About Rs 6.19 lakh crore Indian banks’ loans at climate change risks, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The United Nations has flashed the Code Red signal on climate change for humanity with serious warnings for India. The recent floodings and landslides have also underscored the risk of climate change for the Indian industry and that banks that lend to them.

About Rs 6.19 lakh crore of debt at India’s leading financial institutions was at risk from extreme weather events such as droughts, floods and cyclones, according to non-profit CDP that has been lobbying banks to measure and disclose the risk climate change may pose to their portfolio.

The organisation has reached the figure based on information provided by some of the biggest lenders, including the State Bank of India and HDFC Bank.

The reason

Indian banks need to plan for a transition for a cleaner future even though they may be locked into funding coal projects for the near term. That’s because the government is still trying to do coal auctions and the industry is still reliant on coal. A lot of the iron and steel and the heavy industry use coal as a fuel. The encouraging sign is that the government has also initiated a plan for green hydrogen, according to CDP. Banks need to look at these newer technologies, newer methods of fuel substitution. All these things require policy support and public capital.

Bank initiatives

State Bank of India is talking about agriculture and allied agri-activities, HDFC Bank has done a scenario analysis in five states on agriculture, flooding and it’s its portfolio in sectors such as steel, cement, power, oil and gas.

SBI, which is facing concerns from shareholders and investors over its proposal to help fund the controversial Carmichael coal mine in northern Australia, valued its total climate risk at Rs 3.83 lakh crore. The bank said it may “indirectly face reputational risks, should it be involved in lending to environmentally sensitive projects which may have significant public opposition.”

SBI has tied up with the European Investment Bank to jointly pump Euro 100 million in equity financing into Indian small businesses focused on climate change and sustainability.

SBI already invests in a vehicle called Neev Funds for its impact investing objectives, and the two entities have created ”Neev Fund II” for taking ahead this partnership. This is one of the EIB’s first private equity investments in India.

Reserve Bank of India

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has been talking about green finance for many years and has taken various steps towards it. It has pushed, on the lines of corporate social responsibility for private companies, the concept of Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) principles into financing aspects. In April this year, the RBI joined the Network for Greening the Financial System (NGFS) in April 2021. The NGFS, launched in December 2017 at the Paris One Planet Summit, is a group of central banks and supervisors from across the globe to share the best practices and contribute to the development of the environment and climate risk management in the financial sector. It is an institutional yet voluntarily membership, which will also help mobilise mainstream finance to support the transition toward a sustainable economy.

The status

India is the only major economy to not have a net-zero emissions target now, even China has a net-zero target. You need If India wants to be net-zero on emissions by 2050, on a broad calculation, its need to have 50% reduction by 2030, according to CDP. This is the action of the decade on climate change and if the opportunity is missed in this decade, it may be too late, it said, according to an S&P Global report.

UN climate change warning

The Indian Ocean is warming at a higher rate than other oceans, the latest report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change said on Monday, with scientists warning that India will witness increased heatwaves and flooding, which will be the irreversible effects of climate change.

For a country like India, some of the increase in heat waves is masked by aerosol emissions, and reducing that is important for air quality. We will also see an increase in the heatwaves, heavy rainfall events, and the further melting of glaciers, which will impact a country like India, more compound events from sea-level rise, which could mean flooding when tropical cyclones hit. These are some of the impacts which will not go away,” Friederike Otto, one of the authors of the report, said.



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Corporates prepay loans, shrink banks’ loan books, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Corporates that are flush with cash on account of booking bumper profits are looking to deleverage their bank loans and prepaying them.

HDFC Bank has received Rs 30,000 crore in prepayments through the Jue quarter, mainly from companies in the commodities and infrastructure sectors.

For companies that have run loans for more than two years, there is no prepayment penalty for business loans.

In the April-June quarter, AAA or AA-rated companies sought to deleverage as they recorded solid cash balances. Cash flows were robust at commodity companies because of record iron ore or aluminium prices, boosting net profits. Infrastructure companies, too, reported fatter bottom lines due to the government’s extensive highway-building programme.

With demand collapsing during pandemic and uncertainty rising, companies had put a pause on expansion and have focused on becoming debt-free.

PSU loan books shrink

The deleveraging has led to a drop in corporate loan demand for banks, especially PSU ones.

The domestic corporate loans by the State Bank of India fell 2.23 per cent to Rs 7,90,494 crore in the quarter ended June 30, 2021, compared to Rs 8,09,322 crore in the same quarter last year. In the first quarter of FY21, SBI reported 3.41 per cent growth in corporate advances.

Union Bank of India‘s share of industry exposure in domestic advances dropped to 38.12 per cent at Rs 2,40,237 crore from 39.4 per cent at Rs 2,47,986 crore in the same quarter a year ago. Corporate loans dropped 3% at Indian Bank during the last quarter. At PNB, corporate loans fell 0.57 per cent at Rs 3,264,66 crore in June quarter 2021 compared to Rs 3,28,350 crore a year ago.

Up to May, the gross loans to large industries declined by 1.7 per cent year­-on­year, according to RBI data.

However, HDFC Bank expanded its corporate loans over 10% in the April-June quarter to about Rs 3.15 lakh crore.

Shift to bonds

The corporate world focused on deleveraging high-cost loans through fundraising via bond issuances despite interest rates at an all-time low. This has led to muted credit growth for banks.

Corporates raised Rs 2.1 lakh crore in the December quarter and Rs 3.1 lakh crore in the fourth quarter from the corporate bond markets. In contrast, the corresponding year-ago figures were Rs 1.5 lakh crore and Rs 1.9 lakh crore, respectively.

Bonds were mostly raised by top-rated companies at 150-200 basis points below bank loans. Most of the debt was raised by government companies as they have top-rated status.

For AAA-rated corporate bonds, the yield was 6.85 per cent in May 2020, which fell to 5.38 per cent in April 2021 and to 5.16 per cent in May 2021.



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HDFC Bank receives Rs 30,000 crore prepayments amid signs of economic recovery and deliveraging, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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In clear signs of a robust economic recovery and sustained deleveraging by top-rated Indian corporates, HDFC Bank received about Rs 30,000 crore in prepayments through the June quarter, primarily from companies in the commodities and infrastructure sectors, two people familiar with the development told ET.

“HDFC Bank has not seen such a high level of prepayment in the recent past,” said one of the persons cited above. “Other banks also obtained prepayments, but the scale is not that high because of lower business volumes.”

HDFC Bank, India’s most valuable lender, did not reply to ET’s queries on the subject. Industry sources didn’t reveal the names of individual corporate borrowers prepaying their loans to HDFC Bank.

In the April-June quarter, AAA or AA-rated companies sought to deleverage as they recorded solid cash balances, banking sources said. Cash flows were robust at commodity companies because of record iron ore or aluminium prices, boosting net profits. Infrastructure companies, too, reported fatter bottom-lines due to the government’s extensive highway-building programme.

HDFC Bank now expects renewed credit demand from these companies in a quarter or two, with the pace of economic recovery quickening and fueling the need for more funds.

The bank expanded its corporate loans in excess of 10% in the April-June quarter to about Rs 3.15 lakh crore. Wholesale banking advances largely include working capital loans. About four years ago, the book size was about Rs 1 lakh crore at the traditionally retail-focused HDFC Bank.

“Prepayments came from borrowers with more than two years of residual loans outstanding,” said a market source.

If a borrowing company runs a loan for two years and gives a prepayment notice of up to 30 days, the bank does not charge any penalty.

“Three months later, these companies will come forward with fresh credit demand,” said a senior banking executive, who advises companies on loan deals and works closely with HDFC Bank. “Demand is coming back as the second wave triggered only localised lockdowns.”

HDFC Bank is increasingly leaning toward companies, with the franchise built around individual consumption pushing credit to deleveraged corporates after Covid-induced job losses and wage cuts raised the risk perception of retail borrowers.

“Corporate loans will likely grow selectively,” Kaizad Bharucha, Executive Director, HDFC Bank, said in an interaction with ET two weeks ago. “The second wave has not destroyed demand for corporate loans but postponed it. With caseloads falling, companies will require money – both working capital and term loans.”



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Banks report improved NII, lower NPA provisioning in Q1, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The provision for cumulative non-performing assets (NPA) by banks softened in the June 2021 quarter after a spike in the previous quarter when they resumed accounting for slippages after RBI’s schemes to defer the recognition of actual NPAs ended in December. For a sample of 28 banks, the loan loss or NPA provision fell by 6.8% year-on-year and 43.8% sequentially to Rs 36,805.4 crore in the June quarter.

The aggregate provision by the public sector (PSU) banks fell by 27% year-on-year due to a sharp double digit drop reported by State Bank of India, Punjab National Bank, Canara Bank, and Bank of Baroda. On the other hand, private sector banks reported 51% jump following a sharp increase reported by HDFC Bank, Kotak Bank, Bandhan Bank and RBL Bank. As a result, their share in the total NPAs increased to 42.5% from 26.1% in the year-ago quarter.

The total sample’s net interest income (NII) increased by 4.8% year-on-year to Rs 1.2 lakh crore. A majority of the banks, 20 to be precise, reported higher net interest from the year-ago level. The share of the private banks in the sample’s net interest expanded to 43.8% from 41.7% a year ago.

The sample’s cumulative COVID provisioning increased to Rs 34,641.5 crore in the June quarter from Rs 29,892.8 crore in the previous quarter. Here, the share of PSU banks increased to 34.7% from 26.7% sequentially.

June ’20 September ’20 December ’20 March ’21 June ’21
Loan loss provision (Rs crore) 39504.8 33896.1 28828.5 65542.2 36805.4
Loan loss provision (YoY % change) -17.0 -11.0 -59.6 19.5 -6.8

Share of PSU banks in quarterly provisioning (%)

June ’20 September ’20 December ’20 March ’21 June ’21
PSU share (%) 73.9 77.5 63.7 66.4 57.5
Non-PSU share (%) 26.1 22.5 36.3 33.6 42.5

Data for a sample of 28 banks. Source: Bank data, ETIG



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HDFC Bank to hire 500 more to expand MSME coverage, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Country’s largest private sector lender HDFC Bank, which has a focus on the MSME sector, is hiring 500 more relationship managers this fiscal as the bank is expanding its coverage to 575 districts, a senior banker has said. The headcount addition will take the bank’s Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (MSME) vertical strength to 2,500. As of June end, the HDFC Bank’s employee strength stood around 1.23 lakh.

The bank’s MSME vertical covers 545 districts now with dedicated relationship managers and supervisors, which will be expanded to 575 districts or more by the end of this fiscal.

“As we are expanding our MSME footprint to 575 districts from 545 now, we are hiring over 500 more to the 2,000-strong headcount at the MSME vertical this fiscal year. This should take the overall headcount at the vertical to a little over 2,500,” Sumant Rampal, senior executive vice-president for business banking & healthcare finance, told PTI on Monday.

After reclassification and the resultant tagging of wholesaler and retailer loans under the MSME book, the bank closed the MSME book at Rs 2,01,833 crore in March 2021 quarter, marginally up from Rs 2,01,758 crore in December 2020, when it grew by over 30 per cent.

The government recently asked MSMEs to be re/de-classify themselves based on their turnover and get a Udhyam registration certificate.

The bank’s MSME portfolio is spread across sectors like textiles, fabrication, agri-processing, chemicals, consumer goods, hotels & restaurants, auto components, pharma and paper industry, and also include the entire selling chain ranging from wholesalers, retailers, distributors, stockists and supermarkets, Rampal said.

Rampal said the bank has been increasing its focus on the sector since the past two years, and the same only increased since the pandemic when the government opened a slew of measures to help small businesses tide over the crisis with the emergency credit line guarantee scheme (ECLGS) being the biggest booster helping it disburse 30 per cent more loans by December 2020, to Rs 2,01,758 crore.

Rampal said his team has already identified the districts for expansion. Though the bank has regular branches in these identified districts, MSME lending needs special focus based on their unique needs, he said.

He said of the over 5,500 branches, a little over 1,800 of them have more than 25 per cent of their loans coming in MSME accounts and 4,800 of them service this segment of customers.

Geographically speaking, the bank is present in 630 districts of which 545 districts now have special MSME counters.

Giving a break-up of the hiring, he said, of the total 500 planned additions, half will be for the small & medium sub-vertical, which already is a 975-strong team.

Though the RBI last Friday said there was nothing alarming about rise in MSME bad loans, a SIDBI-CIBIL report in late July said, the NPA levels among MSME borrowers surged to 12.6 per cent in the March 2021 quarter, up from 12 per cent in December 2020, while loans to them have jumped to Rs 9.5 lakh crore in FY21 from Rs 6.8 lakh crore in FY20.



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These transactions on HDFC Bank Net Banking, mobile app won’t be available during this time, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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In an email sent to its customers, HDFC Bank has said that as part of “our ongoing effort to provide you with a seamless, best-in-class digital banking experience, we are undergoing scheduled maintenance.”

According to the email, between August 7, 6 pm and August 8, 10 pm customers will not be able to view/download credit card statements on the Net banking and mobile banking app platforms. On August 11, between 12.30 am and 6.30 am. debit and credit card related services will not be available. HDFC Bank sent this mail to its customers on August 6, 2021 .

Added to this, according to the HDFC Bank website, all accounts, deposits, fund transfers, payment related services and online shopping services from 2.30 am to 5.30 am on August 8 will not be available on the Net banking and mobile banking app platforms. Further, the net banking and mobile banking app platforms will not be available from 4.30 am to 5.15 am on August 8. “Debit card related transactions will not be available on NetBanking and MobileBanking App on 7th Aug’21 from 12:30 AM to 04:30 AM,” stated the HDFC Bank website.



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These transactions on HDFC Bank Net Banking, mobile app won’t be available during this time, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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In an email sent to its customers, HDFC Bank has said that as part of “our ongoing effort to provide you with a seamless, best-in-class digital banking experience, we are undergoing scheduled maintenance.”

According to the email, between August 7, 6 pm and August 8, 10 pm customers will not be able to view/download credit card statements on the Net banking and mobile banking app platforms. On August 11, between 12.30 am and 6.30 am. debit and credit card related services will not be available. HDFC Bank sent this mail to its customers on August 6, 2021 .

Added to this, according to the HDFC Bank website, all accounts, deposits, fund transfers, payment related services and online shopping services from 2.30 am to 5.30 am on August 8 will not be available on the Net banking and mobile banking app platforms. Further, the net banking and mobile banking app platforms will not be available from 4.30 am to 5.15 am on August 8. “Debit card related transactions will not be available on NetBanking and MobileBanking App on 7th Aug’21 from 12:30 AM to 04:30 AM,” stated the HDFC Bank website.



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Actions against HDFC Bank, Mastercard driven by keenness to ensure compliance of norms: Das

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A keenness to ensure compliance to regulatory guidelines has led the RBI to initiate strong actions against entities like HDFC Bank, Mastercard and American Express, Reserve Bank of India (RBI) Governor Shaktikanta Das said on Friday.

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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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HDFC profit dips marginally on lower income from sale of investments; NPAs rise

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The collection efficiency for individual loans on a cumulative basis in June stood at 98.3%, compared to 98% in March.

Housing Development Finance Corporation (HDFC) on Monday reported a 2% year-on-year drop in its net profit for the June quarter to Rs 3,000.67 crore as it earned less from sale of investments. The net interest income (NII) for Q1FY22 stood at Rs 4,147 crore, 22% higher than Rs 3,392 crore in the previous year. The net interest margin (NIM) for the quarter rose 20 basis points (bps) sequentially to 3.7%.

Keki Mistry, vice chairman and chief executive officer, HDFC, said the growth in individual loan disbursements in the first quarter has not been impacted as severely as last year. “While there continues to be uncertainty on the duration of the lockdowns and the possibility of a third wave, we are optimistic of our ability to deliver,” Mistry said.

As of June 30, the assets under management (AUM) stood at Rs 5.74 lakh crore, up 8% from Rs 5.31 lakh crore at the end of the same quarter in the previous year. Individual loans comprised 78% of the AUM. On an AUM basis, the growth in the individual loan book was 14% and growth in the total loan book was 8%.

The company carried provisions worth Rs 13,189 crore as of June 30. As per regulatory norms, the company is required to carry a total provision of Rs 5,778 crore. Of this, Rs 2,443 crore is towards provisioning for standard assets and Rs 3,335 crore is towards non-performing assets (NPAs).

The gross non-performing asset (NPA) ratio increased 26 bps sequentially to 2.24%. The overall collection efficiency ratio for individual loans improved in June to pre-Covid levels, HDFC said in a statement. The collection efficiency for individual loans on a cumulative basis in June stood at 98.3%, compared to 98% in March.

“Individual NPAs increased due to slippages on account of the impact of the second wave of the pandemic. Collection efforts were hindered due to the recovery teams being unable to do field visits during the lockdown period,” the company said, adding that court orders also hampered the collection effort.

Mistry said that so far, HDFC has received requests for one-time restructuring of accounts worth `778 crore, or 0.15% of the loan book.

The capital adequacy ratio (CAR) of the lender stood at 22%, of which tier-I capital was 21.3% and tier-II capital was 0.7%. As per regulatory norms, the minimum requirements for the CAR and tier-I capital are 15% and 10% respectively.

Shares of HDFC ended at Rs 2,462.30 on the BSE on Monday, 0.88% higher than their previous close.

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