Centrum Broking , BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Centrum Broking has add call on Ujjivan Small Finance Bank with a target price of Rs 31. The current market price of Ujjivan Small Finance Bank Ltd. is Rs 25.9.

Time period given by analyst is one year when Ujjivan Small Finance Bank Ltd. price can reach defined target. .
Ujjivan Small Finance Bank Ltd., incorporated in the year 2016, is a banking company (having a market cap of Rs 4484.98 Crore).

Financials
For the quarter ended 30-06-2021, the company reported a Standalone Total Income of Rs 716.29 Crore, down -2.56 % from last quarter Total Income of Rs 735.14 Crore and down -7.57 % from last year same quarter Total Income of Rs 774.98 Crore. The bank reported net profit after tax of Rs -233.47 Crore in latest quarter.

Investment Rationale
Provision spike could impact FY22 PAT by 76% while overall stress accretion would lower FY22/23 ABV by 20%/13%. MFI/MSE loan exposure at 80% is affecting Ujjivan, leading to rise in delinquencies and protracted recoveries. Lower multiple to 1.8x FY23ABV (earlier 2.1x), revise TP to Rs31 from Rs42. Change rating from BUY to ADD. Risks: higher provisions.

Promoter/FII Holdings
Promoters held 83.3 per cent stake in the company as of June 30, 2020, while FIIs held 5.1 per cent, DIIs 4.2 per cent and public and others 7.3 per cent.

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A sizzling rally lures HDFC Bank to do more equity deals

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A hot equity market in India is prompting HDFC Bank Ltd. to try to muscle in on the action as companies raise record levels of funding.

The government has flooded the market with money in response to one of the world’s worst outbreaks of coronavirus, pushing stocks to dizzying levels and helping companies to boost capital buffers. Despite being India’s most valuable lender, HDFC Bank so far hasn’t been able to exploit its strong balance sheet to make inroads into this competitive market.

“We will do whatever it takes to reach there – hire more people, grow more people from inside and even enter into partnerships,” Rakesh Singh, group head of investment banking, private banking, marketing and products at HDFC Bank, said in an interview. “As we build our distribution network a larger share of the equity capital market deals will come our way.”

Also read: Indian shares open lower ahead of GDP data

It may be easier said than done for a relatively late starter like HDFC Bank to grab a bigger share of the market as it grapples with uncertainty over its asset quality. The country’s second-largest lender will have to fight it out with veteran local players including ICICI Bank Ltd., Axis Bank Ltd. and State Bank of India.

HDFC Bank has lagged in recent years as it focused on its fast-growing core business of lending and deposits rather than investment banking. The Mumbai-based company ranked number 16 for overall equity deals business last year, and number 29 in 2019, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Also read: Markets may open flat as bulls likely to take a breather

“It’s a cut-throat market where big corporates prefer to work with dominant and well-established bankers with existing relationships who can offer them the best pricing,” said Siddharth Purohit, an analyst at SMC Global Securities Ltd. “Unless HDFC Bank offers something really attractive it will not be easy for them to grow this business quickly and get the big-ticket deals.”

India’s stocks have extended their climb, reflecting investor optimism that the economy will rebound strongly from devastation caused by the coronavirus. The benchmark index was up 0.7 per cent on Monday, close to its record high in February.

Companies raised ₹789 billion ($10.9 billion) so far this year through the equity markets, a 9.3 per cent increase from last year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. That’s after an unprecedented ₹2.2 trillion of deals in 2020.

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Archegos and how it impacts markets and investors

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What is Archegos and who is Bill Hwang?

Archegos Capital Management (Archegos) is a US based private family office founded by Bill Hwang. A family office is a private asset management/advisory firm that is set up to manage the private wealth of individuals.

Archegos was originally a hedge fund called Tiger Asia, founded in 2001 by Bill Hwang. He was earlier an employee of Tiger Management (closed in 2000) founded by legendary fund manager and billionaire – Julian Robertson. Post-closing of his hedge fund, Julian Robertson funded/ seeded many hedge funds (including Tiger Asia) founded by his former employees. Many of these have become very successful – the most famous and successful amongst them being tech focussed Hedge Fund, Tiger Global, with AUM of around $50 billion. The many funds founded by former employees of Julian Robertson, came to be known as the ‘Tiger Cubs’, akin to the ‘Paypal Mafia’ that refers to former employees of Paypal who moved on to founding many successful companies like Tesla, Linkedin, Palantir etc.

In 2012, after pleading guilty to wire fraud (insider trading charges), Bill Hwang returned the investors’ money with Tiger Asia back to its investors and converted it into Archegos to exclusively manage his private family money. According to unconfirmed reports, between 2012 till the recent implosion of his fund, he had grown initial wealth of the family office of $200 million, into $10 billion!

What triggered the implosion of Archegos?

It’s the same story again– unravelling of excessive leverage and murky financial instruments – whether it was Long Term Capital Management going bust in 1998 that caused global jitters, Wall Street banks and hedge funds going bust in 2007/08 that caused the great recession or Archegos.

Being a private family office that was trading/investing personal money, Archegos was not subject to higher disclosure requirements that Hedge Funds and Asset Management Companies dealing with public money had to confirm with. Also since it was dealing primarily in instruments such as swaps and contract for differences (cfd) in the direct over the counter (OTC) derivatives segment with Wall Street banks (outside of exchanges), its transactions were behind closed doors. These complex derivative instruments allowed Archegos to make high leveraged bets in many shares by paying only margin money. This way, Archegos profited substantially when the positions moved favourably. Otherwise, it settled with higher margin in case of unfavourable movement. With Archegos dealing with numerous Wall Street banks via these OTC derivatives, no one possibly could have had an exact account of its cumulative leverage or concentrated exposure to few stocks except Archegos itself. According to reports in the public domain, Archegos leverage was as high as 8x to 20 x with some of the banks!

What actually happened on Friday, March 26?

Everything works perfectly till it suddenly stops working. A seemingly great wealth creation success story over 8 years, came to dust in just a week. While the seeds of destruction were sowed in the form of excessive leverage, the trigger for the unravelling was a planned share offering announced on March 22 by media conglomerate ViacomCBS to fund investments in its streaming business. The offering which would have resulted in around 5 per cent dilution was not well received by the markets and the stock started correcting post this announcement. Prior to this announcement ViacomCBS had an unusual run up of around 175 per cent year to date. In hindsight, it appears this was due to outsized long positions amassed via OTC derivatives by Archegos. The correction in ViacomCBS stock triggered margin calls on Archegos positions which could not be met, resulting in forced liquidation of Archegos positions in this and another media conglomerate – Discovery, besides few other tech stocks and Chinese ADRs.

According to reports in the public domain, Wall Street banks had met and discussed if they could try alternatives other than forced liquidation. But soon after the meeting ended, the Wall Street maxim ‘If you need a friend, get a dog’ came to fore. By Friday morning, it was each bank fending for itself. With Archegos’ positions possibly around $50 billion (according to some estimates) with just around $10 billion in capital, Wall Street banks had to resort to game theory and not co-operation to protect their capital. Goldman Sachs and Deutsche Bank appear to have come out relatively unscathed while Morgan Stanley has had some impact. Credit Suisse and Nomura bore the brunt.

What is the implication of this event for markets?

The fundamental implications of this event are many – transactions with just one client in one geography is expected to wipe off the entire second half year profits of global investment bank Nomura (losses expected around $2 billion). If market sources on loss at Credit Suisse are to be believed, at the higher end of estimates, Archegos driven losses may be close to 2 times Credit Suisse’s entire FY 2020 profits of around $2.85 billion. If banks have been lax with risk management with just one client, a fear arises on whether things are in order with other clients.

Although markets may have brushed of this event under the assumption that this implosion is contained, it is reflective of symptoms of exuberance the markets has been exuding since the covid lows last year. Such lack of caution to factor potential hidden risks in the system may come back to haunt later.

Hence the implications from this event for markets may come in the form of tighter controls in risk management, clampdown in excessive lending and use of murky derivatives. All of these may take away the sheen of recent market exuberance. If corrective steps are not taken now, there may be another event in future that may turn out to be contagious to financial markets and negatively impact asset valuations, including equities.

What is the implication for Indian investors?

India may not face Archegos style events given equity AIFs (Hedge Funds) penetration is relatively low vs market size and we do not have the extensive and complex OTC equity derivatives like in the US. However, one should keep in mind that whenever the US sneezes, the rest of the world including India catches a cold. Whether it was the dotcom boom of 2000 or subprime housing boom of 2007 – both of which were US centric events – India also faced collateral damage when those bubbles burst. Our indices corrected by over 50 per cent from peak, and economic growth was also impacted sharply. Hence, we must always be alert to possibilities of a spill over effect.

Besides that, Indian markets in FY21, received unprecedented FPI investments of over Rs 2.7 lakh crore (most of it in 2H) which is 5 times the highest flows received in last 5 years prior to this . Market buoyancy can be directly attributed to this. Any clampdown on risk taking or increase in margin requirements by foreign brokerages post recent events, may impact these flows and consequently, the markets.

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India to propose cryptocurrency ban: senior official

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India will propose a law banning cryptocurrencies, fining anyone trading in the country or even holding such digital assets, a senior government official told Reuters, in a potential blow to millions of investors piling into the red-hot asset class.

The Bill, one of the world’s strictest policies against cryptocurrencies, would criminalise possession, issuance, mining, trading and transferring crypto-assets, said the official, who has direct knowledge of the plan.

The measure is in line with a January government agenda that called for banning private virtual currencies such as bitcoin while building a framework for an official digital currency. But recent government comments had raised investors’ hopes that the authorities might go easier on the booming market.

Bitcoin jumps to all-time high as cryptocurrency fever continues

Instead, the Bill would give holders of cryptocurrencies up to six months to liquidate, after which penalties will be levied, said the official, who asked not to be named as the contents of the Bill are not public.

Officials are confident of getting the Bill enacted into law as Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government holds a comfortable majority in Parliament.

If the ban becomes law, India would be the first major economy to make holding cryptocurrency illegal. Even China,which has banned mining and trading, does not penalise possession.

The Finance Ministry did not immediately respond to an email seeking comment.

‘Greed over panic’

Bitcoin, the world’s biggest cryptocurrency, hit a record high $60,000 on Saturday, nearly doubling in value this year as its acceptance for payments has increased with support from such high-profile backers as Tesla Inc CEO Elon Musk.

Cryptocurrency surge may continue, but regulatory uncertainties create bottlenecks

In India, despite government threats of a ban, transaction volumes are swelling and 8 million investors now hold 100 billion rupees ($1.4 billion) in crypto-investments, according to industry estimates. No official data is available.

“The money is multiplying rapidly every month and you don’t want to be sitting on the sidelines,” said Sumnesh Salodkar, a crypto-investor. “Even though people are panicking due to the potential ban, greed is driving these choices.”

User registrations and money inflows at local crypto-exchange Bitbns are up 30-fold from a year ago, said Gaurav Dahake, its chief executive. Unocoin, one of India’s oldest exchanges, added 20,000 users in January and February, despite worries of a ban.

ZebPay “did as much volume per day in February 2021 as we did in all of February 2020,” said Vikram Rangala, the exchange’s chief marketing officer.

Promoting blockchain

Top Indian officials have called cryptocurrency a “Ponzi scheme”, but Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman this month eased some investor concerns.

“I can only give you this clue that we are not closing our minds, we are looking at ways in which experiments can happen in the digital world and cryptocurrency,” she told CNBC-TV18. “There will be a very calibrated position taken.”

The senior official told Reuters, however, that the plan is to ban private crypto-assets while promoting blockchain — a secure database technology that is the backbone for virtual currencies but also a system that experts say could revolutionise international transactions.

“We don’t have a problem with technology. There’s no harm in harnessing the technology,” said the official, adding the government’s moves would be “calibrated” in the extent of the penalties on those who did not liquidate crypto-assets within the law’s grace period.

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‘Markets relying on RBI to support FY22 borrowing calendar’

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Amandeep Chopra, group president and head of fixed income, UTI AMC,

The rate cycle bottomed out last year but without the central bank changing its accommodative stance. This is the new normal. Amandeep Chopra, group president and head of fixed income, UTI AMC, in an interview with FE’s Urvashi Valecha and Malini Bhupta, explains why the higher-than-expected fiscal deficit has created concerns among market participants. Excerpts:

The government borrowing programme for the next fiscal at Rs 12 lakh crore is huge. Will the markets be able to absorb this?

The Budget has targeted growth with a strong fiscal stimulus. The fiscal deficit for FY21-22 (BE — 6.8%) is much higher than the market expectation of around 5.5%, which has created concerns among market participants. There doesn’t seem to be that level of demand among local investors. Presently, it’s unlikely that FPIs will create additional demand in FY22. This has already led to the yield curve shifting up. The market has been able to absorb gross borrowings of around `11.6 trillion so far in FY20-21 only with the help of RBI. Hence, the markets are relying on the central bank to support the borrowing calendar next year as well.

RBI’s decision to withdraw liquidity saw the yields spike. What is the yield curve suggesting? Will a calibrated withdrawal of liquidity work without a sharp reaction from the market?

The RBI has given a calibrated schedule to withdraw liquidity, which will align the short-term rates with the operative rate (reverse repo). The excess liquidity was leading to the 3-month rates trading at levels well below the reverse repo and creating an aberration in the short-term yield curve.

When do you see the rate cycle turn? Economists are suggesting that withdrawal of liquidity is a sign of rate cycle turning. Your view.

The global economic outlook has improved significantly over 2020 with most of the lead indicators rising. The benefits of a fast roll-out of vaccination have further improved this outlook and market sentiments. The combination of aggressive fiscal stimulus and central bank easing could lead to some inflationary fears as well. This has led to a generalised rise in global bond yields anticipating withdrawal of accommodation by the Fed and other central banks.

For India, we have been saying for some time now that do not expect further easing by the RBI and the rate cycle seems to have bottomed out. We have a few quarters before we see RBI starting to raise policy rates as normalcy returns to pre-pandemic levels across sectors. Given the current circumstances, how can bond investors play the debt markets?

I would not recommend the investors to play the markets during these evolving times. We recommend staying true to your asset-allocation for investing for long-term goals. The debt fund portfolios could be shuffled towards the shorter-duration funds if the investment horizon is less than three years.

From January 1, Sebi mandate on categorising the risks of MFs came into the picture. Has that had an impact on the flows into debt MFs, have retail inflows into debt funds become erratic?

Sebi reviewed the guidelines for product labels in MFs based on the recommendation of the Mutual Fund Advisory Committee (MFAC) and modified the ‘Risk-o-meter’ to depict six levels of risk.

With its implementation, each scheme was assigned a risk level and going forward the majority of the schemes are expected to settle down within one particular risk level, providing the investors with a relative framework on risk across schemes and categories.

Debt funds in January have seen outflows worth Rs 33,408.76 crore. Is this expected to continue?

The outflows in debt funds for January can primarily be attributed to outflows in the liquid fund categories to the tune of `45,315 crore. As a whole, debt funds have seen strong inflows to the tune of Rs 2,81,400 crore this financial year and I expect the trend to continue.

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U GRO Capital launches GRO Micro, adds 25 branches

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U GRO Capital has launched a dedicated distribution channel called GRO Micro to help lending services for the unorganised micro businesses in non-metro markets.

It has expanded its distribution network by adding 25 branches across five States — Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, Gujarat, Telangana and Rajasthan.

U GRO Capital sees disbursements at pre-Covid-19 level

Shachindra Nath, Executive Chairman and Managing Director, U GRO Capital, said the company aims to reach over five lakh small businesses across these five States through the launch of GRO Micro.

Covid-19 lockdowns: How much did the unorganised sector lose?

“We intend to carry our experience from these locations and expand our network by a further 75 branches by the end of 2021-22,” he further said.

Small-ticket loans

“The company aims to offer small-ticket loans secured against property, as well as unsecured loans, to micro businesses to help them in sustenance and stability in the post-pandemic era, meet their working capital needs to fix broken cash flows and cater to their business expansion needs,” it said in a statement.

With GRO Micro, U GRO Capital now has an extensive network of 34 branches and presence in eight States across the country.

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