Beginning of the end? Covid cases in India may top 25 lakh in ongoing second wave, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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A total 25 lakh cases are expected pan India in the second Covid wave that began in India in February 2021 based on trends till March 23.

Considering the number of days from the current level of daily new cases to the peak level during the first wave, India might reach the peak in the second half of April, according to SBI Research.

The entire duration of the second wave might last up to 100 days counted from February 15.

Notably, Maharashtra alone accounts for the majority of the daily new cases currently.

Localised lockdowns/restrictions have not resulted in controlling the spread of infection, it said, adding, “This is visible in the case of many states including Maharashtra and Punjab.”

Vaccines

Though the global COVID-19 experience shows a second wave is much higher in intensity than the first wave, the presence of the vaccine makes the difference currently. Thus India will be able to manage the situation better, it said.

District wise analysis reveals that cases have again started increasing in top 15 districts, mostly urban, while the spread in rural districts is almost stable: Shift in rural penetration from Kerala in January 21 to Maharashtra in March 2021 cases are largely localised and concentrated, it said in a report, ‘Second wave of infections: The beginning of the end?’

The research house added it thought it will never have to put together slides documenting the second wave.

Certain states like Rajasthan, Gujarat, Kerala, Uttarakhand, Haryana have vaccinated more than 20% of their elderly
population (above 60 years)

Several states with a higher elderly population (>60 years) including Punjab, Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh, Maharashtra and West Bengal have vaccinated less percentage of their elderly population and must increase their pace of inoculation, it said

If we assume more number of people are willing to take vaccines and the daily vaccine inoculation increases to 40-45 lakh from the current maximum level of 34 lakh, then with this capacity we can vaccinate our population above 45 years in four months from now.

There has also been a study in the past of the Great Pandemic flu of 1918-19 by Hatchett, Mecher and Lipsitch (2007) whose findings support the hypothesis that rapid implementation of multiple non-pharmaceutical interventions (NPIs) including the closure of schools, churches, and theatres can significantly reduce influenza transmission, but that viral spread will only be renewed upon relaxation of such measures, it said.

Other countries

Daily cases during the second wave peak witnessed in other countries has been multiple times the peak daily cases during the first wave: But at that time there was no vaccination. For instance, France witnessed peak daily cases of around 11.7 times the daily peak of new cases witnessed during its first wave.

But India might be able to handle well as vaccine is now available, it said.

“If we consider the days required to reach the current level from the lowest level of daily new cases witnessed in Feb’21, overall number of days that India took during the second wave is similar to what was during the first wave,” it said.

However, the difference lies in the speed of spread of infection in certain States like Gujarat, MP, Maharashtra, Punjab and Chhattisgarh, where the cases have increased at a much faster pace during the current second wave, it said.



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Digital lenders on fund raising spree

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Concerns about the sector notwithstanding, the digital lending segment is seeing a boom with increased demand for easy credit from customers and fund raise by many of these firms.

Over the last few months, many of these lenders have raised funds for penetrating deeper into the country and launching new products and more such firms are expected to raise funds in coming weeks.

Digital lenders including IndiaLends, KreditBee and True Balance (for its lending arm -True Credits) have raised funds via equity as well as debt in recent weeks.

Easy credit

Easier availability of credit through these lenders has been a draw for customers, especially with job losses and salary cuts since Covid-19 led crisis. A number of these companies are also looking at offering other products such as virtual credit cards and insurance.

Analysts believe that the sector has shrugged off the liquidity crisis during the Covid-19 pandemic and are set for more growth and tie-ups with banks and NBFCs.

Also read: Digital lending apps continue to see robust demand

A report by Credit Suisse estimates that retail digital lending has delivered about 43 per cent CAGR over the past seven years, reaching $ 110 billion in size by 2019, differentiated mainly by faster disbursements.

“Digital lending is being led by the emergence and growth of many specialised digital lenders like pay day, SME, unsecured retail and BNPL lenders who differentiate mainly through faster disbursements,” said the report, adding that they have gained more than a 40 per cent market share in new personal loans and over 20 per cent in unsecured retail loans. It also noted that they have been the worst impacted by the Covid-19 pandemic.

‘More growth’

According to Monish Shah, Partner, Deloitte India, “We will see digital lending grow exponentially over the next few years on the basis of this data dividend, the unmet needs and increasing digital maturity across the segments. So the sector will require a fair bit of growth capital to drive customer acquisition and servicing.”

Shilpa Mankar Ahluwalia, Partner, Shardul Amarchand Mangaldas noted that the sector has dealt with some negativity over the last few months but this has been triggered mainly because of a few bad actors that misappropriated personal data. “The sector is positioned to grow and once they have created the distribution channel for customers, there is the potential for growth of multiple financial products,” she said.

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SC Verdict: Additional relief of about ₹7,000 crore to borrowers may have to be given

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The Centre may have to allocate an additional ₹7,000 crore as relief to borrowers following the Supreme Court verdict on loan moratorium on Tuesday, according to analysts.

“As per our estimates, the compounded interest for six month of moratorium across all lenders is estimated at ₹13,500 to ₹14,000 crore,” said Anil Gupta, Vice President – Financial Sector Ratings, ICRA.

Pointing out that the Centre has already announced relief for borrowers having borrowings up to ₹2 crore, which was estimated to cost about ₹6,500 crore to the Exchequer, Gupta said, “With announcement of waiver for all borrowers, the additional relief of about ₹7,000 crore to ₹7,500 will need to be provided to borrowers.”

Mahesh Misra, CEO, IMGC welcomed the Supreme Court judgement and said, “The court has limited its scope to judicial review and not opined on the merits of the policy. Any other outcome would have created a potential moral hazard and also penalized conscientious borrowers. This creates the right precedent as well.”

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Interest rates on education loans see a decline, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The Covid-19 pandemic and rising fee structure of education has made it difficult for parents to fund their children’s higher studies.

As the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) slashed repo rates by 75 basis points in March and 40 basis points in May last year, the banks have cut down on loan rates across categories.

Public sector banks contribute over 70% of total education loans along with NBFCs. Public sector banks including Union Bank of India are offering the cheapest loans, with rates starting at as low as 6.80% for a Rs 20-lakh loan with a tenure of seven years.

Central Bank of India, Bank of India, Bank of Baroda, State bank of India offer education loan at 6.85%. Whereas, Punjab National Bank, IDBI bank, Canara Bank charge 6.85% Interest on Education Loan.

Bank of Maharashtra and Indian Bank charge 7.05% and 7.15% interest respectively on education loans.

State Bank of India’s (SBI) rates have dropped marginally by 5 basis points over the last two months.

In the recent announcement the Union government informed Parliament that Nearly 9.55% of education loans extended by public sector banks were categorized as non-performing assets (NPAs) as on 31 December.

Out of total education loans disbursed, 366,260 accounts worth ₹8,587 crore have turned bad, the govt said.



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Interest of bank employees will be protected, says FM

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Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman on Tuesday said that every interest of the personnel in banks that are likely to be privatised will be fully protected. She also said that interests of those who put in decades of service in these banks will “absolutely be protected– whether it is their salaries, pension, etc”.

“Even in financial sector, we will still have the presence of public sector enterprise. This means not all of them (banks) are going to be privatised,” she said, after a Cabinet meeting that approved a new Development Financial Institution.

‘More equity’

“We want financial institutions to get more equity and make them more sustainable. We want their staff to perform duties which they have acquired as a skill over the decades and run the banks. So to quickly conclude that every bank is going to be sold off is not right,” she said. Besides IDBI Bank, the government is looking to privatise two public sector banks and a general insurance company.

‘Have serious discussions’

Responding to a media query on comments made, usually as two liners, by Opposition leader Rahul Gandhi, the Finance Minister said she would want him to engage in serious discussions rather than “throw these kind of two liners every now and then”.

 

She refuted his reported remarks that the current government was “privatising profits and nationalising loss” and highlighted that the erstwhile UPA regime were only resorting to “privatising taxpayers money”.

On the issue of allegations of nationalising losses, Sitharaman said that today public sector banks are loss making and prompt corrective actions are bringing them out because of the “telephone banking that happened during his time (UPA government)”.

“Nationalising corruption and privatising taxpayers money for the betterment of one family is what Rahul Gandhi should take as a reply for the tweet that some outsourced fellow in his team is feeding him with. He should be ready to stand for discussions and not throw allegations and go away,” she added.

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Ares SSG funds complete acquisition of Altico Capital

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Ares SSG on Thursday announced that some of its funds have completed the acquisition of all underlying assets of Altico Capital India Limited.

“The acquisition marks the first resolution of a defaulting NBFC outside India’s Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code and represents Ares SSG’s single largest investment in India to date,” said the Asia Pacific alternative asset manager.

Funds managed by Ares SSG along with Assets Care and Reconstruction Enterprise have acquired all outstanding loans and investments from Altico for about ₹2,800 crore, which is in line with its original resolution plan submitted in February 2020.

“Ares SSG’s plan has ensured a full resolution while also maximising the value of the underlying assets for creditors, despite the adverse impact of the pandemic on several of Altico’s portfolio companies,” the statement said.

Debt ridden Altico had been facing a liquidity crisis since late 2019. It had defaulted on about ₹20 crore to Mashreq Bank in September 2019.

Also read: Mutual fund exposure to NBFC debt grows marginally in Q3

Lenders led by State Bank of India had then formed a committee and initiated the resolution plan. In all, about 27 lenders have exposure to Altico Capital.

In the statement, Ares SSG said Altico’s entire team will continue to assist in servicing the existing portfolio.

“This investment also highlights our confidence in the prospects for India and the steps being taken to spur growth that has over the past year been held back by the global pandemic,” said Shyam Maheshwari, Partner, Ares SSG.

Manish Jain, CEO, SSG Advisors, an advisor to Ares SSG, said, “Ares SSG’s plan for Altico allows its creditors to realise immediate value for the assets.”

Set up in 2004, Altico Capital is an NBFC, which focuses on senior secured lending to mid-income residential projects and Commercial Real Estate sector across Tier-1 cities. It also provides structured finance solutions to the infrastructure and other adjacent sectors.

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Axis Bank launches wearable payment device for Rs 750, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Axis Bank, country’s third-largest private sector bank, has stepped up their game in the contactless payments segment by launching its own range of wearable contactless payment devices. With the launch of its wearable devices brand, ‘Wear ‘N’ Pay’, Axis Bank has become the first bank to introduce a new line of wearable devices that can be incorporated into existing accessories or worn easily to carry out contactless transactions on the go.

These devices come in a variety of accessories like band, key chain and watch loop that factor in practical usage and are available at a fee point of Rs. 750,

The wearables are directly linked to the customers’ bank account and function like a regular debit card. This allows purchases to be done at any merchant who accepts contactless transactions.

Sanjeev Moghe, EVP & Head-Cards & Payments, Axis Bank said, “Contactless payments are the future of the payments industry in India. To tap into this market, our Wear ‘N’ Pay program brings in convenience in contactless payments at a budget friendly price point, offering a safe and secure mode of payments on the go.”

He added, “Not only are these devices contemporary looking, but are also designed in a way that it becomes a part of our daily lives, thus increasing adoption of cashless transactions for everyday requirements.”

Vikas Varma, COO-South Asia, Mastercard, said, “Mastercard is constantly innovating technologies that securely and seamlessly integrate contactless payments into people’s day-to-day lives. Given that the wearable tech space is an integral part of driving contactless payments, this launch and partnership is a further testimony to Mastercard working towards building a secure and inclusive payments ecosystem.”



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Citigroup needs a new strategy for its lagging Asian consumer banks, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Citigroup Inc.’s new Chief Executive Jane Fraser is facing an Asia question handed down to her from predecessor Mike Corbat’s time: What to do about the consumer banks?

Out of the 19 that Citi operates globally, 12 are in the Asia-Pacific region. When Corbat took over as CEO in 2012, the unit — which now also includes five smaller consumer banks in Europe, the Middle East and Africa — was pulling in half the firm’s Asia net income. Over the next seven years, the institutional clients group, which houses the corporate and investment banks, powered ahead and became twice as profitable as the stagnant consumer franchise. Some investors began to ask if it was time to exit.

My view then was, “Don’t do it.” It was too early to give up on the Asian consumer. But the pandemic has changed the math. Consumer banking in South Korea, the Philippines, Thailand and Australia is under review. Even in India, where Citi is the largest foreign bank, the retail business might be spun off, according to local media reports.

Covid-19 hit Citi with $17.5 billion in credit losses and allowances, two-thirds of which were in global consumer banking. A $900 million payment erroneously sent to Revlon Inc.’s lenders shaved off 0.3 percentage point from last year’s 6.9% overall return on tangible common equity, leaving it woefully short of the 14% return at JPMorgan Chase & Co.

Fraser wants to unlock value by simplifying the firm like “any true Scot,” she says. It’s about time. After a subprime crisis, a pandemic, and years of repair work in between, Citi shares are 55% lower than in September 2008. In the same period, Jamie Dimon at JPMorgan has quadrupled the stock price.

Still, if Citi goes under the knife, it will be more facelift than amputation. The well-heeled among Asian consumers will still remain important to a Citi shorn of consumer banking.

The first woman to lead a major Wall Street institution is planning a big push into wealth management. Asia is Fraser’s best bet. Even HSBC Holdings Plc, which is scaling down its ambitions in North America and continental Europe, is pivoting to the region to grab the same opportunity.

Among “glocals,” or global banks servicing local Asian economies, Citi has a better chance of making it in the post-pandemic landscape than HSBC. (With return on tangible equity down in the dumps at 3%, Standard Chartered Plc isn’t even in the race.) That’s because its access to Asia’s wealthy isn’t restricted to Hong Kong, HSBC’s traditional stronghold and the source of much of its current grief because of China’s incursions into the city’s autonomy.

Citigroup needs a new strategy for its lagging Asian consumer banks
Citi has pan-Asian heft, garnering about 30% of its revenue in the region from ASEANnations. Rapid digitization in Southeast Asia was shaking the economics of physical branch networks for all lenders. And that was before Covid-19 sparked a work-from-home megatrend. An asset-light banking model could work, as long as affluent customers don’t fall through the cracks.

Rich people do business everywhere. Citi taps them via the plumbing of commerce: by supporting their firms in everything from cash management to fund-raising across 96 countries where it has boots on the ground. The quarter of the world’s billionaires who are its private-banking clients won’t exactly fret if some ATMs in Manila or Mumbai disappear. They want access to hot initial public offers — Citi and Goldman Sachs Group Inc. are running neck and neck in underwriting U.S. IPOs this year. With almost $9.5 billion of deals so far in 2021, Citi is also leading the global craze for blank-check special purpose acquisition companies, or SPACs.

Unlike JPMorgan, Morgan Stanley or HSBC, Citi doesn’t have a large asset management arm. So it offers a wider menu of funds from many firms even to the customer with $100,000 to invest. Its broader wealth operation is being merged with the private bank. To put millionaires and billionaires under one roof is a much required simplification, especially in a region where a new affluent class is climbing the ladder rapidly as their businesses become multinationals. This is something that the pandemic hasn’t slowed.

Citi’s wealth unit added net new client assets of $20 billion in Asia last year, taking its total to $310 billion, which puts it behind only the Swiss heavyweights, UBS AG and Credit Suisse Group AG.

As long as Citi retains the consumer banks in the marquee financial centers of Singapore and Hong Kong, it can redeploy capital from other Asian markets to improve returns. On her first day as CEO this month, Fraser made the commitment to achieving net-zero greenhouse-gas emissions in financing by 2050, which should get the stock some new love from environmentally conscious funds. Share buybacks, through which the lender has returned $65 billion to investors since 2015, have resumed.

Before the financial crisis, Morgan Stanley worried if its Dean Witter brokerage would get crushed by Citi making a play for UBS. After the 2008 turmoil, Citi’s prized Smith Barney unit fell into Morgan Stanley’s lap. There’s no such pressure now. The balance sheet has weathered the pandemic and dodged the Revlon blow. Overhauling controls to satisfy regulators is the priority. While attending to it, Fraser has to bulk up in wealth — even if that means trimming branches in Asia, and issuing fewer credit cards and mortgages. For the world’s last surviving global bank to remain standing, the Scot in the corner office has to unsheathe the claymore. With luck, she’ll only need to prune the hedges.



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The power of women in the BFSI sector, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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In the last few weeks, two headlines became very famous and all the verticals of the media around the world carried it. First was Kamala Harris who took over as a vice president of the United States of America. And the second is Jane Fraser, who took over as CEO of CitiBank. The common factor in both the stories is not just that they belong to America… but both of them are the first women candidates in the role.

What surprises me is the largest economy, and the most developed country in the world never ever had any woman in these roles in the past. Forget politics, not even in banking. Despite being a global bank operating in almost 50 countries, it’s hard to believe that CITI took more than 200 years to find a women leader.

Dr B R Ambedkar said, “I measure the progress of a community by the degree of progress which women have achieved,”

Ambedkar’s statement is quite laudable in India‘s financial world. Because India had and also has a number of women leaders in the sector. Look at the accompanying chart. This is not a complete list.

Present Women Leaders

Nirmala Sitharaman Fianance Minister Government of India
Padmaja Chunduru MD & CEO Indian Bank
Zarin Daruwala CEO Standard Chartered Bank (India)
Kalpana Morparia CEO JP Morgan India
Radhika Gupta CEO Edelweiss Asset Management
Vibha Padalkar MD & CEO HDFC Life
Anamika Roy Rashtrawar MD & CEO Iffco Tokio General Insurance
RM Vishakha MD & CEO IndiaFirst Life Insurance
Neera Saxena MD & CEO GIC Housing Finance
Shanti Ekambaram President (Consumer Banking) Kotak Mahindra Bank
Meghana Baji CEO ICICI Prudential Pension Funds
Ashu Suyash CEO CRISIL
Renu Sud Karnad MD HDFC
Sonia Dasgupta MD JM Financial
Vani Kola Co-Founder & MD Kalari Capital
Suniti Rani Nanda Chief FinTech Officer Government of Maharashtra
Rashmi Mohanti CFO & Interim CEO Clix Capital
Deena Mehta Managing Director Asit C. Mehta Investment Interrmediates

Women leaders in past

State Bank of India Arundhati Bhattacharya Chairman
ICICI Bank Chanda Kochar MD & CEO
Axis Bank Shikha Sharma MD & CEO
NSE Chitra Ramakrishnan MD & CEO
Alice Vaidyan GIC Re CMD
Naina Lal Kidwai HSBC India Country Head
Usha Ananthasubramanian CMD Bhartiya Mahila Bank
Meera Sanyal CEO RBS

Due to space crunch I have only added a few names but women leaders are an integral part of the India’s finance sector. From Deputy Governors at RBI and Whole Time Members at SEBI and even emerging areas like FinTechs, and technology also have many women CEOs.It requires a refined mind and a dedication to follow a great schedule to maintain a work life balance. For women it’s far trickier… In my recent conversation with Padmaja Chunduru, MD & CEO of Indian Bank, she said that she travelled to a village with a three- month-old infant. I am sure every lady has a breathtaking journey.

In the BFSI sector women have raised their flag high…let it wave there always. In the words of the poetess, Sylvia Path,

‘I took a deep breath and listened to the old brag of my heart… I am, I am, I am…

Editors View is a weekly column written by Amol Dethe, Editor, ETBFSI. Click here to read his previous columns.



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G-Sec yields may soften temporarily if last two weekly auctions are cancelled: ICRA

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Government Security (G-Sec) yields could soften temporarily as the Government of India’s (GoI) fiscal deficit may undershoot FY2021 Revised Estimate (RE) by ₹50,000 crore to ₹90,000 crore, possibly resulting in cancellation of the final two G-Sec auctions, according to credit rating agency ICRA.

ICRA observed that the yield for the 5.85 G-Sec 2030 has risen by more than 35 basis points (bps) since its introduction, to 6.23 per cent intra-day as on March 5, 2021, with an uptick in the recent weeks.

This increase in yields is mainly due to higher-than-expected fiscal deficit and borrowings of GoI for FY2021 and FY2022, a rise in US Treasury yields and hardening crude oil prices.

 

“In our assessment, there could be a modest upside to the GoI’s tax revenues, whereas its non-interest non-subsidy revenue expenditure may trail the Revised Estimate (RE) for FY2021. Therefore, the GoI’s fiscal deficit in FY2021 may end up undershooting the RE of ₹18.5 lakh crore by ₹50,000 crore to ₹90,000 crore,” said ICRA in a study.

Accordingly, the agency projected the fiscal deficit in FY2021 at ₹17.6-18.0 lakh crore or 9-9.2 per cent of GDP (as per ICRA’s nominal GDP forecasts), lower than the 9.5 per cent of GDP included in FY2021 RE.

“Based on this, we assess a lower borrowing requirement of the GoI in the remainder of this fiscal year. However, given the substantial devolvement in Friday’s auction, it remains unclear whether the GoI will choose to cancel the last two weekly auctions of Government of India security (G-sec) with a planned amount of ₹49,000 crore, instead of carrying forward larger cash balances,” ICRA’s economists Aditi Nayar, Yash Panjrath, Aarzoo Pahwa and Tiasha Chakraborty said.

If the final two G-Sec auctions for March 2021 are cancelled, ICRA expects the yield for the benchmark 5.85 GS 2030 may temporarily soften from the current levels (6.2324 per cent) to 6.10-6.15 per cent in the remainder of this month.

Subsequently, the bond yields would take cue from the domestic inflation trajectory, upcoming borrowing calendar of the GoI for H1 (first half) FY2022 and the State governments for Q1 (April-June) FY2022, magnitude of Open Market Operations (OMOs), as well as global factors such as movement in US treasury yields, crude oil prices, and overall risk sentiment.

Yields may remain elevated

Based on the available trends, the agency expects the headline CPI inflation to average around 6.1 per cent in FY2021, before easing to 4.5 per cent in FY2022, while remaining above the mid-point of the Monetary Policy Committee’s (MPC’s) current target range of 2 per cent to 6 per cent. ICRA anticipates that the MPC will leave the repo rate unchanged in 2021.

Given the large supply of dated G-sec and state development loans (SDL) that is expected in FY2022 (aggregate net supply projected at ₹16.0-16.5 lakh crore), yields may remain elevated in the absence of sizeable and frequent market operations.

In ICRA’s view, the benchmark yield may rise during Q1 FY2022, to as much as 6.35 per cent by the end of the quarter.

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