Private banks lead, overall NPA provisioning falls in Q2, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The worst seems to be over for banks in the pandemic, going by the drop in bad loan provisioning numbers. The bad loan provisioning by banks fell sequentially for the second consecutive quarter in the three months ended September 2021, led by a significant drop in some of the private sector banks. The trend is likely to continue on account of improved collections and lower slippages.

The aggregate provisioning towards non-performing assets (NPA) or loan loss provision for a sample of 29 banks fell by 20.5 per cent sequentially and 10.9 per cent year-on-year to Rs 30,400 crore. It has softened over the past two quarters after peaking at Rs 65,986.9 crore in the March 2021 quarter when banks resumed accounting for slippages.

Private banks at the forefront

The fall in the September quarter was driven by a sharp 43.9 per cent drop in loan loss provisioning by the private sector banks at the aggregate level. Top banks including HDFC Bank, Axis Bank, Kotak Bank, and IndusInd Bank recorded a double-digit sequential drop in the NPA provisioning.

The public sector banks on the other hand reported a modest 1.6 per cent fall in the NPA provisioning. Their share in the sample’s NPA provisioning increased to 68.5 per cent from 55.3 per cent in the previous quarter.

Analysts expect the asset quality of banks to improve gradually in the coming quarters following a pick up in economic activity and recovery in collections.

“Banks slippage ratios reduced substantially by 100 basis points QoQ on an average in the September quarter. The asset quality situation is likely to improve further driven by a reduction in retail as well as SME nonperforming loans in the coming quarters,” a Macquarie Capital Securities (India) note said.

The banks’ net interest income increased by 3.7 per cent sequentially and 2.4 per cent year-on-year to Rs 1.3 lakh crore. The sequential growth was faster for PSU banks at 5 per cent compared with 2.1 per cent for the private sector banks.



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IndusInd Bank launches Indus Merchant Solutions app, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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IndusInd Bank today launched ‘Indus Merchant Solutions’, a mobile application app.

The new application will enable merchants and retailers to undertake activities such as accept instant cashless payments on mobile phones from customers through multiple digital modes, track inventory via in-built dashboards, apply for a Point of Sale (PoS) machine to facilitate card based payments and avail small ticket business loans from the bank in a digital manner.

Current account holders of IndusInd Bank can download the ‘Indus Merchant Solutions’ app.

Soumitra Sen, Head – Consumer Bank, IndusInd Bank said, “Given the sharp rise in the number of consumers as well as merchants, who prefer transacting online, Indus Merchant Solutions is a holistic proposition that will significantly improve merchant engagement, user experience and convenience”

Currently, the app is available on smartphones with Android operating systems. It will soon be available for smartphones using the iOS operating system.

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IndusInd Bank launches mobile app for merchants

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Private sector IndusInd Bank has launched a comprehensive mobile application (app) to enable merchants, retailers and professionals to carry out banking transactions digitally, on a single platform.

“Indus Merchant Solutions will enable merchants and retailers to undertake an array of activities such as accept instant cashless payments on mobile phones from customers through multiple digital modes, track inventory via in-built dashboards, apply for an exclusive Point of Sale (PoS) machine to facilitate card based payments, as well as avail small ticket business loans from the bank in a completely digital and paperless manner, without having to visit a bank branch,” it said in a statement on Wednesday.

Any current account holder of IndusInd Bank can download the ‘Indus Merchant Solutions’ app and start using it. A non-customer can open a current account with the bank through a fully digitised process, and get themselves registered as a merchant, it further said.

The app is currently available on smartphones with Android operating systems and will shortly be available for smartphones using the iOS operating system as well.

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Credit card spends sparkle on festive rush in October, November, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Credit card spends are seen hitting record highs in October and November as the COVID-19 wave ebbs and festive euphoria sets in. As per trends, it has grown 17 per cent in October and 11 per cent in November.

Spending traction is evident from the record absolute spends and the ratio of credit card to debit card spend, which stands at 1.28x. October is likely to be 15-18% better than September while November’s first-week run rate has been better than October, according to ICICI Securities.

September jump

Credit card spends jumped 60 per cent year-on-year (YoY) in September, helped by the onset of the festive season. However, on a sequential basis the growth slowed down to 3 per cent at Rs 80,500 crore in September.

Spends grew strongly at 60% year on year (+16% on a two-year CAGR basis). Kotak Mahindra Bank reported the highest growth (27% MoM) in September, followed by IndusInd Bank and ICICI Bank (13% each).

Other major players reported growth in the +-4% range. On a two-year CAGR basis, spends for ICICI Bank grew 58%, IndusInd 33%, Kotak Mahindra Bank 29%. HDFC Bank and SBI Cards posted growth of 10–15% and Axis Bank and SCB 2–3%. On the other hand, Citi and Amex saw declines of 8% and 26% respectively. ICICI Bank surpassed SBI Cards to become the second-largest player in spends, with market share of 19.3% over 6MFY22.

Outstanding credit cards up 10.8%

The total number of outstanding credit cards in the system grew 10.8% YoY to 65 million in September 2021 – the highest in the past 11 months. Among the major players, ICICI Bank reported strong growth of 26.1% YoY, followed by IndusInd Bank (15.6%), SBI Cards (14.3%). Foreign players such as American and Citi witnessed decline of 10% and 5% respectively. SBI Cards and ICICI Bank continued to perform strongly, resulting in a 59–218 bps YoY increase in market share to 19.3% and 18.0% respectively in September.

ICICI Bank added close to 2 million new cards in the past 10 months, taking its credit card base to 11.6 million as of September. Despite a 247 bps year on year decline, HDFC Bank remained the largest player with a market share of 23.0%.

Around 10.91 lakh new cards were added to the system in September with HDFC Bank being the largest acquirer at 2.44 lakh cards.



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IndusInd Bank’s ‘technical glitch’: RBI examining portfolio as part of an ongoing audit

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The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) is already examining issues around the technical glitch at IndusInd Bank’s subsidiary that led to 84,000 loans being disbursed without the customers’ consent. The lender will also undertake an external audit of the issue if required.

This was informed by IndusInd Bank’s Managing Director and CEO, Sumant Kathpalia, at an analyst call on November 6. He also denied allegations of evergreening of loans and stressed that there is strong risk management and a control framework in place – both within the bank and its microfinance subsidiary Bharat Financial Inclusion Ltd (BFIL).

“Yes, it is part of the annual review process which happens and it is already going on and they (RBI) are reviewing this portfolio,” Kathpalia said in response to a query on whether this issue would be a part of the risk-based supervision audit that is conducted by the RBI. “The whistleblower complaint was marked to the RBI also and the bank has kept the regulator abreast on its internal review process,” he further said.

Internal review

Meanwhile, responding to another query, Kathpalia said the bank will appoint an external auditor to validate the results of the internal review.

Also read: IndusInd Bank shares slump 11 per cent following loan evergreening issue

“We will have the review process completed. We will have a committee which will include external participants and an external auditor validating the results, and will have an independent process to give comfort to the investors that everything is right in BFIL. We will not be happy only with the internal audit,” he said.

In the call, Kathpalia also said the bank has a strong succession plan for BFIL in place in case its top management leaves. Non-executive Vice Chairman of BFIL, MR Rao, had stepped down in September but Kathpalia said he continues to work as an advisor with IndusInd Bank.

‘Unlisted company’

While analysts expressed surprise that this was not informed to the stock exchanges, Kathpalia maintained that BFIL is an unlisted company. “There was an agreement that he will retire in March 2021 and we had honoured that… he was also very upset on the 84,000 loans. We have taken action against certain persons,” he said.

Also read: Under fire, IndusInd Bank begins review of microfinance subsidiary

Trying to assuage concerns, he also said that the bank has been following a conservative provisioning approach.

“IndusInd Bank could have done better in terms of communicating about the management changes in BFIL and a technical glitch in the microfinance book, which led to allegations of evergreening in the MFI book (which otherwise has always been an area of suspicion). We believe that the bank’s turnaround story remains intact but it needs to work more on strengthening credit underwriting/risk management, and communication with the stakeholders to sustain the long-term rerating,” said Emkay Global Financial Services in a note on Monday.

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IndusInd Bank shares tank after report of loan evergreening allegation at unit, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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BENGALURU – Shares of IndusInd Bank slid as much as 11.45% on Monday after a report said whistleblowers had alleged loan evergreening at the private sector lender’s micro finance arm.

On Friday, the Economic Times reported that whistleblowers had alerted the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) and the IndusInd board that Bharat Financial Inclusion (BFIL) had evergreened some loans – a practice where new loans are given to stressed borrowers to enable them to repay existing loans.

IndusInd denied the allegation in an exchange filing on Nov. 6 and said the report was “grossly inaccurate and baseless”.

However, it said nearly 84,000 loans were disbursed in May without customer consent due to a technical glitch and that the issue was rectified expeditiously.

IndusInd did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.

On Monday, shares of the private sector lender were the top percentage losers on the Nifty private bank index and on track for their worst session since April 2020.

Due to pandemic-related restrictions, some loans had to be disbursed via cash at BFIL, and as of September-end, only 26,073 clients out of 84,000 were active with loan outstanding at 340 million rupees ($4.58 million), IndusInd said.

In multiple emails to the RBI and the IndusInd board in October, a whistleblower group that included BFIL officials alleged that the unit had evergreened loans, inflated revenues and under-reported non-performing assets, the report said.

The report also cited two people familiar with the developments saying there was a separate whistleblower complaint from an outsider on Oct. 14 that suggestions to set up risk management and audit committees for BFIL were ignored.

In its exchange filing, IndusInd said an independent review had been initiated by the bank to see if there was any process lapse or accounting failure at BFIL.

($1 = 74.1900 Indian rupees)

(Reporting by Chandini Monnappa in Bengaluru; Editing by Subhranshu Sahu)



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IndusInd Bank, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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IndusInd Bank on Saturday admitted that its micro-finance arm gave nearly 84,000 loans “without customer consent” due to a “technical glitch” in May 21, but denied whistleblowers’ allegations of “ever greening” — a ploy to mask defaults with new loans. An independent review has been initiated by IndusInds “to see if there is any process lapse or accounting failure at Bharat Financial Inclusion (BFIL), the bank’s wholly-owned micro-lending subsidiary, said an IndusInd release. “The Bank wishes to reiterate that there is a strong risk management and control framework in place, both within the Bank and at BFIL,” said the bank.

In multiple emails to the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) and the IndusInd board in October, a whistleblower group comprising officials of the BFIL had alleged that the bank had ever-greened loans, inflated revenues and under-reported nonperforming assets. The emails followed a month after similar allegations by former BFIL vice-chairman MR Rao who, in his resignation letter, had said that the loans disbursed without customer consent did not appear as “process lapse” but a “deliberate attempt to shore up repayments.” The letters from the whistleblower group and Rao’s parting observations were reported by ET on Friday.

Reacting to the whistleblowers’ allegations, a statement issued by the bank on Saturday, said, “…the technical glitch was rectified expeditiously. Out of the above, only 26,073 clients were active with the loan outstanding at Rs 34 crore, which is 0.12% of the September end portfolio. The bank carries necessary provision against this portfolio. The standard operating procedure (SOP) has since been revised to make biometric authorisation compulsory.”

While strongly denying allegations of ‘ever greening’, the IndusInd statement said, “All the loans originated and managed by BFIL, including during the Covid period which saw the first and second waves ravaging the countryside, are fully-compliant with the regulatory guidelines… During the pandemic, the customers faced operational difficulties and some have turned intermittent payers, though a large part of them demonstrated a strong intent to repay on many occasions. Basis the requirements, the Bank adopted a multi-pronged approach depending upon the need of the client. (sic)”

The whistleblower group has blamed BFIL CEO Salabh Saxena and CFO Asish Damani for the alleged under-provisioning of loans running into thousands of crores. Neither of them responded to ET’s query on the whistleblower emails. According to a media report, both Saxena and Damani may soon quit BFIL and join Spandana Sphoorty, a micro-finance institution.

However, this could not be independently confirmed. According to the IndusInd release, the loans follow a weekly repayment model and the customers are required to make payments week on week. “.. if there is any default, the same gets recorded as missed instalments. In view of the weekly repayment model, the concept of ever greening is infeasible,” said the statement. “The level of non-performing assets reported by BHIL is significantly lower than other MFIs. So, we would like to know more, given that many lenders have seen a drop in collection efficiency during the pandemic.. If a loan is given by mistake without taking the borrower’s consent, it should be reversed,” said an analyst who did not wish to be named.



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Indusind Bank says whistleblower claims baseless; gave 84k loans sans client consent in May, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Mumbai, Terming whistleblower allegations on loan evergreening as “grossly inaccurate and baseless”, Indusind Bank on Saturday admitted to have disbursed 84,000 loans without customer consent in May owing to a “technical glitch”. Lending without the consent was reported by the field staff in two days, and the glitch was also rectified expeditiously, the private sector lender said in a clarification.

On Friday, there was a media report about anonymous whistleblowers writing to the bank management and the RBI about BFIL, the microlending-focused subsidiary of the bank, allegedly resorting to evergreening of loans, wherein existing borrowers unable to pay dues were given new loans to present the books as clean.

“The bank strongly denies the allegations of ‘evergreening’. All the loans originated and managed by BFIL, including during the COVID period which saw the first and second waves ravaging the countryside, are fully compliant with the regulatory guidelines,” an official statement said.

“Due to a technical glitch in May 2021, nearly 84,000 loans were disbursed without the customer consent getting recorded at the time of loan disbursement,” it added.

“Operational issues” due to the pandemic’s second wave like lockdowns, containment zones, and restrictions at the village/panchayat level had necessitated disbursement of some loans in cash, it said.

At the end of September, 26,073 of these 84,000 clients were active with the loan outstanding at Rs 34 crore, which is 0.12 per cent of the September-end portfolio, the bank said, adding that it carries necessary provisions against the loans.

It also said that the Standard Operating Procedure has since been revised to make biometric authorization compulsory, and that in October 2021, nearly 100 per cent of the loan disbursements were in the bank accounts of the customers, as in pre-COVID time.

During the pandemic, customers faced operational difficulties and some have turned to intermittent payers, though a large part of them demonstrated a strong intent to repay on many occasions, the bank statement said.

The bank added that help was rendered to such clients, including through additional liquidity support to the extent of 20 per cent of the outstanding as on February 29, 2020 as applicable under the ECLGS (Emergency credit line guarantee Scheme), restructuring, and additional loan with a longer tenor and lower EWI (equated weekly instalments) for customers, after they cleared of their arrears and with their due consent.

It can be noted that nearly all the lenders have reported reverses on the microloans front since the beginning of the pandemic. The activity is concentrated in rural areas, where field agents of a lender go deep to disburse loans and also collect dues in cash on a weekly basis.

With the easing of the lockdown measures, all lenders are reporting an improvement in collections and also disbursements.

Indusind Bank management had reported an increase in stress in the microfinance loans portfolio, with the gross non-performing assets ratio moving up to 3.01 per cent as of September, up from 1.69 per cent in June.

The fresh slippages in the book had stood at Rs 1,070 crore in the September quarter, while the net after-recoveries and upgrades stood at Rs 460 crore.

As per the media report on Friday, communication from the whistleblowers to the bank’s chief executive Sumant Kathpalia, independent directors and RBI officials had happened between October 17 and October 24. Additionally, there was also an “outsider” who had written to RBI on October 14, it said.

The report had highlighted that a month prior to the October 14 complaint, BFIL’s non-executive chairman M R Rao had stepped down and also flagged RBI’s concerns on the loans given without customer consent in his resignation letter, calling it a deliberate act to shore up repayment rates. PTI AA DRR DRR



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IndusInd Bank says whistleblower claims baseless; gave 84k loans sans client consent in May

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Terming whistleblower allegations on loan evergreening as “grossly inaccurate and baseless”, IndusInd Bank on Saturday admitted to have disbursed 84,000 loans without customer consent in May owing to a “technical glitch”.

Lending without the consent was reported by the field staff in two days, and the glitch was also rectified expeditiously, the private sector lender said in a clarification.

On Friday, there was a media report about anonymous whistleblowers writing to the bank management and the RBI about BFIL, the microlending-focused subsidiary of the bank, allegedly resorting to evergreening of loans, wherein existing borrowers unable to pay dues were given new loans to present the books as clean.

“The bank strongly denies the allegations of ‘evergreening’. All the loans originated and managed by BFIL, including during the Covid period which saw the first and second waves ravaging the countryside, are fully compliant with the regulatory guidelines,” an official statement said.

“Due to a technical glitch in May 2021, nearly 84,000 loans were disbursed without the customer consent getting recorded at the time of loan disbursement,” it added.

“Operational issues” due to the pandemic’s second wave like lockdowns, containment zones, and restrictions at the village/panchayat level had necessitated disbursement of some loans in cash, it said.

At the end of September, 26,073 of these 84,000 clients were active with the loan outstanding at ₹34 crore, which is 0.12 per cent of the September-end portfolio, the bank said, adding that it carries necessary provisions against the loans.

It also said that the Standard Operating Procedure has since been revised to make biometric authorization compulsory, and that in October 2021, nearly 100 per cent of the loan disbursements were in the bank accounts of the customers, as in pre-Covid time.

During the pandemic, customers faced operational difficulties and some have turned to intermittent payers, though a large part of them demonstrated a strong intent to repay on many occasions, the bank statement said.

The bank added that help was rendered to such clients, including through additional liquidity support to the extent of 20 per cent of the outstanding as on February 29, 2020 as applicable under the ECLGS (Emergency credit line guarantee Scheme), restructuring, and additional loan with a longer tenor and lower EWI (equated weekly instalments) for customers, after they cleared of their arrears and with their due consent.

Also read: IndusInd Bank Q2 net profit up 72%

It can be noted that nearly all the lenders have reported reverses on the microloans front since the beginning of the pandemic. The activity is concentrated in rural areas, where field agents of a lender go deep to disburse loans and also collect dues in cash on a weekly basis.

With the easing of the lockdown measures, all lenders are reporting an improvement in collections and also disbursements.

IndusInd Bank management had reported an increase in stress in the microfinance loans portfolio, with the gross non-performing assets ratio moving up to 3.01 per cent as of September, up from 1.69 per cent in June.

The fresh slippages in the book had stood at ₹1,070 crore in the September quarter, while the net after-recoveries and upgrades stood at ₹460 crore.

As per the media report on Friday, communication from the whistleblowers to the bank’s chief executive Sumant Kathpalia, independent directors and RBI officials had happened between October 17 and October 24. Additionally, there was also an “outsider” who had written to RBI on October 14, it said.

The report had highlighted that a month prior to the October 14 complaint, BFIL’s non-executive chairman MR Rao had stepped down and also flagged RBI’s concerns on the loans given without customer consent in his resignation letter, calling it a deliberate act to shore up repayment rates.

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Bankers of McLeod Russel sign ICA for resolution on debt recast, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Bulk tea major McLeod Russel India on Friday said its bankers have signed an Inter Creditors Agreement (ICA), a precursor to a resolution plan for debt restructuring, that rekindled hope of revival of the once largest tea producer of the world. After the promoters of McLeod reach a settlement with a financial creditor, Techno Electric & Engineering, the company could be out of National Company Law Tribunal‘s insolvency process.

The trigger for the insolvency application by Techno was a loan agreement for providing Rs 100 crore inter-corporate deposit (ICD).

“We hope to reach a satisfactory resolution shortly with the bankers on debt recast,” a McLeod official told PTI.

“All the banking lenders have signed/executed an Inter Creditors Agreement (ICA) to provide for ground rules for finalisation and implementation of Resolution Plan in respect of borrower/Company”, McLeod Russel said in a stock exchange filing.

There are nearly 8-10 lenders including a combination of private and public-sector banks, such as Axis Bank, UCO Bank, Allahabad Bank, Indusind Bank and ICICI Bank.

The outstanding debt including interest will be around Rs 2100-2300 crore, company officials estimated which is not sustainable for the tea major.

Till March 2018, McLeod had 52 estates in the country producing 67 million kg of tea with a total saleable production of 89 million kg. By FY20, its total saleable quantity had dropped by nearly 53 per cent to 42 million kgs with the company selling estates to square off debts.

A slew of ICDs – unsecured borrowings from other entities – extended to some of the other BM Khaitan group companies, hurtled the tea major into a serious crisis. PTI BSM NN NN



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