Global banks move some India operations overseas, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Global banks are feeling the coronavirus heat in India.

With several employees or their kin down with Covid, Wall Street banks with centres in top metros including Bengaluru, Mumbai, Pune and Gurgaon, are moving some work to overseas locations.

About 200 employees at HSBC’s tech centre in Bengaluru are affected due to Covid, and its centres in China and Krakow have picked up work from Bengaluru.

Deutsche Bank, with 4,000 employees in Bengaluru and Pune, said it does not expect the pandemic to disrupt its operations as it has all the contingency plans in place.

Standard Chartered said last week that about 800 of its 20,000 staffers in India were infected. As many as 25% of employees in some teams at UBS are absent.

Wells Fargo

At Wells Fargo & Co’s offices in Bangalore and Hyderabad, work on co-branded cards, balance transfers and reward programs is running behind schedule. Some work is getting transferred to the Philippines, where staff is working overnight shifts to pick up the slack. The San Francisco-based bank employs about 35,000 workers in India to help process car, home and personal loans, make collections, and assist customers who need to open, update or close their bank accounts.

Wall Street giant Morgan Stanley, which has 6,000 employees in Mumbai and Bengaluru, said a small percentage of its staff

have been impacted due to the pandemic, though it is operating in a business-as-usual mode.

Goldman Sachs

Goldman Sachs’s Bengaluru centre which has over 6,000 employees across all the businesses, had close to a 48-hour impact as some of its employees were affected by Covid.

But the work was picked up by Salt Lake City in Utah that makes up the second-largest presence in North America. Work from India moved to London too in those 48 hours.

At UBS, with many of the bank’s 8,000 staff in Mumbai, Pune and Hyderabad absent, work is being shipped to centres such as Poland. The Swiss bank’s workers in India handle trade settlement, transaction reporting, investment banking support and wealth management. Many of the tasks require same-day or next-day turnarounds.

Barclays Plc is shifting some functions were shifted to the UK from India.

Citigroup Inc said there’s currently no significant disruption, while Deutsche Bank AG said employees were working seamlessly from home.

Dire predictions

Nasscom, the key lobby group for India’s $194 billion outsourcing industry and its almost 5 million employees, has downplayed the threat to operations.

Experts have warned the crisis has the potential to worsen in the coming weeks, with one model predicting as many as 1,018,879 deaths by the end of July, quadrupling from the current official count of 230,168. A model prepared by government advisers suggests the wave could peak in the coming days, but the group’s projections have been changing and were wrong last month.



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Goldman offers new Bitcoin derivatives to Wall Street investors, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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By Matthew Leising

Goldman Sachs Group Inc. is wading deeper into the $1 trillion Bitcoin market, offering Wall Street investors a way to place big bets.

The investment bank has opened up trading with non-deliverable forwards, a derivative tied to Bitcoin’s price that pays out in cash. The firm then protects itself from the digital currency’s famous volatility by buying and selling Bitcoin futures in block trades on CME Group Inc., using Cumberland DRW as its trading partner. Goldman, which still isn’t active in the Bitcoin spot market, introduced the wagers to clients last month without an announcement.

“Institutional demand continues to grow significantly in this space, and being able to work with partners like Cumberland will help us expand our capabilities,” said Max Minton, Goldman’s Asia-Pacific head of digital assets. The new offering is “paving the way for us to evolve our nascent cash-settled crypto-currency capabilities.”

Goldman Sachs, which restarted a trading desk this year to help clients deal in publicly traded futures tied to Bitcoin, said in March it was also close to offering private wealth clients additional vehicles to bet on crypto prices. But the push into forwards dramatically increases its capacity to help big investors take positions. The partnership with Cumberland underscores the bank’s willingness to work with outside firms to help it do so, according to people familiar with the matter, speaking on the condition they not be identified.

For years after its creation in 2009, Bitcoin was shunned by Wall Street banks, with JPMorgan Chase & Co. Chief Executive Officer Jamie Dimon once threatening to fire any of his traders caught buying and selling the digital currency. While Dimon later softened his tone, the banking world has long seen Bitcoin as a plaything for criminals, drug dealers and money launderers.

But client interest and Bitcoin’s astronomical price gains — reaching a high of almost $65,000 in April — have turned many bankers around, with Morgan Stanley making a Bitcoin trust product available to its customers and JPMorgan working on a similar offering.

“Goldman Sachs serves as a bellwether of how sophisticated, institutional investors approach shifts in the market,” said Justin Chow, global head of business development for Cumberland DRW. “We’ve seen rapid adoption and interest in crypto from more traditional financial firms this year, and Goldman’s entrance into the space is yet another sign of how it’s maturing.”

Banks are still wary of the regulatory challenges of holding Bitcoin outright. As derivatives settled with cash, the products Goldman Sachs is offering don’t require dealing with physical Bitcoin. In a similar way, the Morgan Stanley and JPMorgan trusts give customers access to vehicles tracking Bitcoin’s price while using a third party to buy and hold the underlying digital asset.

Goldman Sachs may next offer hedge fund clients exchange-traded notes based on Bitcoin or access to the Grayscale Bitcoin Trust, one of the people said.

“The crypto ecosystem is developing rapidly,” Chow said. “There is progress being made in offering ETFs, new custody providers coming online and optimism that regulatory efforts are coming into focus. It’s a great time to be in the space.”



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After Morgan Stanley, JPMorgan prepares to offer rich clients access to bitcoin fund

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With the latest move, JPMorgan would be the latest and biggest US megabank to adopt crypto as an asset class.

Investment bank JPMorgan’s crypto and blockchain efforts are on a roll. The bank is now looking to offer an actively managed bitcoin fund for clients in its private wealth division. With the latest move, JPMorgan would be the latest and biggest US megabank to adopt crypto as an asset class. The development, which was reported by CoinDesk on Monday, may see the bitcoin fund launched as soon as this summer. The move would also signal a shift in the company’s outlook towards cryptocurrencies as its CEO Jamie Dimon had reportedly called bitcoin a dangerous fraud in 2017 and had also threatened to fire employees who traded bitcoin. Last month, according to a CNBC report, Morgan Stanley had become the first big US bank to offer its wealthy clients access to bitcoin funds after they demand exposure to the cryptocurrency.

Comments from JPMorgan regarding the development were not immediately available.

Even as the bitcoin fund is the latest step by JPMorgan, its investment, commercial banking, and wealth management divisions have gradually evolved in their treatment of crypto and blockchain. As per CoinDesk, the bank’s research analysts regularly issue market insight on bitcoin’s price and prospects in reports available to clients. In February, it had tested blockchain’s decentralised network in space to see if two machines could transact autonomously. The experiment involved carrying out blockchain-based payments between satellites in space “which validated the approach towards a decentralized network where communication with the earth is not necessary,” according to a statement by the Nasdaq-listed manufacturer and supplier of nanosatellites for customers in the academic, government, and commercial markets – GomSpace.

Also read: Coinbase India plan: Acquire startups, hire ‘hundreds’ of employees in 2 yrs, says incoming country head

Earlier this month, JPMorgan had launched a new solution called Confirm using blockchain technology to improve funds transfers between banking institutions globally and to help bring down the number of “rejected or returned transactions caused by mismatched payment details,” according to the investment bank. As a result, the solution will lead to lowering costs for both the sending and receiving banks. “JPMorgan getting into blockchain is going to help a lot on the institutional side of fund transfers. It is looking to resolve the clearing and settlement problem which happens in the bank-to-bank transfers and takes multiple days to settle. With blockchain, JPMorgan and banks will be able to settle it in near real-time,” Ashish Agarwal, a blockchain expert and Founder of PayO — neo banking platform for SMEs – had told Financial Express Online.

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Coinbase hangover rattles crypto assets with bitcoin in free fall, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The mania that drove crypto assets to records as Coinbase Global Inc. went public last week turned on itself on the weekend, sending Bitcoin tumbling the most since February.

The world’s biggest cryptocurrency plunged as much as 15% on Sunday, just days after reaching a record of $64,869. It subsequently pared some of the losses and was trading at about $56,440 at around 8:25 a.m. in Tokyo Monday.

Ether, the second-biggest token, dropped as much as 18% to below $2,000 before also paring losses. The volatility buffeted Binance Coin, XRP and Cardano too. Dogecoin — the token started as a joke — bucked the trend and is up 7% over 24 hours, according to CoinGecko.

The weekend carnage came after a heady period for the industry that saw the value of all coins surge past $2.25 trillion amid a frenzy of demand for all things crypto in the runup to Coinbase’s direct listing on Wednesday. The largest U.S. crypto exchange ended the week valued at $68 billion, more than the owner of the New York Stock Exchange.

“With hindsight it was inevitable,” Galaxy Digital founder Michael Novogratz said in a tweet Sunday. “Markets got too excited around $Coin direct listing. Basis blowing out, coins like $BSV, $XRP and $DOGE pumping. All were signs that the market got too one way.”

Dogecoin, which has limited use and no fundamentals, rallied last week to be worth about $50 billion at one point before stumbling Saturday. Demand was so brisk for the token that investors trying to trade it on Robinhood crashed the site a few times Friday, the online exchange said in a blog post.

There was also speculation Sunday in several online reports that the crypto plunge was related to concerns the U.S. Treasury may crack down on money laundering carried out through digital assets. The Treasury declined to comment, and its Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) said in an emailed response on Sunday that it “does not comment on potential investigations, including on whether or not one exists.”

‘Price to Pay’
“The crypto world is waking up with a bit of a sore head today,” said Antoni Trenchev, co-founder of crypto lender Nexo. “Dogecoin’s 100% Friday rally was ‘peak party,’ after the Bitcoin record and Coinbase listing earlier in the week. Euphoria was in the air. And usually in the crypto world, there’s a price to pay when that happens.”

Besides the “unsubstantiated” report of a U.S. Treasury crackdown, Trenchev said factors for the declines may have included “excess leverage, Coinbase insiders dumping equity after the direct listing and a mass outage in China’s Xinjiang province hitting Bitcoin miners.”

Growing mainstream acceptance of cryptocurrencies has spurred Bitcoin’s rally, as well as lifting other tokens to record highs. Bitcoin’s most ardent proponents see it as a modern-day store of value and inflation hedge, while others fear a speculative bubble is building.

Interest in crypto went on the rise again after companies from PayPal to Square started enabling transactions in Bitcoin on their systems, and Wall Street firms like Morgan Stanley moved toward providing access to the tokens to some of the wealthiest clients.

Volatility
That’s despite lingering concerns over their volatility and usefulness as a method of payment. Moreover, governments are inspecting risks around the sector more closely as the investor base widens.

Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell last week said Bitcoin “is a little bit like gold” in that it’s more a vehicle for speculation than making payments. European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde in January took aim at Bitcoin’s role in facilitating criminal activity, saying the cryptocurrency has been enabling “funny business.”

Turkey’s central bank banned the use of cryptocurrencies as a form of payment from April 30, saying the level of anonymity behind the digital tokens brings the risk of “non-recoverable” losses.



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Inevitable rise of CBDC’s in the digital age, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Digitalization has thrown almost every part of the economy into disarray, and the payment system is no exception. Cash use has decreased significantly across developed and developing economies as customers have accepted the convenience and ease of digital payments. Privately run solutions have taken substantial market share. These range from well-established (debit and credit cards) to early stage (cryptocurrencies). According to Morgan Stanley, the failure of physical cash to play an effective role in the digital economy raises the risk that monetary authorities will fail to provide the population with a stable, accessible, and reliable means of payment. To protect their monetary sovereignty and mitigate financial stability concerns Central banks are on track to introduce their own digital currencies in the coming years that is Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC).

Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC) are a new form of money – digital cash, developed and backed by the central bank with the aim of facilitating digital transactions and transfers. CBDC would offer a new type of widely accessible, digitally issued money. Importantly, CBDC will not be a cryptocurrency, Cryptocurrencies are designed to work without a central issuing or controlling authority, have a fixed or system-determined money supply, and use distributed ledger technology to record and validate individual transactions using cryptography (blockchain). CBDC, on the other hand, requires none of these characteristics. The central banks retain complete control over the currency and its issuance and in most of the cases will track and certify transactions through a centralised ledger.

Central banks will have to make three main design decisions when developing their digital currency systems: Who has access to digital currencies issued by central banks? How are they going to be accessed? What type does a digital currency take in terms of technology?.86% of the world’s central banks are exploring the issuance of central bank digital currencies. The PBoC has already put its eCNY initiative to the test in three major Chinese cities. The ECB will release the results of its recently concluded public consultations and could announce its intention to develop a digital Europe by the summer. In the United States, Fed Chair Powell has described digital currency as a “high priority initiative,” with the Boston Fed preparing to launch one.

Morgan Stanley reported, even without a CBDC, India is an instructive example, Policymakers have taken the lead in developing the public data infrastructure that enables advanced and widely available payment solutions. The public sector has created a strong foundation for private sector innovation to promote payments and increase financial inclusion by providing a national identity verification system (Aadhaar), an instant real-time payment system at the central bank (United Payment Interface), and a comprehensive legal framework on data privacy. As a result, India now has a highly modernised payments infrastructure and has surpassed other emerging markets in terms of financial inclusion.

Morgan Stanley anticipates that central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) will help to strengthen monetary sovereignty and alleviate concerns about financial stability, but they pose a risk of disruption to commercial banks and the financial ecosystem. While central banks’ efforts at introducing CBDC are not intended to disrupt the banking system, it will likely have unintended disruptive effects. Banks will face disruption from three fronts; First, depending on the degree to which consumers can move their bank deposits to CBDC accounts, banks’ deposit bases can shrink. Second, CBDC’s technical framework could make it easier for new entrants to enter the payments market without having to rely on incumbent banks. Third, as more of the transactions move to CBDC, which are likely to include privacy safeguards, banks will have to compete harder for access to consumers’ spending data. The central banks’ design choices would have a significant effect on how much disruption occurs on all three fronts. The speed at which network effects take place in a CBDC system can determine how easily disruption occurs. The greater the acceptance of digital currencies, the more opportunities for innovation and the greater is the risk of financial system disruption.



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Morgan Stanley becomes first major U.S. bank to offer clients access to bitcoin funds, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Morgan Stanley has become the first big U.S. bank to offer its wealth management clients access to bitcoin funds, CNBC reported on Wednesday.

In an internal memo, the bank told its financial advisers it would launch access to three funds allowing ownership of bitcoin, CNBC reported, citing people with direct knowledge of the matter. (https://cnb.cx/3vwOjou)

The decision was taken after the bank’s clients demanded exposure to the cryptocurrency, according the report.

Morgan Stanley did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.

Bitcoin surged to a record high of $61,781.83 on Saturday, but has since fallen as investors consolidated gains and on news of plans by India to ban cryptocurrencies.

The cryptocurrency has been gaining mainstream acceptance lately, with Elon Musk’s Tesla Inc and Square Inc betting on it.

Last month, Bank of NY Mellon Corp formed a new unit to help clients hold, transfer and issue digital assets.

Access to the funds will only be allowed to people who have at least $2 million in assets held by the bank. Investment firms with at least $5 million at the bank will also be eligible. In both cases, the accounts have to be at least six months old, according to the report.

The bank will limit investments to 2.5% of total net worth even for investors with enough assets to qualify, the people said.

The two funds that will be offered are from Galaxy Digital, crypto firm founded by Michael Novogratz. The third fund is a joint effort from asset manager FS Investments and bitcoin company NYDIG. Clients could start investing in these funds next month, the report said.



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Morgan Stanley, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Indian state-owned lenders are expected to see additions to bad loans moderate, but structural issues at the banks could cap returns on their stocks, Morgan Stanley said on Thursday.

Some of the country’s state-owned banks have long struggled with a pile of bad loans, prompting the government to pump in more funds to shore up their balance sheets.

“Over the past few years, state-owned enterprise banks have seen significant capital infusion by the government, lower risk-weighted assets density, higher provisioning and some large recoveries,” the brokerage said in a report, adding that as slippages moderate, fresh additions to bad loans, credit costs will also moderate over the next few years.

The brokerage preferred India’s largest lender State Bank of India, as well as large private banks, expecting them to play a major role in the corporate recovery cycle.

In February, SBI said its asset quality has remained largely stable and the lender revised its credit cost guidance to lower than 2% for the financial year. A return to pre-pandemic levels of retail growth drove the bank’s third-quarter profit well past estimates.

But weak underwriting practices, diminishing loan market and deposits share in the sector will weigh on the stocks of many other public sector banks even as cheap valuations make them look attractive, Morgan Stanley said.

“We think state-owned enterprise banks will continue to lose loan market share given technology changes, strong competition and a weak internal rate of capital generation,” analysts at the brokerage said.

The Nifty public sector bank index was down 0.4% on Thursday. The index has risen nearly 39% so far this year against a drop of about 31% in 2020.



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Morgan Stanley ups target price on SBI, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Morgan Stanley raised its price target on State Bank of India to Rs 600 from Rs 525 citing improvement in retail business and a turnaround in the corporate cycle. The new price target implies a 45 per cent upside in the stock price. On Thursday, SBI shares gained 0.8 per cent to close at Rs 415.20.

“SBI has built a strong retail franchise and also sustained its deposit market share. Even on digitisation, the progress has surprised, unlike peer SoE (State Owned Enterprises) banks,” said Morgan Stanley in a note to clients. “As the corporate cycle turns, we expect earnings estimate upgrades and significant re-rating.”

The brokerage said SBI reminds it of China Merchants Bank (CMB), which has shown consistent improvement in its retail franchise compared to the country’s other public sector banks.

“Though there are significant differences between CMB and SBI, we believe SBI could show a similar re-rating trend vs. Indian SoE banks,” said Morgan Stanley.

SBI shares have gained almost 120 per cent since November 1 as against 47 per cent gains in the Bank Nifty index in the period. The stock has been an underperformer in recent years with private retail lenders hogging the limelight.

Analysts said the recovery in the growth cycle augurs well for industrial banks like SBI.

“The current cycle reminds us of the early 2000s, a period in which SoE banks outperformed significantly in the initial years — SBI looks best placed to play this theme,” said Morgan Stanley. “SBI profitability does very well as the economic cycle turns — this coupled with strong improvement in the retail franchise should drive significant upside in this cycle.”



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V Vaidyanathan, IDFC First Bank, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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V Vaidyanathan, MD & CEO, IDFC First Bank, says Morgan Stanley has always talked about the bank’s low ROE but he is confident that it will touch 18% soon.

The Budget has surprised us, growth is back from the throes of pandemic and things are indeed looking up. What’s your view?
No doubt about it! All indicators that are coming across all sectors, be it FMCG or sales of tractors and vehicles, everything is looking up now.

Things are looking up for IDFC Bank as well but there is a historical challenge in the MSE and SME books. While the retail book is growing, how to address the other aspect?
There is no challenge in the MSE and SME book. The challenge was in the large corporate and infrastructure exposures. Our infrastructure exposure at the time of the merger was Rs 22,000 crore. We are very aware that infrastructure has to come down because it has its own challenges. We have brought down the infrastructure book down to Rs 11,000 crore. Our game plan is to bring it down to almost nil over the next two or three years. MSME and consumer are our staple business and that is doing fantastically well.

I want to understand the CASA side of your business. You are offering the best rates and the industry has helped you to get a lot of low cost deposits. What happens next? Obviously you cannot pay such high rates for savings?
Two things. First off all, we had a historical borrowing rate because IDFC Ltd. was a DFI and had borrowed at about 8.5% and even Capital First and NBFC had borrowed around that rate. So, we had a large borrowing at that rate. So we keep it at 7%, which is a good rate compared to 8.5% and we kept swapping that money. But that was then.

The important thing is that our incremental flow from the customers on CASA has been phenomenal and our CASA rate has not touched 48% and we are feeling very comfortable. The liquidity in the bank is Rs 17,000 crore. Obviously, we do not need to pay 7% anymore and we have brought down rates to 6%. But frankly, we are a very customer-first organisation and even at 6%, we have one of most attractive rates in the market today. Change to 6% will also increase the net interest margins.

The Morgan Stanley report dated 31st of December is calling you one of the most expensive banks looking at the underlying growth. Your take?
They have always called us the most expensive, overvalued bank. In this report, they made a mistake which I think is an honest one. I do not think there is malice behind it but they made a mistake whereby they added the bonds exposure and non-funded exposure on the numerator but the denominator they forgot to add. So the net of its numbers are much lesser than what they have represented. It is a general mistake and they openly fixed that.

But stepping away from that, they have always been wrong about us. Let me just say one more thing, they are just being very mathematical about us. But how do you value a phenomenal intellectual property the bank is building? How do you value the fact that this bank is showing the capability of growing from Rs 100 crore to Rs 30,000 crore, from Rs 30,000 crore to Rs 60,000 crore and now we are projected to be Rs 1 lakh crore. They have not given any valuation for that kind of growth on the retail side. They cannot see the fact that NIM has grown by 1.5%-1.6% to 4.6%; they cannot see PPOP has moved from Rs 30 crore pre-merger to Rs 500 crore even without treasury. They are just going on and on one issue — that ROE is low.

Fine our ROE will come, it will come because we are building a good bank. It will be in mid teens and it will be a 18% ROE in my opinion.

When do you think ROA and ROE will be around industry averages?
Definitely we are getting there. Let us just get back to the core. The core is the ability to lend in a safe, risk-adjusted manner and we have demonstrated that capability quite a number of times, In Capital First, the NIM was 9%; in this bank our NIM has already touched 4.6%. On the retail side, now we are able to borrow money at 6% incrementally because the saving rates are 6% at the peak. We are going to borrow money at 6%, our lending is on an average at around 15% but we lend anywhere between 9% and 20% odd depending on the product segment. If we borrow at 6% and lend at 15%, we have to make money, it has to become ROE accretive.

Overtime, infrastructure problems will go away, overtime some of the corporate loan issues will all go away. It is a matter of time, they have already started going away. By the way, our credit loss is only 2% because our credit quality is improving. So if you lend at 15-16% and you have a 2% credit loss, there is a 14% risk adjusted money. You are borrowing money at 6%. It is pretty plain that the bank has to make money and it has to be ROE positive. So my sense is that ROE will come, it is only a matter of time.

Is it a right way to look at a bank purely based on price to book or should one look at PE multiples because ultimately it is about growth? In your case, I can slice your book in many ways depending on my assumption rather than focusing on absolute growth?
Well, banks raise equity from time to time and hence the price to book becomes a benchmark but even in terms of price to book, people normally factor return on equity in the equation and that is one of the reasons Morgan Stanley goes after us every time saying our ROE is low.

But anyway, coming back to the ROE point, they are looking at us at a 2% ROE today but they should not forget that in our previous company, we moved the ROE from negative to 15%, in fact, heading towards 20%. So even here, ROE will come. I have explained to you the reason why price to book is used as a benchmark.

By the way consumer companies are valued at price to earnings. We are not a consumer company. We are 60% retail and in the next two, three years, we will probably be 80% retail and can be considered a consumer company.

Ultimately banks are a play on economy and consumers. Why should we look at historical benchmarks? But we will keep that conversation for some other time…
No, it is also because of the corporate loans. If you take a consumer company and think of it like a consumer company, you can value it like a consumer company.

The government is committed to spend a lot on the infrastructure sector. Once the bad bank and other factors come into play, things would dramatically change there. Could the legacy problem be a future growth driver? Are we looking at that kind of a scenario?
No, no, we are not going there at all. First of all, what the government has done on infrastructure is fantastic and as an Indian, as a resident of this country, we obviously feel proud that someone is going after infrastructure the way this government is doing. It is not just the bad bank and not just that Rs 20,000 crore and DFI, it is also the kind of investment that the government is putting out in infrastructure.

The amount seems crazy but we will have a derived advantage of all that investment. Derived advantage meaning when money goes into roads, ports, infrastructure etc, it goes to the vendors; vendors have contractors, contractors have employees and there’s a whole chain. Once cement and steel and everything starts moving, consumption moves. We will have a derived play of consumption. Infrastructure has its own challenges and everybody recognises that. We are not going there, short answer. We just want to be a fantastic consumer bank, a well growing, good risk management, good corporate governance, consumer bank.

In today’s world, everything is going digital and fintech disruptions are happening in the consumer banking and the consumer retail space, how will you differentiate yourself?
We are really at the forefront of that. We love it first of all because we know that game. We had played that game for 10 years. Basically these games can be very unnerving for those who do not know the game. But that is where we were born. We were born a fintech. For example, we have the ability to give out consumer loans after doing all kinds of algorithms of fraud, analytics, credit view, everything in a matter of seconds. We know we give out three to four million loans through the use of technology.

Even on the liability side we use technology to create effect. The kind of CASA we have got is also because of our technology capability and not just because of pricing. The short answer is that we are very good in that space and we will lead yield on the front. There are new apps coming up which are very advanced, you can have a look at that.

A very basic yardstick which markets and investors use is what is the promoter’s commitment to its business, that is ownership patterns. Your ownership has been gliding down. Has that been done consciously and if you have sold, why?
Actually it had a sequence. I know what you are referring to. When it was Capital First, I gave away stock to some people because I thought they all helped with the company and it was about 20 odd percent of my holding. When Corona happened, I had to sell a significant holding because I am not a generational wealthy guy. I borrowed money to buy the stock and did leverage to buy out of the prior company. So I had leverage and in Corona, I got stuck. So I sold. Then later I gifted some stock to some people whom I thought were very valuable in my life in the past. Wealth is good only when it rotates and when it keeps moving on rather than getting accumulated to one demat account. It has got nothing to do with commitment. My commitment is 100%. The bank is 100% mine. I work like that. So no investor needs to worry about that.

Is there leverage which you took when you committed to this transactions? Is that leverage still there on your balance sheet or is it over?
It is over. I had to square it at the depth of corona at Rs 20 rupees or something. But such was the moment. But I do not have any leverage on account of those matters anymore.

On one side, there are some investors who are asking why is Mr Vaidyanathan reducing stake? The other set of investors especially on social media said Mr Vaidyanathan is running this bank and this bank is going to be a turnaround one and a big one looking at his past experiences. For the worried investors, you have addressed the concerns, For those who are excited about what you can do, should you temper it down?
I am very aware that a lot of people believe that they should put all the money in this bank because it has a good future. My honest answer would be that you should diversify. No matter how much you trust a bank on the equity front, equity has its own ups and downs. There may be other banks who are ahead of the curve than us, who started may be 20 years before us or 15 years and are ahead of the curve in ROA and ROE. But are catching up.

In the long run, we will be a fantastic bank but you should diversify. But on the deposit side, you can be 100% assured, this is a fantastic bank. Your money is like 1000% safe. Just sleep well.

So the saving rates which you are offering, where do you think that will settle?
First of all, when we started paying 7%, we were paying it across pockets; then we paid 7% only up to Rs 10 crore; then we paid 7% only on savings up to Rs 1 crore. Now we are paying 6% only and that is the peak rate. Basically the strength of the bank, the liquidity is strong and so we reduced it.

Going forward, if you ask whether we are going to reduce it further, my view is not in the near future. Near future means the next five or six months. Beyond that, who knows?

The big picture is that in the banking sector, consolidation is evident. How do you see the landscape of the Indian banking sector changing? Will the number of banks become less and will the relevance of small banks be completely gone?
Not at all. Small and medium banks are catering to specific needs and therefore everyone has a space. No one bank, not State Bank of India, not any of the big four, can meet all the needs of this country. Everybody has their own criteria and like we say product programmes of respective banks by themselves are not inclusive. They are exclusive. There will be space for lots of small finance banks. In fact, I would personally wish that India comes out with a lot more small finance banks which can cater to these needs. India also needs a lot more universal banks. In fact, consolidation of banks is not a good solution. Privatisation is a good idea.

For any consumer bank like yours, where there is a very large fee-based component. But in today’s zero broking environment where fintech has disrupted everything, would fee-based income spreads come under pressure?
It depends on how you look at it because if your book is growing and the businesses operations are increasing, fee-based income can keep increasing. But we are very clear that we do not want to see any fee-based income which is made at the cost of trying to pinch the customer’s pocket in an incorrect sort of way.

But generally speaking, I feel that fee income will continue to grow because you offer more service and collect your fee. We are also launching credit cards and that again is a line of business for us.

Yes, that is a disruptive launch. Isn’t it? The kind of fee you are charging has set cat among the pigeons!
Well the intension was not to set any cat among any pigeons, but I always think of expanding markets. In India, for 30 years, interest rates have been 38-40% on credit cards. Cash withdrawal is even more expensive. So we just thought that we could price customers individually, based on certain algorithms and logics and even on cash advance, the fee structure in India has been very high. I think customers are beginning to like it.



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Morgan Stanley, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The debate in Indian banks has quickly shifted from impaired loans to growth. Stocks have done well over the past week to three months and are likely pricing in some growth recovery. Growth momentum is strong, and it is believed that the next leg of returns will be driven by valuation re-rating to much above-average valuations.

According to the report, the balance sheets at large private banks are among the strongest ever post any crisis with strong capital ratios with high non-specific loan provisions and significant liquidity. Loan growth has surprised positively with 70% incremental market share during F9M21. As the economy improves, it is expected to see significant earnings acceleration.

Morgan Stanley raises price targets to factor in 10-15% above-mean valuations at HDFC Bank and Axis Bank. ICICI’s valuation is well above mean levels given significantly higher profitability compared to past levels. A combination of valuation re-rating and strong earnings compounding drives 30-40% upside for the group.

“Our top picks are ICICI, HDFC Bank and Axis Bank. IndusInd Bank should also benefit from the cyclical tailwinds. The questions that we are being asked include why buy the Indian Financial stocks incrementally and can the stocks continue to do well: We believe this cycle is likely to be similar to the one in the early 2000s. Balance sheets at private banks are the best ever in terms of capital, provisions and liquidity. This will help them gain market share at an accelerated pace” said the report.

Profitability is high, helped by strong improvement in loan spreads in recent years as well as lower tax rates. Consequently, return ratios are also expected to reach or cross previous cycle peaks. With strong digital capabilities, and given the different evolution and regulatory dynamics in Large Indian private banks, it is believed that the risks are manageable.

Asset quality trends have surprised positively at large private banks

Indian Private Banks are exiting the cycle with strong excess provisions and asset quality trends have been much better than expected. Impaired loan formation was expected to pick up as the moratorium ended in August,2020 and restructuring window for corporate and retail loans ended in December, 20.

However, the trends surprised positively – impaired loan formation was 1.8-2.4% in F9M21 Vs 1.7-3.4% in F9M20. While unsecured retail and CV NPL formations have been high, corporate asset quality and secured retail have surprised positively with the stress largely being in disproportionately affected segments CVs, MFI, real estate, travel,etc.

Digital adoption has picked up sharply; will continue to improve:
Large private banks have done well on digitization and have improved significantly. Product offerings, where delivery and convenience can match better than that of the fintechs, this has helped them tie up with new players efficiently. Distribution capabilities have improved whereas speed, accessibility and cost of delivery has reduced.

Underwriting practices with new datasets are now originating because of which the ability to underwrite has improved and costs have lowered since.



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