Capri Global Capital Q2 standalone net dips 21% to ₹41 crore

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Capri Global Capital Ltd (CGCL) reported a 21 per cent year-on-year (yoy) drop in second quarter standalone net profit at ₹41 crore against ₹52 crore in the year ago period as growth in total expenses outstripped growth in total income.

While total income was up 16 per cent yoy at ₹171 crore (₹147 crore in the year ago quarter), total expenses rose 48 per cent yoy at ₹114 crore (₹77 crore).

The non-banking finance company’s loan portfolio (standalone) increased 21 per cent to ₹3,797 crore and investment portfolio was up 33 per cent to ₹553 crore.

During the reporting quarter, the company implemented resolution plans in the case of 571 accounts aggregating ₹180 crore under the RBI’s August 6, 2020, circular on “Resolution Framework for Covid-19-related Stress”.

CGCL’s consolidated net profit ( including results of Capri Global Housing Finance and Capri Global Resource) declined 14 per cent to ₹52.5 crore (₹61 crore).

Disbursals (consolidated: MSME, construction finance and housing finance) jumped over three times to ₹585 crore during the quarter against ₹190 crore in the year ago quarter.

Assets under management (consolidated) was up 27 per cent at ₹5,271 crore (₹4,147 crore).

Also read: Capri Global launches ‘Prime’ affordable housing loans

Net interest margin (NIM) declined to 9.6 per cent from 10.6 per cent in the year ago quarter. However, NIM in the reporting quarter was up vis-a-vis preceding quarter’s 9.3 per cent.

Gross stage 3 (credit impaired) assets rose to 3.26 per cent of gross advances against 2.18 per cent in the year ago quarter. However, the proportion of such assets in the reporting quarter was down vis-a-vis preceding quarter’s 3.45 per cent.

Net stage 3 assets rose to 0.61 per cent of net advances against 0.12 per cent in the year ago quarter. However, the proportion of such assets in the reporting quarter was down vis-a-vis preceding quarter’s 0.81 per cent.

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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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India banning Bitcoin would be a terrible idea

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If India proceeds with a rumoured ban on cryptocurrency, it wouldn’t be the country’s first attempt to impose currency controls. This time, however, a ban is even less likely to succeed — and the consequences for India’s economy could be more dire. The country shouldn’t make the same mistake twice.

In the 1970s and 80s, at the height of what was known as the Licence Raj, Indians could only hold foreign currency for a specific purpose and with a permit from the central bank. If a businessman bought foreign exchange to spend over two days in Paris and one in Frankfurt, and instead spent two days in Germany, the Reserve Bank of India would demand to know why he’d deviated from the currency permit. Violators were routinely threatened with fines and jail time of up to seven years.

India to propose cryptocurrency ban: senior official

Imports required additional permits. Infosys Ltd founder Narayana Murthy recalls spending about $25,000 (including bribes) to make 50 trips to Delhi over three years, just to get permission to import a $150,000-computer. Plus, since any foreign exchange that the company earned notionally belonged to the government, the RBI would release only half of Infosys’s earnings for the firm to spend on business expenses abroad.

Naturally a black market, with all its unsavoury elements, emerged for foreign currency. The government doubled down, subjecting those dealing in illicit foreign exchange to preventative detention, usually reserved for terrorists. Businessmen selling Nike shoes and Sony stereos were arrested as smugglers.

The system impoverished Indians and made it impossible for Indian firms to compete globally. There’s a reason the country’s world-class IT sector took off only after a balance of payments crisis forced India to open up its economy in 1991.

Indian millennials drawn to Bitcoin’s charms

Negative factors

While details of the possible crypto ban remain unclear, a draft Bill from 2019 bears eerie resemblance to the 1970s controls. It would criminalise the possession, mining, trading or transferring of cryptocurrency assets. Offenders could face up to ten years in jail as well as fines.

Such a blanket prohibition would be foolish on multiple levels. For one thing, enforcing the law would be even more difficult than under the Licence Raj. Raids once aimed at seizing dollars and gold bars would face the challenge of locating a password or seed phrase holding millions in Bitcoin. Nor can the government seize or even access the network of computers scattered across the world mining cryptocurrency and maintaining blockchain ledgers.

To enforce a ban, authorities would have to develop an intrusive surveillance system that could track all digital and internet activity in the country. Thankfully, India does not have the state capacity to pull that off. More likely, its efforts will only drive the cryptocurrency market underground.

That would almost certainly give rise — again — to an ever-evolving set of arbitrary rules imposed by the central bank and tax department, optimised mostly to extort bribes. Young coders and start-up founders would face harsh and arbitrary raids. Unlike the “smugglers” of the 1970s, some of India’s most elite and entrepreneurial workers are engaged in these new financial technologies; persecution could spur a brain drain.

Tax evasion won’t be addressed

Ordinary Indians would be deprived of the very real benefits of cryptocurrency. The ban would prevent Indians from capitalising on crypto-asset appreciation, which blockchain evangelist Balaji Srinivasan has called a “trillion-dollar mistake.” India receives the highest inflow of global remittances and using blockchain networks could save Indians billions in transfer fees. Meanwhile, elite Indians with options will flee the country, taking their wealth and innovations with them.

And none of this will address the government’s real fear: tax evasion. Granted, unlike gold bars and dollars under the mattress, cryptocurrency is hard if not impossible to track. Some users will no doubt exploit that fact to hide earnings from the tax authorities.

But, just like its disastrous predecessor — the government’s snap decision in 2016 to render 86 per cent of India’s currency notes invalid overnight — banning cryptocurrency to fight “black money” would be like setting fire to the forest in order to smoke out a few sheep. A far better solution would be to streamline India’s complex tax code, broaden the tax base and make enforcement less arbitrary, thus encouraging more Indians to pay what they owe.

Long-term solution

The government’s second worry is preventing capital flight and volatility during economic crises. Cryptocurrency would allow Indians to bypass the current restrictions on capital account convertibility and invest abroad more easily. But again, protecting Indians from global volatility by banning cryptocurrency would be like making roads safer by eliminating cars. The real long-term solution is for the government to gradually reduce controls over capital mobility and make India a more desirable investment destination.

Instead of criminalising digital currencies, the government should take a hard look at India’s restrictions on financial transactions and bring them in line with the changing world. Liberalisation in 1991 made India a world leader in IT. Opening up even further could place Indians where they belong — at the frontier of fintech innovation, not under suspicion.

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