Govt sells Central Electronics to Nandal Finance and Leasing for Rs 210 cr, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The government on Monday approved sale of Central Electronics Ltd to Nandal Finance and Leasing for Rs 210 crore. This is the second strategic stake sale by the government after Air India.

“The Alternative Mechanism … has approved the highest price bid of M/s Nandal Finance and Leasing Pvt Ltd for sale of 100% equity shareholding of GoI in Central Electronics Ltd (CEL) – a CPSE under the Department of Scientific and Industrial Research (DSIR). The winning bid is for Rs 210,00,60000,” an official statement said.

The Alternative Mechanism (AM) on strategic disinvestment comprises Road Transport Minister Nitin Gadkari, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman and Minister of State for Science and Technology Jitendra Singh.

Two bidders had put in financial bids for CEL — Nandal Finance and Leasing Pvt Ltd for Rs 210 crore and JPM Industries Ltd bid for Rs 190 crore.

The higher of the two price bids, submitted by M/s Nandal Finance and Leasing Pvt Ltd, was found to be above the reserve price, the statement added.



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Central Bank of India identifies 350 branches in coastal areas for aqua financing, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Central Bank of India will expand its agri-loan portfolio through aqua financing and has identified around 350 branches in coastal areas to cater to such loans in the rural areas.

“We are now moving onto the agri related industries like processing. In coastal areas, we have identified around 350 branches where we are bringing only aqua financing from the rural centres,” M V Rao, MD & CEO, Central Bank of India, said in earnings call with analysts post June 2021 quarter results of the bank.

Rao said the bank is segregating how to diversify the agri portfolio.

Central Bank will use its own financing for this kind of diversification on the agri and agri processing industries, horticulture industries and aqua based industry, he said.

On the mandated priority sector loans, the loans to the targeted sector were higher than the stipulated, the bank said.

Regarding total priority sector lending of 40 per cent, the bank was at 43.76 per cent, he said.

Agriculture sector was 19.74 per cent against a target of 18 per cent, while for lending to small and marginal farmers, the bank was at 10.70 per cent against a target of 8 per cent, Rao added.

The state-owned lender will also rebalance its credit book with 70 per cent of the overall lending to the RAM segment (retail, agri and MSME).

“Going forward, we will be rebalancing our credit book with 70/30 that is 70 per cent (of the loan book) will be RAM and 30 per cent will be corporate.

“So our RAM, which was 62.03 per cent in June 2020, now it has gone up to 65.41 per cent. Further reduction in the corporate (loan) happened because of the technical write-off done in the month of March,” he said.

The lender said it also entered into co-lending agreements last month with three NBFCs to expand lending in the housing and MSME sectors.

The bank also sees opportunity in lending to the trader community, which was recently brought under priority sector by the government.

In July, MSME minister Nitin Gadkari had announced to bring retail and wholesale traders under the priority sector lending.

“So with the ministry recently announcing to bring traders under priority sector, we feel that opportunity is there in the trading (segment),” Rao said.



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Gross NPAs of banks likely to decline in FY21 amid MSME schemes, restructuring, write-offs: CARE Ratings

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The year-on-year gross bank credit growth to MSEs in March had declined to its lowest level, amid the second Covid wave, since May in the financial year 2020-21.

Gross non-performing assets of banks are likely to decline in FY21 due to restructuring, write-offs, and resilience in the economy, rating agency CARE Ratings said on Wednesday. The decline is expected as several regulatory and government support schemes for MSMEs and others had helped borrowers to access liquidity and conserve cash flows. For instance, the moratorium on loan repayments for six months till August 30, 2020, Covid-related restructuring scheme for MSMEs till March 31, 2021, and for large corporates till December 31, 2020, Resolution Framework 2.0 scheme for personal loans and MSMEs till September 30, 2021, ECLGS to enable banks and NBFCs provide funding to MSMEs, TLTROs, special refinance facilities to NABARD/SIDBI/NHB to address sectoral credit needs, and extended partial guarantee scheme, the agency noted.

“The government had enabled loan of up to 20 per cent of an MSME’s total outstanding credit in the Rs 3 lakh crore ECLGS scheme. So, loans were guaranteed by the government and MSMEs got significant breathing space with immediate cash flows being taken care of so that they may not default and deteriorate their credit score, etc. Given that MSMEs generally have a significant share of NPAs, now that share will be much more muted than what we would have expected otherwise,” Sanjay Agarwal, Senior Director, CARE Ratings told Financial Express Online.

Gross NPAs had jumped by 43.7 per cent from Rs 7.1 lakh crore in March 2017 to reach Rs 10.2 lakh crore by the end of March 2018 following which the NPAs witnessed moderation and reached Rs 8.9 lakh crore by end of March 2020, the report said. The asset quality pressure witnessed by the banks over post asset quality review (AQR) had been reducing in a couple of years prior to Covid. The movement in gross NPA had declined to Rs 9 lakh crore in FY19 and to Rs 8.9 lakh crore in FY20.

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Despite a challenging year (FY21), the quantum of gross NPAs of scheduled commercial banks (SCBs) is expected to decline by the end of March 2021 as compared with the previous year due to write-offs, lower slippage, restructuring schemes, and ECLGS support for MSMEs, the agency said in the report. However, as anticipated with the Supreme Court judgment allowing for the recognition of NPAs, FY21-end numbers are expected to be either similar or slightly above the Q3 FY21 numbers, it added. “Slippages are largely from MSMEs in retail. MSME slippages have been reduced because of the ECLGS,” added Agarwal.

The FY21 gross NPAs is estimated to settle at Rs 7.9 lakh crore, according to CARE Ratings. While public lenders’ gross NPA amount is expected to be around Rs 6.0 lakh crore at the end of March 2021 vis-à-vis Rs 6.8 lakh crore at the end of March 2020, for private lenders, the gross NPA amount increased from Rs 1.8 lakh crore in March 2018 to over Rs 2 lakh crore in December 2019. However, it is subsequently expected to have retreated to around Rs 1.96 lakh crore by the end of March 2021.

Moreover, write-offs’ share in gross NPAs has markedly increased post FY18, indicating that SCBs have cleaned their books taking a hit and recoveries have had a smaller share of the same, the agency said. “MSMEs right off every quarter by all banks has been very significant because the government had given quite a lot of equity and banks had made a lot of provisions. Now they have written off against the provisions. So it doesn’t reflect in the profit and loss statement but writes-offs are very significant,” said Agarwal.

Importantly, the year-on-year gross bank credit growth to MSEs in March had declined to its lowest level, amid the second Covid wave, since May in the financial year 2020-21. The credit outstanding as of March 26, 2021, was Rs 11.07 lakh crore – up only 2.5 per cent from Rs 10.8 lakh crore in March 2020, according to the RBI’s monthly bulletin. Moreover, the share of MSEs in India’s overall gross bank credit also continued to decline for the third straight month. From 12.11 per cent in December 2020, the MSE share contracted to 12.09 per cent in January 2021 and 11.8 per cent in February before slipping further to 11.3 per cent in March. The overall gross bank credit as of March 26, 2021, stood at Rs 97.2 lakh crore.

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HDFC Bank’s MSME book grows 30% to cross Rs 2 trillion-mark, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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MUMBAI: HDFC Bank‘s MSME book grew 30 per cent year-on-year to cross the Rs 2-lakh-crore-mark as of December-end, mainly boosted by the pandemic-induced ECLG scheme under which it disbursed over Rs 23,000 crore. The growth is also driven by a renewed push towards customers in semi-urban and rural areas, the bank has said.

In December 2019, the bank’s MSME book stood at Rs 1.4 lakh crore, which has grown by over 60,000 crore or 30 per cent to Rs 2,01,758 crore by the December 2020 quarter, giving it a 10.6 per cent share system-wide MSME lending, becoming the second-largest lender in this segment after the State Bank of India, the bank added.

“Our MSME lending is back to pre-pandemic levels, with loan book growing at 30 per cent year-on to Rs 2,01,758 crore as of the December 2020 quarter,” Sumant Rampal, senior executive vice-president, business banking and healthcare finance, at the bank told on Friday.

“While the ECLG scheme was the biggest driver boosting the loan book by Rs 23,000 crore disbursed to around 1,10,000 MSME customers, our own renewed push towards customers in semi-urban and rural areas has also helped us during the pandemic, leading to an incremental loan growth of over Rs 60,000 crore,” he said, adding most of the ECLGS disbursals took place only in the past three-four months.

At 30 per cent loan growth, the MSME book is the fastest-growing vertical for the bank. “This is a testimony to our commitment to strengthen the MSME sector that accounts for about 30 per cent of GDP and the largest employer,” Rampal said.

The government launched the third version of the Rs 3-lakh crore emergency credit line guarantee scheme (ECLGS) last November for MSMEs, following the KV Kamath committee report.

On Thursday, Union MSME minister Nitin Gadkari told the Lok Sabha that banks and other financial institutions have cumulatively sanctioned Rs 2.46 lakh crore of the Rs 3 lakh crore scheme, while disbursal stood at low Rs 1.81 lakh crore, as of February 28, according to the data from the National Credit Guarantee Trustee Company, which is the implementing agency of the ECLGS.

The scheme comes with a 2 per cent interest subvention and is a five-year tenor of which the first year gets a payment moratorium.

“Our MSME portfolio is geographically balanced spread across all metropolitan cities, urban, semi-urban and rural regions. And we reached out to them with a suite of customised products which they could access conveniently either through physical or electronic channels,” said Rampal.

The bank offers a range of services to MSMEs, ranging from conventional working capital/term loans, structured cash flow management and financing solutions, trade financing solutions, forex services, individual banking needs of promoters and family, salary accounts plus advisory on investment banking.

Its MSME portfolio is spread across sectors like textiles, fabrication, agri-processing, chemicals, consumer goods, hotels & restaurants, auto components, pharma and the paper industry, and also include the entire selling chain ranging from wholesalers, retailers, distributors, stockists and supermarkets, he said.

On Q4, Rampal refused to share numbers citing the Nasdaq silent period, just saying my team is busy at work and pointed to the large market of 6 crore registered MSMEs, but only 1.2 crore of them borrowing even after all the push by the government and the Reserve Bank.

He said of their 5,500 branches, 1,800 of them have more than 25 per cent of their loans to MSMEs and 4,800 units service this segment of customers. Geographically speaking, the bank is present in 630 districts, of these, 560 districts have MSMEs.

There is no concern on the asset quality front for the bank, which has a history of having the lowest NPAs in the system. In December 2019, the MSME bad loans for the bank were just 0.48 per cent and Rampal said, anyway currently the entire ECLGS book is under mandatory moratorium.

He said, the services industry is still facing challenges and expressed apprehension about the second wave of the pandemic.



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Yes Bank rolls out Yes MSME offering funding, knowledge partnerships & digital solutions to MSMEs, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Yes Bank has rolled out Yes MSME, a comprehensive proposition enabling easy access to funding, knowledge partnerships and digital solutions.

The start-up programme offers collateral free loan up to Rs 5 crore, offers comprehensive micro-segmented services, facilitates easy access to capital with lower TAT and minimal documentation among other host of benefits with partnerships and technological opportunities.

The bank said in a release, “The YES MSME proposition focuses on supporting MSMEs in expanding their business, sustaining momentum and accelerating growth through solutions across lending, deposits, insurance, customized and segmented digital solutions for retail, manufacturing, wholesale, trade and service providers. This also includes special current account offerings for the self-employed segment.”
The bank has partnered over 700+ associations to take this ahead.

Nitin Gadkari, Union Minister for MSMEs and Road Transport and Highways, said, “The MSME sector is the backbone of the Indian economy and accounts for 30 per cent of the economy creating 11 crore jobs so far. Investment in the sector is the need of the hour and we are hopeful that concerted efforts by the industry and the Government will help expand it. I congratulate YES BANK for this new addition under their MSME sector initiative and the long-term plan to strengthen the ecosystem.”

Prashant Kumar, MD and CEO, YES BANK, said at the launch, “YES BANK remains committed to supporting the growth of this employment-intensive sector and contribute to the growth of the economy. The Bank’s enhanced value proposition will improve access to finance for MSMEs and support their technology upgrade, among other customer-focused measures. I am confident that our measures will have tangible outcomes and contribute to the collective vision of a self-reliant nation.”

The bank said, “The unique endeavour is yet another step for a meaningful push to increase the GDP contribution of the MSME sector – which came under strain in the aftermath of COVID-19 – from the current 30 per cent to 50 per cent, as the Government of India has envisioned.”



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