Large corporates no longer borrowing engine for banks as retail borrowing rises, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The dominance of large corporate accounts in banks’ loan portfolio that lasted until 2014 has shrunk, giving way for retail borrowing to rise, according to a study by the Reserve Bank of India.

An analysis of the sectoral composition of non-food credit by a team of RBI economists reveals that the share of the industrial sector in overall non-food credit offtake, which stood at over 45% in 2013-14, declined to around 30% by 2020-21.

Over the years, retail and services sector loans have gained more prominence.

Capital investment shrinking

Capital investment by private companies could slide this financial year as well, after shrinking in the previous year due to COVID-19 lockdowns, a central bank forecast shows.

A study of the phasing profile, i.e., stage wise implementation over three or four years, of planned capex of pipeline projects could shrink 27% on year to Rs 68,469 crore. The phasing profile of the capital expenditure based on the pipeline of sanctioned projects in the previous years indicates a decline from Rs 94,227 crore in 2020-21 to Rs 68,469 crore.

The pandemic impacted adversely appetite for new projects during 2020-21, and also posed impediments to timely completion of projects in the pipeline, the RBI said.

The regulator assessed that a total capex of Rs 1.60 lakh crore would be incurred by the private corporate sector in FY21, translating into a sharp dip of 30% from the previous year.

Retail going strong

The outstanding retail loans are higher at Rs 28.6 lakh crore against Rs 28.2 lakh crore for industry that includes MSMEs and large corporates at the end of July. The outstanding loans to the services sector stand at Rs 26 lakh crore.

The growth rate of the retail/personal loans segment stood at 11.2% in July 2021, higher by 220 basis points when compared with July 2020.

In absolute terms, credit outstanding has increased from Rs 25.7 lakh crore in July 2020 to Rs 28.6 lakh crore in July 2021.

The growth in retail loans has been driven by personal unsecured, vehicle loans and gold loan lending by some banks. The growth rate came in higher by 120 bps as compared with March 2021.

Industry loans

The industry segment witnessed a growth of 1% on a year-on-year basis in July 2021, after witnessing a de-growth in previous month. Large industries account for 80.5% share (83.8% share in July 2020) in the total outstanding credit to industries, and this segment reported a drop of 2.9% in July 2021 versus a growth of 1.4% in July 2020.

The growth movement is weak as corporates continue to de-leverage and select large corporates access to bond markets. MSME industries grew by 21.3% in July 2021, which partially offset the fall in large segments, compared with a drop of 1.8% in July 2020. The growth in lending to industry and services was almost entirely led by the MSME segment, which was driven by disbursements under ECLGS scheme, wherein Rs 2.14 lakh crore were disbursed up till date.

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Kotak Mahindra Bank cuts home loan interest rate to 6.5% for 60 days, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Kotak Mahindra Bank has cut its interest rate on home loans to 6.50% from 6.65% per annum, starting from Friday till November 8.

The bank is offering these rates in view of the upcoming festive period. These rates will be prevalent for both fresh home loans and balance transfers, and will be available across all loans amounts and is linked to a borrower’s credit profile.

The bank’s home loan rates are linked to an external benchmark, that is the Reserve Bank of India’s policy repo rate of 4%

With Kotak Digi Home Loans, home loan applicants can apply and receive an instant in-principle sanction letter, loan amount eligibility, tenure of the loan, interest rate and EMI in an end-to-end contactless process.
Following are the features of the home loans:
> Starting at 6.50% per annum, on fresh home loans and balance transfer loans
> Attractive rates for both salaried and self-employed customer segments
> Instant in-principle sanction with Kotak Digi Home LoansConsumers can also apply through Kotak’s bank branches across India. The bank’s home loans are available across over 100 cities and towns in India. Existing Kotak customers can also apply through the Kotak mobile banking app or net banking.



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Mudra loan ratio trebles to 20% during pandemic as stress hits small businesses, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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A man displays new 2000 Indian rupee banknotes after withdrawing them from a State Bank of India (SBI) branch in Kolkata, India, November 10, 2016. REUTERS/Rupak De Chowdhuri/Files

Gross NPAs in the Mudra loan book is estimated to have reached around 20 per cent at June-end 2021, from around 6 per cent at March-end 2020.

As the stress builds up in the economy due to pandemic, lenders are seeing a sharp uptick in NPAs in Mudra loans, which have trebled in June 2021 over the pre-Covid fiscal of 2019-20.

Gross NPAs in the Mudra loan book is estimated to have reached around 20 per cent at June-end 2021, from around 6 per cent at March-end 2020.

In Maharashtra, public sector banks’ Mudra loan NPAs have risen to 32 per cent at June-end 2021, from 26 per cent at June-end 2020.

SBI’s NPA on Mudra loans in the state is at 59 per cent as on June-end 2021 followed by Punjab National Bank at 44 per cent, Indian Bank at 33 per cent and Bank of Maharashtra at 31 per cent at June-end 2021.

In Jharkahnd, Canara Bank Mudra NPAs as high as 114.35 per cent as bad loans were Rs 183.63 crore against the outstanding amount of loans at Rs 160.58 crore.

Among private sector banks, HDFC Bank’s Mudra loan NPA in Jharkhand was at 26.21 per cent, followed by IDFC First Bank at 24.93 per cent.

The Credit Guarantee Fund for Micro Units (CGFMU) provides guarantee against loan losses in Mudra loans, but 75 per cent of NPAs in Mudra loans, while the rest of losses have to be borne by the banks.

Loan losses

Public sector banks (PSBs) have seen a sharp surge in the amount of Mudra loans turning into non-performing assets (NPAs) over the last three years. NPAs in Mudra loans had jumped to Rs 18,835 crore in 2019-20, from Rs 11,483 crore in 2018-19 and Rs 7,277 in 2017-18, according to the Finance Ministry data.

Mudra loan disbursements by state-owned banks rose to Rs 3.82 lakh crore in 2019-20, from Rs 3.05 lakh crore in 2018-19 and Rs 2.12 lakh crore in 2017-18. The Mudra loan NPAs as a percentage of total loans rose to 4.92 per cent in 2019-20 from 3.42 per cent in 2017-18.

Banks and financial institutions have sanctioned Rs 14.96 lakh crore to over 28.68 crore beneficiaries in the last six years. The average ticket size of the loans is about Rs 52,000, it said.

Under PMMY collateral-free loans of up to ₹10 Lakh are extended by Member Lending Institutions (MLIs) viz Scheduled Commercial Banks, Regional Rural Banks (RRBs), Small Finance Banks (SFBs), Non-Banking Financial Companies (NBFCs), Micro Finance Institutions (MFIs) etc.

The scheme

Under the scheme, credit up to Rs 10 lakh is provided by banks and non-banking financial companies to small and new businesses.

The loans are given for income generating activities in manufacturing, trading and services sectors and for activities allied to agriculture.

The government has sanctioned loans of Rs 15.5 lakh crore under PMMY since its inception in April 2015.

Till March 31, 2021, the Government had sanctioned 29.55 crore loans under the scheme. Of this more than 6.8 crore loans worth Rs 5.2 lakh crores have been given to new entrepreneurs.

For FY22, loans worth Rs 3,804 crore have been sanctioned by 13 public sector banks (PSBs) as on June 25.



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India Ratings retains overall negative outlook for microfinance institutions, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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FILE PHOTO: A customer hands Indian currency notes to an attendant at a fuel station in Mumbai, India, August 13, 2018. REUTERS/Francis Mascarenhas

India Ratings and Research has maintained an overall negative outlook on the microfinance sector for the second half of the current financial year due to liquidity concerns in small and mid non-bank microfinance institutions, which could lead to a constraint in their disbursements.

The ratings agency retained a stable outlook for the large and strong sponsor-backed microfinance institutions, while small and mid non-bank microfinance institutions, including those with over 50% of assets under management in microfinance, were on a negative outlook rating.

Liquidity constraints of small and mid-sized companies could have a larger impact on Kerala and West Bengal, while harmonisation guidelines, government guaranteed loans, mechanism of Assam debt waiver and equity raise by some of these companies in the second half of the year could support sentiment in the near term.

According to the agency, microfinance institutions can be categorised as per their funding access. For most large companies, bank funding lines could continue and they may not face immediate liquidity stress. However, small and mid-size companies would need to conserve their liquidity, which could to a lag in their performance.

“The lower rated (BBB and below category) entities have witnessed a rising trend in incremental cost of borrowing which is not the case with large entities. If they are able to get a disproportionate share in government guarantee backed loans, it could help them in funding cost,” the agency said in its report.

Credit costs for microfinance institutions are likely to be in the range of 5%-10% this financial year, depending on their size and scale, access to liquidity, that is the ability to continue to disburse, and geographic concentration, the ratings agency said.

India Ratings also noted the recovery efforts taken by microfinance institutions. The collection efficiency improved over July-August 2021 from June 2021, given that around 70% of the borrowers were in the essential goods and services segments. The current collection efficiency at the end of June lagged behind March levels by 15%-20%, according to the agency.



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China urges banks to be flexible with loans for some home buyers, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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BEIJING, Sept 7 – China‘s banking watchdog said on Tuesday that banks ought to offer financial support for home buyers with so-called “rigid” demand, referring to purchasing or renting from those recently married or seeking low-cost housing.

Banks should implement differentiated mortgage polices and down-payment requirements, the China Banking and Insurance Regulatory Commission (CBIRC) said in a statement, avoiding inflexible rules that penalise non-speculative, legitimate home buyers.

Speculators have stoked Chinese real estate prices in recent years, prompting authorities to roll out restrictions including curbs on borrowing, seeking to control a build-up in financial risks in the property sector.

The curbs have slowed property purchases while some developers have been hit hard by a squeeze in liquidity.

Overall, bank loans in the real estate sector have continued to slow, CBIRC said in the statement.

Sector-wide growth of property loans hit its lowest pace in eight months, while the outstanding size of banks’ investment in the sector via special vehicles fell for the 18th straight month, it said.

As of end-July, individual mortgages for first-home purchases accounted for 92% of banks’ total mortgage loans, while outstanding loans used to rent homes rose 29% from a year earlier, the CBIRC said. (Reporting by Cheng Leng, Zhang Yan and Ryan Woo;)



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Orange Retail Finance eyes to disburse loans worth ₹1,000 crore

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Orange Retail Finance, a rural-focussed non-banking finance company, aims to disburse loans of about ₹1,000 crore over the next two years amid signs of economic recovery and pent-up demand for credit in the rural economy.

“Over the last eight years, we have disbursed loans worth ₹900 crore. Our current AUM is at ₹400 crore. In the next two years, we are planning to disburse about ₹1,000 crore in two-wheeler loans and loan against property (LAP),” said Ebenezer Daniel G, Founder, MD & CEO, Orange Retail Finance India Private Limited.

Affordable financial solutions

Started in 2013, the Chennai-based NBFC is focused on providing affordable mobility and livelihood finance solutions to semi-urban and rural India. Currently, the company has over 100 branches across the five southern States covering over 10,000 villages with a base of 1.45 lakh customers.

“Two-wheeler loans are our core product. Every year, rural two-wheeler growth is around 10-15 per cent while urban market growth is almost saturated,” Daniel said, adding, “There is growth in the rural segment because two-wheeler is a livelihood asset, and we can survive by creating an impact in this market.”

Currently, 80 percent of Orange Retail Finance’s loan portfolio comprises two-wheeler loans followed by swift cash loans (10 per cent) and LAP (5-10 per cent). In the next two years, the company plans to increase the share of LAP and swift cash loans to 25 per cent and 20 percent of the loan book, respectively.

Mobile app

The company recently launched ‘Orange Finmobi’, a mobile app where a customer can manage the end-to-end process of two-wheeler purchase including loan application, vehicle selection, RTO registration, EMI mandate and home delivery of vehicle.

“During the first Covid wave when the lockdown was in place for six months, over 22,000 of our cash mode customers migrated to digital payments using QR codes,” Daniel said. “Digitalisation is one of the key reasons for our survival. Now, we want to scale up in a big way using the digital infrastructure.”

The company also sees a big growth opportunity in electric two-wheeler financing.

“We have signed up with Hero Electric as a preferred financier and in the final stage of signing an MoU with Ola as a preferred financier for south India. We are also having discussions with TVS, Bajaj and Ather for a tie up,” Daniel said.

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Will not haul up RBI for declaring loans as NPAs, says Apex Court

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“Economy is booming in the country after the second Covid wave,” said the Supreme Court on Friday as it refused to entertain a batch of pleas seeking contempt action against the Governor of Reserve Bank of India and senior officials of other banks for declaring loan accounts as Non-Performing Assets (NPA).

The top court said that contempt is between court and contemnor and it is not inclined to initiate contempt action against senior officials of banks.

“In our considered view, we are not inclined to exercise our contempt jurisdiction, since it is not in the interest of justice,” said a bench of Justices DY Chandrachud, Vikram Nath and Hima Kohli.

The bench said that petitioners are at liberty to seek remedy under the Securitisation and Reconstruction of Financial Assets and Enforcement of Security Interest Act (Sarfaesi Act), 2002.

Advocate Vishal Tiwari, appearing in a batch of petitions said that despite the top court’s order of September 3, 2020 that the accounts which were not declared NPA till August 31, 2020 shall not be declared NPA till further orders, banks unilaterally declared the accounts as NPA under the Act.

‘Not going to haul up RBI’

At the outset, the bench said, “Economy is booming in the country after the second Covid wave. That’s what we have read in newspapers. Since the second wave, when these orders were passed, a lot of development has taken place. We are not going to haul up the RBI for this. Contempt is between court and the contemnor”.

Tiwari said that RBI has itself issued a notice in March, last year after the nationwide lockdown granting moratorium from paying the instalment for loan.

‘Several petitions’

Several traders have moved the top court against declaration of their account as NPA by the banks and seeking contempt action against the senior officials of the banks. One of the pleas, filed by Ajay Hotel and Restaurants through its proprietor has contended that it was availing various credit facilities by way of financial assistance against various assets creating security interest in favour of the State Bank of India and timely payment of the instalments of the loan were made and its Account was not turned NPA till August 31, 2020.

“That on May 18, 2021 the State Bank of India (R-3) issued a demand notice under section 13 (2) of the Sarfaesi Act, 2002 to the petitioner demanding the Amount…as on May 18, 2021 inclusive of interest”, the plea said.

It added that the bank had unilaterally classified the petitioner as NPA on November 30, 2020 and no show cause notice was given. The plea said that despite the express order of the top court on September 3, 2020, the banks continued to proceed under provisions of the Act.

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Axis Bank joins green finance rush with first ESG bonds in India, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Axis Bank has raised $600 million from offshore investors by selling sustainable additional tier-1 (AT1) bonds at a coupon of 4.1 per cent said.

The bank will be using the proceeds towards eligible green and social project categories, as per the term sheet. The bonds will be listed on bourses, including NSE IFSC and India INX IFSC.

The lender launched the issue of the perpetual bonds earlier in the day with the initial pricing guidance at 4.4 per cent, looking to raise up to USD 1 billion.

Axis Bank raised USD 600 million from its GIFT City branch. The issue saw the order book peaking at USD 2.3 billion, as per the sources.

The major investors in the issue included Bluebay, Blackrock, Fidelity and HSBC Asset Management Company, they said.

This was only the third environment, social and governanc-themed bond issue by any lender globally and the first one in India.

The Axis Bank bonds were rated Baa3 (negative) by Moody’s Investors Service, BB+ (stable) by Standard & Poor’s and BB+ (negative) by Fitch Ratings.

HSBC deposits

Last month UK-based Hong Kong and Shanghai Banking Corp (HSBC) has raised $400 million of green deposits in India and identified financing opportunities to use those funds. Under its strategy, the bank first finds avenues to finance before raising the resources. The loans are extended for renewable projects, biodiversity linked initiatives, clean transportation and pollution control. Once the loans are sanctioned they are matched with deposits.

HDFC issue

HDFC, India’s largest private-sector mortgage financier, too announced last month the launch of a new green deposit plan to attract environmentally conscious depositors.

The company plans to raise these deposits from individuals to lend to projects by retail borrowers.

It plans to use these funds to lend to standalone homes which use environment-friendly practices, like putting up solar panels and water recycling, or even to women borrowers or self-help groups.

AT1 bonds

The bank is the third lender in quick succession to raise money from the AT1 route after HDFC Bank raised USD 1 billion from overseas investors last month, and SBI raised Rs 4,000 crore earlier in the day from domestic investors.
The AT1 capital instrument had received a setback after Yes Bank’s investors lost over Rs 8,400 crore of bets after a write-off in the RBI-led bailout.



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