RBI cautions against offers of buying or selling old notes, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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A worker walks past the logo of the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) inside its office in New Delhi. (File Photo/Reuters)

Mumbai, The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has cautioned the public from falling prey to offers of buying or selling of old bank notes and coins.

In a statement, the central bank said that certain elements are fraudulently using the name and logo of the Reserve Bank of India, and seeking charges, commission and tax from public, in transactions related to buying and selling of old banknotes and coins through various online and offline platforms.

“It is clarified that Reserve Bank of India does not deal in such matters and never seeks charges/commissions of any sort. The Reserve Bank of India has also not authorised any institution/firm/person etc to collect charges/commission on its behalf in such transactions,” it said.

The RBI has advised members of public to remain cautious and not to fall prey to elements using its name to extract money through such fictitious and fraudulent offers.

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RBL Bank reports Rs 459 crore loss in Q1 on higher loan provisions, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Mumbai: RBL Bank slumped to a loss in the quarter ended June 2021 as the bank jacked up provisions to deal with current and future stress as it prepared to clean up its balance sheet to prepare for opportunities in the next four years.

The bank reported a net loss of Rs 459 crore largely due to almost a threefold rise in provisions to Rs 1,426 crore from Rs 500 crore a year earlier on a sharp surge in slippages from the bank’s microfinance and credit card portfolios.

Total slippages at Rs 1,342 crore included about Rs 450 crore each from microfinance and credit card loans where collections were hit due to the second wave of the pandemic.

Provisions also included Rs 604 crore of extra provisions as the bank decided to increase cover for bad loans and improve the coverage ratio to 61% from 52% in March. Gross NPAs increased to 4.99% up from 3.45% a year ago.

CEO Vishwavir Ahuja said the bank has consciously decided to bite the bullet as it wants to double down on the opportunities in the near future.

“We have pressed the reset button. As economic activity and growth revives, vaccinations gather pace and health infrastructure improves we wanted to have a clean slate to launch a 2.0 transformation based on vectors like branch banking, credit cards and micro banking which we are already ahead,” Ahuja said.

RBL expects the market to resume normal operations by the third quarter. It has set itself a target of increasing its customers base threefold from the current 4 million in the next four years.

Ahuja said the immediate target is to increase its return on assets to 1% by the end of March 2022 from negative 1.8% at the end of June.

“Our retail loan growth will be more in line with the GDP growth at 7% to 10%. Our corporate book is solid after the cleanups in the last couple of years so corporate growth will also be led by high-quality clients. There has been a significant opening up in the markets, especially in the urban areas as shown by the high-frequency data. But of course, it all depends on the Covid third wave,” Ahuja said.

A strong increase in other income helped revenue to double to Rs 695 crore led by a 137% growth in retail fee income.

The growth in other income masked a 7% fall in net interest income year on year to Rs 970 crore.

The bank has appointed four new directors —Vimal Bhandari as a non-independent director and Somnath Ghosh, Chandan Sinha and Manjeev Singh Puri as independent directors subject to shareholder approval.



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Net profit rises 32% YoY to Rs 1,642 cr; asset quality weakens, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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MUMBAI: Kotak Mahindra Bank today reported a 32 per cent year-on-year rise in its net profit to Rs 1,641.9 crore for the quarter ended June, which was below analysts’ expectations.

The private sector lender reported net interest income growth of 6 per cent on-year to Rs 3,942 crore, which was also below analysts’ estimates.

Provisions and contingencies in the quarter declined to Rs 935 crore from Rs 962 crore in the year-ago quarter. However, the lender saw a deterioration in asset quality in the reported quarter.

Kotak Bank’s gross non-performing loans ratio stood at 3.56 per cent in the reported quarter as against 3.25 per cent at the end of the March quarter. Similarly, the net NPA ratio expanded to 1.28 per cent from 1.21 per cent in the previous quarter.


The private sector bank’s net profit in the quarter was largely boosted by a sharp uptick in other income. Other income in the reported quarter jumped to Rs 1,583.03 crore from Rs 773.5 crore in the year-ago quarter.

Covid-related provisions as on June 30 were maintained at Rs 1,279 crore. In accordance with the Resolution Framework for Covid-19 and MSME announced by the RBI, the bank implemented total restructuring of Rs 552 crore as on June 30, Kotak Bank said.


In terms of loan growth, the quarter was tepid for the bank affected by the second wave as well as its conservative approach. Advances in the quarter grew merely 6 per cent on-year, which was lower than many of its peers.

At the same time, the current account-to-savings account ratio of the lender further improved to 60.2 per cent at the end of the June quarter from 56.7 per cent a year ago.

Kotak Bank’s operating performance was sturdy as operating profit jumped 19 per cent year-on-year to Rs 3,121 crore in the reported quarter.



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Bajaj Finance net rises 4%, bad loans jump, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The company’s assets under management grew 12 per cent to Rs 1.19 lakh crore as of June 30.

Mumbai: Bajaj Finance on Tuesday reported a consolidated net profit of Rs 1,002 crore for the quarter ended June 2021, a 4.2% increase over Rs 962 crore in the year-ago period.

The company said that the board of directors in their meeting also approved the appointment of Pramit Jhaveri, who headed Citibank India for nearly a decade, as an independent director on its board.

While the company’s assets under management (AUM) increased by 15% to Rs 1.6 lakh crore as of June 30, bad loans or gross non-performing assets (NPAs) rose faster to 2.96% of gross advances, from 1.4% a year ago. Shares of the company closed 1.2% lower at Rs 5,937.

“Since Q1 has been a large miss on expectations and provisioning buffer has declined, incremental bounce, collections and roll-back trends would be key monitorables. The management’s credit cost and growth guidance for the rest of the year is primarily anchored on these metrics staying healthy,” said Rajiv Mehta, analyst at Yes Securities.

“The deterioration in asset quality is not surprising given it was a Covid quarter without any regulatory moratorium and that the management had alluded to higher forward flows across overdue buckets due to collection constraints,” said Mehta.



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RBI launches two key surveys, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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MUMBAI: The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) on Tuesday launched its quarterly Industrial Outlook Survey (IOS) to assess the performance of the manufacturing sector.

The central bank also announced the launch of the next round of the quarterly Services and Infrastructure Outlook Survey (SIOS) for the current quarter.

The 95th round of IOS of the Indian manufacturing sector will assess business sentiment for the current quarter and expectations for the ensuing quarter (Q3:2021-22) based on qualitative responses on a set of indicators pertaining to demand conditions, financial conditions, employment conditions and price situation.

“The survey provides useful insight into the performance of the manufacturing sector,” the RBI said.

The SIOS survey will assess the business situation for the current quarter from selected companies in the services and infrastructure sectors in India and their expectations for the ensuing quarter.

It is based on responses on a set of indicators pertaining to demand conditions, financial conditions, employment conditions and the price situation.



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HDFC Securities to enter discount broking to win market share, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Mumbai, July 18: HDFC Securities is creating its own discount broking architecture to compete with new-age firms like Zerodha which are eating into market shares of entrenched players in the business, its parent HDFC Bank‘s managing director Shashidhar Jagdishan has said. Over the next two-three years, the company targets to gain market, Jagdishan said, making it clear that the largest private sector lender does not have any plans to sell stakes in the brokerage.

It can be noted that over the last few years, discount brokerages which help an investor transact by paying a fraction of commissions and fees have become popular with investors, forcing many of the entrenched players to offer similar offerings.

“I’m happy to say that our own HDFC Securities also has a plan and you will see that countering the threats from discount brokerages with its own neo architecture or discount kind of an architecture as well,” Jagdishan told the bank’s shareholders at its annual general meeting on Saturday.

He added that HDFC Securities will be responsible and exuded confidence that it will gain market share in the next 2-3 years.

The company, which registered a 94.9 per cent growth in its June quarter net profit to Rs 260.6 crore, is doing extremely well, Jagdishan said.

As per filings, HDFC Securities’ total income grew by 67.3 per cent to Rs 457.8 crore in the June quarter as against Rs 273.7 crore in the year-ago period. It had 215 branches across 147 cities / towns in the country.

Meanwhile, speaking at the bank’s AGM, its non-executive chairman Atanu Chakraborty said the largest lender in the private space is on its way to scale technology adoption and transformation agenda through scaling infrastructure, disaster recovery resilience, information security enhancements and having a monitoring mechanism.

He said the bank has taken the regulatory actions arising out of challenges faced on technology in the right spirit and the management has displayed grace and humility.



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Chairman, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The country’s largest lender State Bank of India is working towards launching the next version of its digital lending platform – Yono (You Only Need One App), chairman Dinesh Khara said. Speaking at a banking event organised by industry body IMC, Khara said when the bank initially started Yono, it was thought of as a distribution platform for the retail segment products.

“During the course of the journey, SBI could realise Yono’s potential for international operations, particularly where we have the retail operations. We could visualise its relevance for Yono business also, and now we have started leveraging it for our agriculture segment,” he said.

“Now what we are thinking of is as to how to integrate all these fragmented pieces of Yono and think in terms of something like Yono 2, which is the next version of it. It is something which we are working on and will come out with it and products soon,” Khara said.

As of March 31, 2021, Yono has over 7.96 crore downloads and about 3.71 crore registrations, according to the bank’s annual report for 2020-2021.

The bank has onboarded 40,000 overseas customers on the Yono platform as of end-March 2021, it said. The lender is on course to launch Yono in Singapore, Bahrain, South Africa, and the USA by the end of the financial year 2021-22.

Khara further said that SBI looks at technology from the point of view of having oversight on its operations.

The bank has started leveraging analytics for profiling the customers and to reach out to customers. It is also leveraging analytics for management and mitigation of risks.

Speaking at the event, Yes Bank‘s Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer Prashant Kumar said this is a time where banks need alliances and relationships with technology. It is a time to ride on the core competence of partners to create solutions and collaborations, he said.



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LenDenClub, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Millennials are dominating as the most influential cohort as both borrowers and lenders on peer-to-peer (P2P) lending platforms according to study done by P2P lender LenDenClub.

According to the report by LenDenClub, young and tech-savvy Indians are much ahead of the previous generations when it comes to borrowing or even availing the platform for a new asset class as an investor. Millennials belonging to the age group of 21-30 years were the most active as both borrowers (56%) and lenders (54%) on its platform. This was followed by the cohort belonging to the age group of 31-40 years accounting for 37% in case of borrowers and 33% in case of lenders. India’s silicon city, Bengaluru, topped the chart in terms of people having the highest credit demand. Interestingly, the highest number of lenders too hailed from the tech city of Bengaluru. Other major lending and borrowing markets were Mumbai, Hyderabad, Pune and Chennai, showing a clear dominance of west and south.

Salaried professionals ranging from CXOs to mid-managerial level, topped the chart as investors on the platform. The report further stated INR 1.81 lakhs was the average investment amount on the platform while INR 50,000 to 1 lakh was the most preferred amount among lenders, accounting to approximately 50% of the pie in terms of value. Owing to the festival season, November (2020) and December (2020) and February (2021) were the top three months when demand for credit was the highest. Whereas, during Apr-Jun 2020, the demand for credit was the least.

Bhavin Patel, Co-founder & CEO, LenDenClub said “Covid-19 has accelerated digital penetration and uptake across every industry, and the lending sector too, has seen transformation beyond imagination. During the global health crisis, medical emergencies continued to be the top reason for borrowing. Interestingly, millennials also actively participated as investors availing P2P lending as an aspirational asset class offering lucrative returns. Thanks to e-commerce and penetration of new-age technology which has built an all-new tech empowered segment of Indians across tier-II and tier-III cities from where we witnessed fresh bouts of demand.”



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RBI tweaks norms for interest on unclaimed amount after deposit matures, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) on Friday tweaked the norms for interest on the amount left unclaimed with the bank after a term deposit matures.

Currently, if a term deposit matures and the proceeds are unpaid, the amount left unclaimed with the bank attracts the rate of interest as applicable to savings deposits.

“On a review, it has been decided that if a term deposit (TD) matures and proceeds are unpaid, the amount left unclaimed with the bank shall attract the rate of interest as applicable to a savings account or the contracted rate of interest on the matured TD, whichever is lower,” the RBI said in a circular.

The new norms are applicable for deposits in all commercial banks, small finance banks, local area banks, and cooperative banks.

Term deposit refers to an interest-bearing deposit received by the bank for a fixed period. It also includes deposits such as recurring, cumulative, annuity, reinvestment deposits, and cash certificates.



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RBI report, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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MUMBAI: The gross non-performing assets (GNPAs) ratio of banks may rise to 9.8 per cent by March 2022, under a baseline scenario, from 7.48 per cent in March 2021, according to the Financial Stability Report (FSR) released by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI).

Under a severe stress scenario, GNPA of banks may increase to 11.22 per cent, the report released on Thursday showed.

“Macro stress tests indicate that the gross non-performing asset (GNPA) ratio of banks may increase from 7.48 per cent in March 2021 to 9.80 per cent by March 2022 under the baseline scenario,” the report said.

It, however, added that banks have sufficient capital, both at the aggregate and individual level, even under stress.

The FSR released in January this year had said banks’ GNPAs may rise to 13.5 per cent by September 2021, under the baseline scenario, which would be the highest in over 22 years.

The latest report said within the bank groups, public sector banks’ (PSBs’) GNPA ratio of 9.54 per cent in March 2021 edging up to 12.52 per cent by March 2022 under the baseline scenario is an improvement over earlier expectations and indicative of pandemic proofing by regulatory support.

For private sector banks (PVBs) and foreign banks (FBs), the transition of the GNPA ratio from baseline to medium to severe stress is from 5.82 per cent to 6.04 per cent to 6.46 per cent, and from 4.90 per cent to 5.35 per cent to 5.97 per cent, respectively.

Under the baseline and the two stress scenarios, the system level CRAR (capital to risk assets ratio) holds up well, moderating by 30 basis points (bps) between March 2021 and March 2022 under the baseline scenario and by 130 bps and 256 bps, respectively, under the two stress scenarios.

All 46 banks would be able to maintain CRAR well above the regulatory minimum of 9 per cent as of March 2022 even in the worst-case scenario, it said.

The report said the common equity Tier I (CET-1) capital ratio of banks may decline from 12.78 per cent in March 2021 to 12.58 per cent in March 2022, under the baseline scenario.

It would further fall to 11.76 per cent and 10.73 per cent, respectively, under the medium and severe stress scenarios by March 2022.

The report said Covid-19 has increased the risks to financial stability, especially when the unprecedented measures taken to mitigate the pandemic’s destruction are normalised and rolled back.

“Central banks across the world are bracing up to deal with the expected deterioration in asset quality of banks in view of the impairment to loan servicing capacity among individuals and businesses,” the report said.

The initial assessment of major central banks is that while banks’ financial positions have been shored up, there has been no significant rise in non-performing loans (NPLs) and policy support packages helped in maintaining solvency and liquidity.

The economic recovery, however, remains fragmented and overcast with high uncertainty, it said.

The report also highlighted the stress test results of the pandemic by various central banks.

Bank of England (BoE’s) ‘Desktop’ stress test in the interim FSR (May 2020) had projected that under appropriately prudent assumptions, aggregate CET-1 capital ratio of banks would decrease from 14.8 per cent at end-2019 to 11 per cent by the second year of test scenario (2021) and banks would remain well above their minimum regulatory capital requirements.

As per the latest position, the CET-1 capital ratio increased to 15.8 per cent over the course of 2020, the report showed.

The report further said in its June 2020 stress test and additional analysis in the light of Covid-19, the US Fed found that banks generally had strong levels of capital, but considerable economic uncertainty remained.

It projected that under severely adverse scenario, the CET-1 ratio of large banks would decline from an average starting point of 12 per cent in the fourth quarter of 2019 to 10.3 per cent in first quarter of 2022.

However, CET-1 ratio for large banks increased to 13 per cent as at end-2020, as per the latest position of stress test of the US Federal Reserve.

Similarly, in its Covid-19 vulnerability analysis results (June 2020) for 86 banks comprising about 80 per cent of total assets in the Euro area, the European Central Bank (ECB) estimated that banks’ aggregate CET-1 ratio would deplete by 1.9 percentage points to 12.6 per cent under the central scenario, and by 5.7 percentage points to 8.8 per cent under the severe scenario by end-2022.

As per the latest position, the CET-1 ratio of Euro area banks on aggregate improved to 15.4 per cent in 2020.

The FSR also conducted the stress tests on banks’ credit concentration — considering top individual borrowers according to their standard exposures.

The test showed that in the extreme scenario of the top three individual borrowers of the banks under consideration failing to repay, no bank will face a situation of fall in CRAR below the regulatory requirement of 9 per cent.

However, 37 banks would experience a decline of more than one percentage point in their CRARs.

Under the extreme scenario of the top three group borrowers in the standard category failing to repay, the worst impacted four banks would have CRARs in the range of 10 to 11 per cent and 39 banks would experience a decline in CRAR of more than one percentage point, the report said.

In the extreme scenario of the top three individual stressed borrowers of these banks failing to repay, a majority of the banks would experience a reduction of 10 to 20 bps only in their CRARs, the report said, adding this will be on account of low level of stressed assets in March 2021.

The report further said despite the pandemic conditions during 2020-21, the GNPA ratio for the non-banking financial companies (NBFCs) sector declined with a more than commensurate fall in the net NPA ratio attesting to higher provisioning, and capital adequacy improved marginally.

The GNPAs of NBFCs stood at 6.4 per cent and net NPAs at 2.7 per cent as of March 2021.



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