crude futures, the global oil benchmark, declined 0.34 per cent to USD 75.30 per barrel.

Foreign institutional investors were net sellers in the capital market on Thursday as they offloaded shares worth Rs 2,890.94 crore, as per exchange data.



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Subbarao, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The central bank can directly print money and finance the government, but it should avoid doing so unless there is absolutely no alternative, former RBI governor D Subbarao on Wednesday said while pointing out that India is ‘nowhere’ near such a scenario.

In an interview with PTI, Subbarao suggested that to deal with the second wave of COVID-19 induced slowdown in the economy, the government can consider Covid bonds as an option to raise borrowing, not in addition to budgeted borrowing, but as a part of that.

“It (RBI) can (print money) but, it should avoid doing so unless there is absolutely no alternative. For sure, there are times when monetisation – despite its costs – becomes inevitable such as when the government cannot finance its deficit at reasonable rates.

“We are nowhere near such a scenario,” he said.

India’s economy contracted by less-than-expected 7.3 per cent in the fiscal ended March 2021. For 2021-22, the deficit has been put at 6.8 per cent of the GDP, which will be further lowered to 4.5 per cent by 2025-26.

The Reserve Bank has lowered the country’s growth projection for the current financial year to 9.5 per cent from 10.5 per cent estimated earlier, amid the uncertainties created by the second wave of the coronavirus pandemic, while the World Bank on Tuesday projected India’s economy to grow at 8.3 per cent in 2021.

According to Subbarao, when people say the RBI should print money to finance the government’s deficit, they don’t realise that the central bank is printing money even now to finance the deficit, but it is doing so indirectly.

For example, he said, when the Reserve Bank of India buys bonds under its open market operations (OMOs) or buys dollars under its forex operations, it is printing money to pay for those purchases, and that money indirectly goes to finance the government’s borrowing.

“The important difference though is this when RBI is printing money as part of its liquidity operations, it is in the driver’s seat, deciding how much money to print and how to channel it into the system,” the former governor noted.

In contrast, Subbarao said, monetisation is seen as a way of financing the government’s fiscal deficit, with the quantum and timing of money to be printed being decided by the government’s borrowing requirement rather than the RBI’s monetary policy.

“That will be seen as RBI losing control over the money supply, which will erode the credibility of both the RBI and the government with costly macroeconomic implications,” he observed.

The RBI’s monetisation of fiscal deficit means the central bank printing currency for the government to take care of any emergency spending to bridge its fiscal deficit.

Asked whether a Covid bond is an option that the government can consider to raise some borrowing, the former RBI governor said, “It is something worth considering, not in addition to budgeted borrowing, but as a part of that”.

In other words, Subbarao said instead of borrowing in the market, the government could raise a part of its borrowing requirements by issuing Covid bonds to the public.

“Appropriately priced and structured, they can provide relief to savers who are short-changed by the low-interest rates on bank fixed deposits.

“Moreover, such Covid bonds will not add to the money supply and will not, therefore, interfere with RBI’s liquidity management,” he pointed out.

To a question on whether the RBI can generate more profits to help relieve the government’s fiscal stress, Subbarao said the central bank is not a commercial institution and profit-making is not one of its objectives.

According to Subbarao, in the course of its business, the RBI makes some profit and withholds a part of that to meet its expenditure and to build its reserves, and transfers the ‘surplus profit’ to the government.

“How much it can hold back for buffering its reserves is now prescribed by the Bimal Jalan Committee.

“The RBI should not do anything with the express intent of making profits,” he emphasised.

The RBI has transferred Rs 99,122 crore to the government as its surplus profit, nearly twice the budgeted amount.

Asked what else can the RBI do to help the economic recovery, Subbarao said since the pandemic hit us over a year ago, the RBI has acted briskly and innovatively.

“What the RBI can do going forward is what the Governor said in his recent policy statement which is to see that there is an ‘equitable distribution of liquidity, which is to say that the credit support must go to the most distressed sectors,” he noted.

To a question – can the RBI embrace even more unconventional policies, Subbarao said there are limits to what an emerging economy central bank like the RBI can do as compared to rich-country central banks like the Fed or the ECB.

“Developed economies have the policy room and the firepower to throw the kitchen sink at the problem. They borrow in hard currencies, which everyone craves.

“We do not enjoy those comforts. Moreover, markets are less forgiving of excesses by emerging market central banks,” he observed.



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Forex gains help RBI to give record Rs 99,122 crore dividend to govt, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) is paying a dividend of Rs 99,122 crore to the government, double than the Budgetary Estimates, which will help the government tide over the revenue losses from lockdowns and extend more support to the pandemic hit industries and the poor people.

Analysts had factored in a dividend of Rs 65,000 crore from the RBI, while the government’s budget estimates included Rs 45,000 crore surplus transfer by the central bank. In fiscal 2020, the RBI had paid only Rs 57,128 crore in dividend.

How the funds came

The higher payout followed the Bimal Jalan panel report that had set a new economic framework capital buffer for the central bank along with the contingency risk buffer at 5.5 per cent.

“In our view, the upside surprise could have been driven by increased returns from domestic assets and changes in accounting practices by the central bank — the RBI recently allowed itself to book profits on its FX transactions from a weighted average cost perspective,” Barclays India said in a report.

This move could have helped the central bank boost yields on its foreign asset holdings. Further, increased holdings of domestic government securities likely further amplified the central bank’s income for the year, the report authored by Barclays India chief economist Rahul Bajoria said.

The dividend announcement will relieve some of the fiscal pressure on the government, providing it with more room to spend in the current fiscal year. This could be particularly helpful in alleviating the impact of the second Covid wave, it said.

Fight against Covid

The record dividend payout will relieve some of the fiscal pressure on the government, providing it with more room to spend in the current fiscal. This could be particularly helpful in alleviating the impact of the second wave, Bajoria added.

Aditi Nayar, the chief economist at Icra Ratings, said this considerably higher surplus transfer will offer the government a buffer to absorb the losses in indirect tax revenue that are anticipated in May-June due to the impact of the lockdowns on the level of consumption on discretionary items and contact-intensive services.

“Moreover, high commodity prices at a time when demand and pricing power are subdued will dent the margins of corporates in many sectors, compressing the growth in direct tax collections,” Nayar warned and said this higher dividend will help cushion some of this revenue shock.

After this dividend payout for the accounting period of nine months ending March 2021 (July 2020-March 2021), the RBI is left with a contingency risk buffer at 5.50 per cent of its capital.

Increased spending

Barclays said the government has flexibility now to increase support to the economy while maintaining its fiscal deficit estimate at 6.8% for FY21-22,

“So far, in response to the second Covid wave, the government has reinstated the free food distribution scheme, which should assist 80 crore people, and set aside a budgetary allocation of Rs 26,000 crore for incremental spending. Further, given the rising demand for the government’s rural job scheme, we see some likelihood that spending on the job guarantee scheme could increase further this year. Recent media reports also indicate that the finance ministry is likely working on further relief measures to support the economy,” it said.



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RBI, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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MUMBAI: The country’s foreign exchange reserves surged to $576.98 billion as on March 31, 2021 from $544.69 billion at September-end last year, an RBI report said.

Foreign currency assets (FCA), a major component of the overall reserves, increased to $536.693 billion as at March-end 2021 from $502.162 billion, the report noted.

On balance of payments basis (excluding valuation changes), foreign exchange reserves increased by $83.9 billion during April-December 2020 as compared with $40.7 billion in the year-ago period, it said.

Foreign exchange reserves in nominal terms (including valuation changes) increased by $108 billion during April-December 2020 as against $47 billion in the corresponding period of 2019-20.

At the end of December 2020, the foreign exchange reserves cover of imports increased to 18.6 months from 17.1 months at September-end 2020, RBI said in its report on management of foreign exchange reserves — October 2020-March 2021, released on Wednesday.

The net forward asset (receivable) of the Reserve Bank in the domestic foreign exchange market stood at $68.2 billion as at March-end 2021.

As on March 31, 2021, the Reserve Bank held 695.31 metric tonnes of gold.

“While 403.01 metric tonnes of gold is held overseas in safe custody with the Bank of England and the Bank of International Settlements (BIS), 292.30 tonnes of gold is held domestically,” the report said.

In value terms (USD), the share of gold in the total foreign exchange reserves decreased from about 6.69 per cent as at September-end 2020 to about 5.87 per cent as on March 31, 2021. Gold reserves stood at $33.88 billion at end-March 2021 as against $36.429 billion by September 2020, the report said.



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High forex reserves, liquidity steps may hit RBI’s surplus transfer to govt, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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At a time when public sector companies are giving huge dividends to the government, the Reserve bank of India may transfer a lower surplus to the government.

The Reserve Bank earned less on the record reserve pile up and also stares at lower interest income as banks parked surplus liquidity with it.

A nearly 25 percent jump in forex reserves has led to a fall in returns by nearly a fifth. Returns on reserves deployment were lower at $4.3 billion during April-December’20 compared with $5.2 billion in the same period a year ago, according to the latest data from the RBI.

Interest hit

The amount of interest it paid to keep the system in surplus liquidity could also hurt its returns as it paid interest for keeping funds with it.

Banks are estimated to have parked over Rs 5 lakh crore on an average during FY’21 on which the central bank has to pay them 3.35 per cent interest.

While RBI’s balance sheet has expanded since June 2020, yields on foreign currency investments have indeed reduced over the past year.

For the Accounting Year 2019-20 (July-June).the RBI transferred only 44 per cent of its surplus at Rs 57,128 crore to the government, which is the lowest in percentage terms in the last seven years.

How does RBI earn?

The RBI is a “full service” central bank, which is not only is it mandated to keep inflation or prices in check, but also has to manage the borrowings of the central and state governments supervise or regulate banks and non-banking finance companies and manage the currency and payment systems.

It makes profits while carrying out these operations. The central bank’s income comes from the returns it earns on its foreign currency assets, which could be in the form of bonds and treasury bills of other central banks or top-rated securities, and deposits with other central banks.

RBI also earns interest on its holdings of local rupee-denominated government bonds or securities, and on lending to banks for very short tenures, such as overnight. It makes a management commission on handling the government borrowings.

ts expenditure is mainly on the printing of currency notes and on staff, besides the commission it gives to banks for undertaking transactions on behalf of the government across the country, underwriting government borrowings.

Surplus transfer

The RBI isn’t a commercial organisation like the banks or other companies that are owned or controlled by the government and it does not, as such, pay a “dividend” out of the profits it generates.

The central bank transfer the “surplus” – that is, the excess of income over expenditure – to the government, in accordance with Section 47 (Allocation of Surplus Profits) of the Reserve Bank of India Act, 1934.

Excessive transfer

In August 2019, RBI’s central board gave its nod for transferring to the government a sum of Rs 1,76,051 crore comprising Rs 1,23,414 crore of surplus for 2018-19 and Rs 52,637 crore of excess provisions identified as per the revised Economic Capital Framework (ECF).

The excess reserve transfer was in line with the recommendation of former RBI governor Bimal Jalan-led panel constituted to decide the size of capital reserves that the central bank should hold. The government was represented by the then Finance Secretary Rajiv Kumar in the panel which finalised its report on August 14, 2019 by consensus.

Since 2013-14, the RBI has been paying 99 per cent of its disposable income to the government, which is battling to rein in deficits.

The size of the Reserve Bank’s balance sheet, which is reflective of activities carried out by it in pursuance of currency issue function as well as monetary policy and reserve management objectives, has increased by 30.02 per cent in the year ended June 30, 2020,



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