IndusInd Bank Q4 deposits up 27 per cent, net advances rise 3 per cent

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Private sector lender IndusInd Bank reported a 3 per cent increase in net advances and 27 per cent rise in deposits as on March 31, 2021, compared to a year ago.

According to a regulatory filing by the bank on Monday, its net advances increased to ₹2.13 lakh crore as on March 31, 2021, versus ₹2.06 lakh crore a year ago. Even sequentially, net advances increased by 3 per cent from ₹2.07 lakh crore as on December 31, 2020.

Deposits increased to ₹2.56 lakh crore as on March 31, 2021, compared to ₹2.02 lakh crore a year ago.

Moody’s affirms IndusInd Bank’s ratings, revises outlook to ‘stable’

“Retail deposits and deposits from small business customers amounted to ₹95,811 crore as of March 31, 2021, as compared to ₹85,914 crore as of December 31, 2020,” IndusInd Bank said.

On a sequential basis, deposits increased 7 per cent in the fourth quarter of last fiscal from ₹2.39 lakh crore as on December 31, 2020.

Why IndusInd Bank FD is an attractive short-term choice

The bank’s CASA ratio was at 41.8 per cent as on March 31, 2020, from 40.4 per cent a year ago.

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Indifi Technologies bags ₹35-cr debt funding from IndusInd Bank

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Indifi Technologies, a Gurugram-based online lending platform for small businesses, has secured ₹35 crore in debt financing from IndusInd Bank Ltd, with a guarantee from US International Development Finance Corporation (DFC).

These funds were from IndusInd Bank’s impact investing group to Riviera Investors Private Ltd, which is Indifi’s in-house NBFC arm. These funds will be used for onward lending to small businesses to accelerate post-Covid-19 economic recovery, the company said in a statement.

“The guarantee from DFC eliminates foreign exchange rate fluctuation risk from the balance sheet of Riviera and it has become an important tool to mobilise debt funding for impact space companies. We have done $30 million of DFC’s guarantee-backed transactions till date, out of which $25 million has been done in FY21,” Roopa Satish, Head-Corporate & Investment Banking, CSR & Sustainable Banking at IndusInd Bank, said.

Indifi has disbursed more than 30,000 loans across over 12 industries since inception through a network of 20 lenders and 80 partners. Recently, Indifi forayed into the pharmaceutical segment and will be extending its credit line solution to retailers — especially pharma distributors and local chemists — for managing their working capital needs and cash flows.

“Indifi deploys a unique and innovative approach to improve access to finance for small businesses, which are an important engine for economic growth in the Indian economy. Indifi’s support is especially important for India’s small businesses as they weather the effects of the Covid-19 pandemic and recover from its effects,” Loren Rodwin, Managing Director of Social Enterprise Finance in DFC’s Office of Development Credit, said.

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Indifi secures Rs 35 crore in debt financing from IndusInd Bank, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Online lending platform Indifi Technologies on Monday said it has secured Rs 35 crores in debt financing from IndusInd Bank Ltd. These funds were deployed through a Rs 35 crore of term loan from IndusInd bank’s impact investing group to Riviera Investors Private Limited which is Indifi‘s in-house Non-Banking Financial Company (NBFC) arm.

The funds will be used for onward lending to small businesses (Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises) to accelerate post-COVID economic recovery, Indifi said.

“We are extremely thankful to the US International Development Finance Corporation (DFC) and IndusInd Bank for this facility which comes to us at the right time and helps us in our goal of extending debt financing to underserved MSMEs who are recovering from the COVID impact,” Siddharth Mahanot, Co-founder and COO, Indifi Technologies, said in a statement.

Indifi claims to have successfully disbursed over 30,000 loans across more than 12 industries since its inception.

“Indifi deploys a unique and innovative approach to improve access to finance for small businesses, which are an important engine for economic growth in the Indian economy,” Loren Rodwin, Managing Director of Social Enterprise Finance in DFC’s Office of Development Credit said.



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IndusInd Bank promoters’ stake increases marginally

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The shareholding of IndusInd Bank promoters in the private sector lender has increased marginally to 16.56 per cent.

According to a regulatory filing by the bank, promoter stake as a percentage of total voting rights was at 15.2 per cent for the period ended February 18, 2021.

As on December 31, 2020, the stake of the promoters stood at 14.67 per cent. Their shareholding as a percentage of total number of shares of IndusInd International Holdings has risen to 12.62 per cent from 11.24 per cent as on December 31, 2020.

The stake of IndusInd Ltd has increased to 3.94 per cent for the period ended February 18, 2021 from 3.43 per cent at the end of the December 2020 quarter.

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Extreme weather like floods, droughts, cyclones puts $84 billion of Indian banks debt at risk, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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An increase in extreme weather events such as floods, droughts and cyclones risk souring debt worth more than Rs 6.19 lakh crore ($84 billion) at India’s biggest financial institutions.

That’s according to leading nonprofit environmental disclosure platform CDP. State Bank of India, the country’s largest lender, HDFC Bank, IndusInd Bank and Axis Bank are among the institutions that reported climate risks to CDP in 2020, it said in its annual report released Wednesday.

The banks flagged exposure to environmentally sensitive businesses including cement, coal, oil and power. They also listed the effects of cyclones and floods on loan repayments in farming and related sectors. Lenders accounted for 87 per cent of the total risk, valued at about $97 billion, across 67 top Indian companies that responded to CDP.

“Climate is the biggest risk to businesses in the long run. Financial institutions are beginning to understand it,” said Damandeep Singh, New Delhi-based director of CDP India. “As investors look at funding companies based on environmental, social and governance disclosures, we’ve seen many more companies report climate change risk.”

The potential harm to agriculture echoes concerns raised by India’s central bank about the impact of climate change on farming, a sector that employs more than half of its citizens. At the same time, the world’s third-biggest emitter of greenhouse gases is relying on coal to help drive its post-Covid recovery. The dirtiest fossil fuel could remain its dominant energy source in the coming decades.

CDP, which gathered the data on behalf of 515 investors with $106 trillion in assets, said it received responses from 220 small and large Indian companies.

State Bank of India, 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 didn’t respond to a request seeking comment.

The second-highest risk was flagged by HDFC Bank, which estimated it had Rs 1.79 laks crore of assets in danger — a 24 per cent increase from 2019. It said its calculations took into account compensation it would have to pay to employees in case of flooding and its exposure to farming, cement, coal, oil and power.

Smaller private banks IndusInd, Axis and Yes reported lowered climate change risk compared to last year at Rs 46,600 crore, Rs 7,500 crore and Rs 2,000 crore respectively, citing more diversified portfolios.

India was second in the Asia Pacific and sixth globally among CDP’s ranking of countries whose companies committed to science-based targets for net-zero carbon emissions, the report showed. More than 50 Indian companies said they are preparing for future policy and regulatory changes by voluntarily committing to cutting their carbon footprint.

Increased investor pressure and stronger disclosure norms are compelling Indian companies to address climate concerns, the CDP report said. Almost all of companies reported board-level oversight of climate-related issues, while some 84 per cent said climate-related risks and opportunities led them to alter plans for products and services.



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Why IndusInd Bank FD is an attractive short-term choice

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With fixed deposit (FDs) rates ruling at historical lows, investors using bank FDs for regular income or as an avenue to build a risk-free corpus are left with few choices.

In this backdrop, FDs from IndusInd Bank, are worth considering, given their reasonably competitive rates as well as improving financial parameters. At the height of the pandemic, IndusInd was witness to the fallout of the YES Bank crisis and it rubbed off on depositor sentiment, rise in delinquencies and significant moderation in loan growth. With Covid-19 threat beginning to dissipate, the problems at IndusInd are also beginning to disperse. Deposit growth has improved, loan growth is better, gross bad loans (GNPAs) have shrunk and provisioning has picked up. Plus, the recent capital injection from promoters last week is a boost.

Yes, some small finance banks offer better rates than IndusInd. If you already have exposure to small finance banks, considering the bettering financials of IndusInd, you can go for this option. Given the current low rates , investors are better off putting their money in shorter-tenure deposits and hence one-year FDs are a good choice.

Attractive rates

IndusInd Bank offers 6.5 per cent per annum on its one- to two-year tenure. For senior citizens, the rate is 7 per cent, that is, an extra 0.5 percentage points.

For similar one- to two-year deposits, public sector banks offer rates of 4.9-5.4 per cent and most private sector banks offer less than 6.5 per cent. As a thumb rule, senior citizens will get an additional 0.5 percentage points on the card rates from most banks.

Investors are better off putting their money in shorter-tenure deposits. This strategy will help them prevent their money from getting locked in longer tenures, and one can retain the flexibility to hunt for better returns once the rate cycle turns. Hence, one-year FDs of IndusInd Bank are a good option now. You can, of course, opt for deposits of below one year too, but the interest rates on these are lower.

Apart from booking an FD in person at the bank branch, investors can also book one online on the bank’s website. Do note the maximum deposit amount allowed online is ₹ 90,000 using Aadhaar eKYC.

In the event of premature withdrawal before the specified tenure, the interest rate applicable will be the rate corresponding to the withdrawn amount and basis the actual run period.

Improving financials

IndusInd’s bettering financials lend comfort.

The bank’s financial performance across last three quarters shows improvement in various metrics. Deposit growth is up by 8 per cent and 5 per cent, respectively, in the September and December quarters (quarter-on-quarter). Gross non-performing assets (GNPA) has steadily declined from 2.53 per cent in Q1, to 2.21 per cent in Q2 and now to 1.74 per cent in Q3. While proforma gross non-performing loans stands at 2.93 per cent as of December (this is on the lower side compared to other frontline banks), the overall restructuring pool was limited to 1.8 per cent.

The bank has improved Provision Coverage Ratio from 67 per cent in Q1 to 87 per cent in Q3 on reported GNPAs and maintained PCR at 77 per cent even after including proforma NPAs. It added ₹1,100 crore to Covid provisions taking total Covid provisions to ₹3,261 crore, and fully provided for unsecured retail and microfinance loans conservatively.

In Q3, IndusInd has reported improvement in collection efficiency (97 per cent in Dec-20) to near pre-Covid levels across segments. Retail loans are seeing healthy traction (up 5.8 per cent y-o-y), with disbursements in vehicles/micro-finance segment now at pre-Covid levels.

Its capital adequacy ratio including nine months of FY21 profits was at 16.93 per cent as of December 31, 2020 and this got augmented to a comfortable 17.68 per cent, with IndusInd on February 18 raising ₹2,021 crore of common equity capital via conversion of preferential warrants issued to promoter entities.

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Kinara Capital gets $10 mn from IndusInd Bank to further MSME financial inclusion, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Kinara Capital has secured $10 million (Rs 74 crore) from IndusInd Bank with a 100% guaranty from the U.S. International Development Finance Corporation (DFC). This investment to be utilised towards the expansion of MSME financial inclusion across manufacturing, trading, and services sectors in India.

“Our partnership with IndusInd and DFC underscores our shared commitment to ease the credit hurdle faced by most small business entrepreneurs in India. MSMEs galvanise India’s economy with income generation and job creation and there is an ever increasing demand for financing for businesses to rebuild and grow this year. This investment from IndusInd Bank and DFC will accelerate financial inclusion of small businesses, thereby invigorating local economies,” said Hardika Shah, Founder & CEO, Kinara Capital.

The total amount of $10 million investment for onward lending to small business entrepreneurs will be deployed over five years from IndusInd Bank’s Impact Investing division. This three-way partnership between Kinara Capital, IndusInd Bank and DFC unites the organisations’ shared goals to promote entrepreneurship, financial inclusion and job creation.

“We are glad to have associated with DFC to support a strong impact creating entity, Kinara Capital, in their growth trajectory. The guaranty from DFC eliminates foreign exchange rate fluctuation risk from the balance sheet of Kinara and it has become an important tool to mobilise debt funding for impact space companies,” said Roopa Satish, Head, Corporate & Investment Banking, CSR & Sustainable Banking, IndusInd Bank.

“Commitment towards financial inclusion from Kinara Capital has made it possible for us to collaboratively help India’s small business entrepreneurs. We are motivated by the high potential and the high prospects of the diverse MSME sector in India and proud to partner with both IndusInd and Kinara Capital,” said Loren Rodwin, Managing Director, Social Enterprise Finance Team, Office of Development Credit at U.S. International Development Finance Corporation (DFC).



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IndusInd Bank raises ₹2,021cr of common equity capital through conversion of preferential warrants

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IndusInd Bank said it has raised ₹2,021 crore of common equity capital through conversion of preferential warrants issued to the promoter entities – IndusInd International Holdings Limited (IIHL) and IndusInd Limited (IL).

“The warrants were issued as an integral part of the merger with Bharat Financial Inclusion Limited in July 2019,” it said in a statement.

The promoter entities had paid ₹673 crore at the time of subscription to the warrants and the balance amount of ₹2021 crore was paid on Thursday.

The finance committee of the bank on Thursday approved allotment of 1.57 crore shares to the promoter entities. “The warrants are converted at a price of ₹1,709 per share reflecting a premium of 65 per cent over the closing price on February 17, 2021,” the bank said.

The Capital Adequacy Ratio of the bank will be further augmented to about 17.68 per cent with this capital raise. It stood at 16.93 per cent as of December 31, 2020 including the profits for the nine months of the current fiscal.

“With this capital raise and continued economic recovery, the bank is well positioned to execute our strategy of ‘Scale with Sustainability’,” said Sumant Kathpalia, Managing Director and CEO of IndusInd Bank.

Together with the current warrants conversion, the bank has raised ₹5,309 crore of equity capital during the current fiscal.

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IndusInd pays premium to redeem warrants

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Market regulator Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) had given them time till February 18, 2021, to make the remaining payment.

The promoters of IndusInd Bank are paying Rs 1,709 per share to redeem warrants, a premium of 65% to Wednesday’s closing price.

lnduslnd International Holdings (IIHL), the promoter entity, had paid Rs 673.82 crore for the warrants or 25% of the total price.

Market regulator Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) had given them time till February 18, 2021, to make the remaining payment.

Post the conversion of the warrants into shares, the promoter holding will increase by 1.7% to about 15%, the company said.

Analysts point out the lender needs capital and believe much of the Rs 2,021 crore would be used for provisioning against sub-standard assets. The gross npas (non-performing assets) at the end of the December 2020 quarter at 1.74% were lower than in the September 2020 quarter.

However, the pro forma gross NPAs were 2.93% as the bank has not declared fresh NPAs following the Supreme Court’s orders. Consequently, the lender increased provisions and contingencies for the nine months to December by 175% to Rs 6,077 crore. For this period, the bank’s net profits fell 52% year-on-year (y-o-y) to Rs 2,004 crore. The company’s capital adequacy ratio at the end of December 2020 was 16.34%, slightly lower than the 16.55% at the end of the September 2020 quarter. The IndusInd stock has lost 32% since the time the warrants were issued in July, 2019.

IIHL said it has raised debt by pledging some shareholding of lnduslnd Bank for acquisition/strategic investment to convert IIHL into a listed operating entity outside India by the first week of September 2021.The promoters of IndusInd Bank have pledged 4.27 crore shares, amounting to a 5.6% stake in the bank.

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IndusInd Bank promoters complete capital raise

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lnduslnd International Holdings Ltd (IIHL), the promoter company of lnduslnd Bank, said it has completed its capital-raise through a rights issue, which was oversubscribed.

“IIHL raised capital at an overwhelming premium of 1,400 per cent towards the subscription of this rights issue,” it said in a statement. This reiterates the confidence of IIHL’s global shareholders in the decision of IIHL and its subsidiary, IndusInd Limited, to redeem the balance of 75 per cent of the warrants at the price of ₹1,709 per share, amounting to ₹2,021.45 crore, the statement added.

Further, to support the redemption of warrants, IIHL has decided to monetise some of the other mature, non-core investments.

The funds from this divestment and the rights issue will be remitted on or before February 18, it said.

Previously in July 2019, 25 per cent of the warrants were subscribed on payment of ₹ 673.8 crore.

“This would lead to IIHL shoring up additional equity of 1.7 per cent in lnduslnd Bank, thereby bringing promoter equity to 15 per cent on a diluted basis,” it said.

The Board of IIHL has always been desirous of increasing its stake in lnduslnd Bank to 26 per cent, the statement further said.

“Towards this, it has raised the debt by pledging some shareholding of lnduslnd Bank for acquisition or strategic investment to convert IIHL into a listed operating entity outside India by the first week of September 2021,” it said.

Meanwhile, according to a regulatory filing on February 16, the promoters of IndusInd Bank have pledged 4.27 crore shares, amounting to 5.6 per cent stake, with Catalyst Trusteeship Ltd.

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