Yes Bank board okays prosecution of Rana Kapoor, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Troubled lender Yes Bank’s board has given sanction to prosecute its jailed promoter Rana Kapoor under the Prevention of Corruption Act (PCA).

This came following a requisition by the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI), which informed a local magistrate’s court of the development and filed a supplementary chargesheet in the Yes Bank fraud case earlier this week.

The central agency has charged R Anand, the then area sales manager, as well as a junior ex-employee of Yes Bank in the case, sources privy to the development told ET.

Last year, the CBI had sought the board’s approval after a special CBI court in Mumbai rejected its charge sheet against the banker under PCA as it lacked prosecution sanction.

The special court remitted the case to a lower court for cognisance under sections related to cheating and criminal conspiracy of the Indian Penal Code (IPC), which attract lesser punishment.

Prior sanction from a competent authority is mandatory to an accused public servant to stand trial under PCA, as per an amendment to the Act notified in 2018.

“Once the consent was accorded by the board, the lower court was intimated and since the sections invoked under PCA attract punishment of over seven years, the case papers have been sent to the Sessions court. A supplementary chargesheet has also been submitted before the Sessions court and cognisance is awaited,” a senior official told ET.

The sanction to prosecute Kapoor was granted by the Yes Bank board, while that for Anand was given by the managing director of the bank, the source added. The agency is probing Kapoor and Dewan Housing Finance Corporation Ltd’s (DHFL) promoters Kapil and Dheeraj Wadhawan in an alleged corruption case of over Rs 600 crore.

“During the course of the probe, it was found that Anand and another junior employee acted on the advice of Kapoor and overruled the recommendations given by the risk management committee against loans sanctioned to DHFL,” the official added.

The committee, in its recommendation, had highlighted that the Letter of Intent was not made to the company that applied for the loan, but in the name of a different company.

The project for which the loan was sought did not have the requisite sanction from the local authorities, including MHADA, and the tenants were not evicted, the official added.

“These over-rulings are discussed on email exchanged between the three and the same has been found during the course of the probe which has been detailed out in the chargesheet,” the source said.

According to the CBI’s first chargesheet, in June 2018, Kapoor, the then head of Yes Bank’s management credit committee, sanctioned a loan of `750 crore on an application by the promoters of DHFL in the name of Belief Realtors Pvt Ltd to develop the Bandra Reclamation Project.

This amount was advanced to RKW Developers, a company controlled by Dheeraj Wadhawan, though the bank’s risk management team had pointed out multiple issues with the proposal.

The agency’s probe revealed that the loan was not utilised for the stated purpose.

Simultaneously, Kapil Wadhawan is alleged to have paid a kickback of `600 crore to Kapoor and his family members in the garb of a builder loan from DHFL to DOIT Urban Ventures (India) Private Ltd (DUVPL).

Rana Kapoor’s daughter Roshni is one of the directors of DUVPL. After deducting a processing fee, Rs 632 crore was transferred to RKW Developers.



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IOB asks Union Bank to buy its stake in Malaysian bank, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Indian Overseas Bank (IOB) has asked the Union Bank of India to buy its 35 per cent holding in India International Bank, Malaysia, a top IOB official said on Tuesday.

The India International Bank was originally a three-way joint venture between the Bank of Baroda (40 per cent stake), the IOB (35 per cent) and Andhra Bank (25 per cent). The Andhra Bank was taken over by the Union Bank of India as a part of the megabank merger scheme last year.

“We have asked Union Bank of India to buy our stakes. The valuation exercise is going on,” IOB Managing Director & CEO Partha Pratim Sengupta told reporters.

According to him, the IOB had decided to exit the Malaysian joint venture as part of its plan to come out of the Reserve Bank of India‘s (RBI) Prompt and Corrective Action (PCA) fold.

Though Sengupta said the IOB is expecting to be out of the PCA fold as it fulfills the RBI’s conditions, the decision to exit the India International Bank continues to hold.

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IOB asks Union Bank to buy its stake in Malaysian bank, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Indian Overseas Bank (IOB) has asked the Union Bank of India to buy its 35 per cent holding in India International Bank, Malaysia, a top IOB official said on Tuesday.

The India International Bank was originally a three-way joint venture between the Bank of Baroda (40 per cent stake), the IOB (35 per cent) and Andhra Bank (25 per cent). The Andhra Bank was taken over by the Union Bank of India as a part of the megabank merger scheme last year.

“We have asked Union Bank of India to buy our stakes. The valuation exercise is going on,” IOB Managing Director & CEO Partha Pratim Sengupta told reporters.

According to him, the IOB had decided to exit the Malaysian joint venture as part of its plan to come out of the Reserve Bank of India‘s (RBI) Prompt and Corrective Action (PCA) fold.

Though Sengupta said the IOB is expecting to be out of the PCA fold as it fulfills the RBI’s conditions, the decision to exit the India International Bank continues to hold.

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Indian Overseas Bank profit doubles to Rs 327 cr in Q1, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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New Delhi: State-owned Indian Overseas Bank on Tuesday reported over two-fold jump in its net profit to Rs 327 crore for the quarter ending June as provisions for bad loans declined. The bank had posted a net profit of Rs 121 crore in the year-ago quarter.

Total income during Q1FY22, however, was down at Rs 5,155 crore as against Rs 5,234 crore in Q1FY21, Indian Overseas Bank said in a regulatory filing.

The interest income was down by 5.6 per cent at Rs 4,063 crore during the quarter. The non-interest income rose by 17.2 per cent at Rs 1,092 crore due to increase in other income, the bank said.

The Chennai-headquartered lender said it reduced non-performing assets (NAPs) worth Rs 1,616 crore during the quarter, as against Rs 1,969 crore in June 2020 quarter.

Bank’s gross NPAs (bad loans) fell to 11.48 per cent of the gross advances as of June 30, 2021, against 13.90 per cent in the year-ago period.

In terms of value, the gross NPAs were worth Rs 15,952 crore, down from Rs 18,291 crore. Net NPAs fell to 3.15 per cent (Rs 3,998 crore) from 5.10 per cent (Rs 6,081 crore).

Provisions for bad loans and contingencies for the quarter fell to Rs 868 crore from Rs 969.52 crore a year ago.

“The bank plans to come out of prompt corrective action (PCA) by focussing on recovery, low-cost deposits and less capital consuming advances,” it said.

The provision coverage ratio recorded at 91.56 per cent, it added.

Shares of the bank traded 2.7 per cent down at Rs 23.40 apiece on BSE. PTI KPM MR MR



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IOB asks Union Bank to buy its stake in Malaysian bank, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Indian Overseas Bank (IOB) has asked the Union Bank of India to buy its 35 per cent holding in India International Bank, Malaysia, a top IOB official said on Tuesday.

The India International Bank was originally a three-way joint venture between the Bank of Baroda (40 per cent stake), the IOB (35 per cent) and Andhra Bank (25 per cent). The Andhra Bank was taken over by the Union Bank of India as a part of the megabank merger scheme last year.

“We have asked Union Bank of India to buy our stakes. The valuation exercise is going on,” IOB Managing Director & CEO Partha Pratim Sengupta told reporters.

According to him, the IOB had decided to exit the Malaysian joint venture as part of its plan to come out of the Reserve Bank of India‘s (RBI) Prompt and Corrective Action (PCA) fold.

Though Sengupta said the IOB is expecting to be out of the PCA fold as it fulfills the RBI’s conditions, the decision to exit the India International Bank continues to hold.

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Bottomline back in black, IOB wants to be out of PCA, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Chennai, With its bottomline back in black after a long time, the Indian Overseas Bank (IOB) has approached the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) seeking it be taken out of the Prompt Corrective Action (PCA) fold, a top official said.

Managing Director & CEO Partha Pratim Sengupta also said that the IOB plans to raise additional funds of about Rs 2,000 crore from a follow-on equity issue and Rs 1,000 crore by issue of bonds.

Addressing reporters, Sengupta said the bank has approached the RBI to be taken out of PCA as its financial metrics have turned good.

The bank also said it plans to come out of PCA by focusing on loan recovery, low cost deposits and less capital consuming advances.

The bank closed last fiscal with a net profit of Rs 831 crore as against a net loss of about Rs 8,527 crore.

The total income for the year ended March 31, 2021 stood at about Rs 22,525 crore as against about Rs 20,712 crore for FY20.

According to Sengupta, the income from treasury operations had beefed up the bank’s other income and the reduction in cost of funds contributed to the profitability.

In a regulatory filing, the IOB said its Board has approved the issue of 125 crore equity shares at an appropriate premium to the public by way of follow-on public offer/rights issue with or without participation of the government.

The Board also decided that the issue could also be to qualified institutional buyers, employee shareholders, and on preferential basis to insurers and mutual funds.

It also approved the issue of Basel III compliant tier II bonds up to Rs 1,000 crore in one or more tranches on private placement or public issue.

On March 31, 2021, the IOB had received Rs 4,100 crore as capital infusion by the government at an issue price of Rs.16.63 per equity share of Rs.10 each.

During the year under review, IOB’s total business stood at Rs 3,79,885 crore (deposits Rs 2,40,288 crore, advances Rs 1,39,597 crore) up from Rs 3,57,723 crore (deposits Rs 2,22,952 crore, advances Rs 1,34,771 crore).

The bank said it had recovered about Rs 6,831 crore from non-performing assets (NPA) accounts last fiscal.

The bank’s gross NPA (GNPA) reduced from 14.78 per cent as at March 31, 2020 to 11.69 per cent as at March 31, 2021.

The net NPA (NNPA) went down from 5.44 per cent, as at March 31, 2020, to 3.58 per cent as at March 31, 2021.

Sengupta said IOB is targeting GNPA of less than 10 per cent this fiscal.

According to him, the bank has identified about Rs 8,000 crore loan for restructuring and a cash recovery target of about Rs 4,600 crore.

Sengupta also said that the IOB had merged 53 branches last fiscal and one or two branches may be merged this year.



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IDBI Bank has transformed into a retail bank: Samuel Joseph, Dy MD

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During the four years that IDBI Bank was under prompt corrective action (PCA), it transformed itself from a predominantly corporate bank to a retail bank. And the Bank, which exited PCA on March 10, 2021, would like to keep it that way, according to Samuel Joseph J, Deputy Managing Director. In an interaction with BusinessLine, he emphasised that it had aggressively accelerated provisioning, over and above the regulatory requirement, in the past to strengthen its balance sheet. So, write back to profits in the next two to three years, whenever the recovery from stressed assets happens, will be about ₹7,500 crore. Excerpts:

Now that your bank is free from the shackles of PCA, how does it plan to grow business?

During the period that we were under PCA, we were consolidating our position. We completely revamped our risk management policies, especially concerning corporate credit. So, everything was ready (for growing business) before we exited PCA. But unfortunately, the exit coincided with lockdown and related economic uncertainty. However, we will be able to expand our book in FY22. We propose to grow our corporate loan book by 8-10 per cent and our retail book by 10-12 per cent.

There is an impression that our Bank is a corporate bank. But if you look at our March 2021 numbers, our corporate to the retail ratio in the overall loan book was 38:62. This is a significant shift from where we were three-four years ago when the ratio was 60:40.

Going forward, we would like to keep the corporate book at about 40-45 per cent and the retail book at about 55-60 per cent.

And even on the liabilities side, we have transformed our liabilities franchise, and today our CASA (current account, savings account) is 50.45 per cent of total deposits. Even within term deposits, our reliance on bulk deposits is less than 15 per cent. Three years back, CASA was at about 37 per cent.

So, we have used the PCA period well to completely transform our business mix and strengthen the balance sheet.

How did you strengthen the balance sheet?

The first thing was recognition of non-performing assets (NPAs). We made aggressive provisioning for the NPAs and took the hit upfront on our Profit & Loss (P&L) account. So, today, our provision coverage ratio is at 96.9 per cent. The huge losses in 2019-20 were all because of aggressive accelerated provisioning. This was not required as per the regulatory norms, which give banks a gliding scale (for provisioning). Going by this, 96.9 per cent provisioning is not required at all. But we made accelerated provisioning to absorb the pain upfront. So, though the Gross Non-Performing Assets (NPA) ratio is slightly elevated at 22.37 per cent, the net NPA ratio is only 1.97 per cent as of March-end 2021.

We have not aggressively written off NPAs in the past because of the uncertainty relating to future profitability. But now that we have made five quarters of profit, we are fairly certain. Of course, we will wait for the Covid uncertainty to clear up, promoter change and all that and then we should be able to bring down GNPA by writing off 100 per cent provided for accounts.

How much provision write-back can you get from recoveries?

Our Gross NPAs are at about ₹36,000 crore. Technically written off (TWO) accounts already in our book aggregate to about ₹43,000 crore. So, both put together is about ₹79,000 crore. And this is about 97 per cent provided for….On average, let us say, we recover about 15 per cent. So, on ₹79,000 crore, we will be able to recover about ₹11,850 crore. Now, let us take a more conservative estimate — say, we recover only about ₹10,000 crore. Our net NPAs are only ₹2,500 crore because of aggressive provisioning. So, provision write-back to profits in the next two to three years, whenever the recovery happens, will be about ₹7,500 crore. The future (profit) potential of this aggressive past provisioning will at least be ₹7,000 crore to ₹7,500 crore going forward in the next two to three years.

Our Capital to Risk-weighted Assets Ratio (CRAR) is 15.59 per cent. So, from now on, we will be able to recoup our capital and increase CRAR much further. So, this is what we have done — on the P&L part, we have absorbed the pain upfront, and we have strengthened our balance sheet to recoup our capital through recovery and write-back to profits in the next two to three years.

Did you zero in on the stressed assets you will transfer to the National Asset Reconstruction Company Ltd?

We have identified the stressed assets for the transfer. The criteria for the transfer is that they should have been 100 per cent provided for, not be categorised as fraud, and it should not be very close to a resolution or recovery. Using these filters, we have identified the assets. We have a list of 11 accounts aggregating about ₹12,000 crore to be transferred to NARCL.

The immediate visual impact of this transfer on our balance sheet will be by way of a reduction in our Gross NPA ratio. Out of this ₹12,000 crore, some of the accounts may even be TWO accounts. The impact of TWO accounts is already reflected in our books. So, if out of ₹12,000 crore, Gross NPAs and TWO accounts amount to ₹6,000 crore each, then the GNPA could come down about 3.50 per cent.

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IDBI Bank back in black in FY21 after 5 years, posts profit of Rs 1,359 cr, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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LIC-controlled IDBI Bank turned profitable in the fiscal ended in March 2021 after five years, posting a net profit of Rs 1,359 crore for the year. In 2019-20, the lender had posted a net loss of Rs 12,887 crore.

IDBI Bank is back in black after five years, said the lender.

In the last quarter of the fiscal year 2020-21, the bank reported a nearly four-fold jump in its net profit to Rs 512 crore, IDBI Bank said in a release. The bank had posted a profit of Rs 135 crore in the year-ago quarter.

The bank, which came out of the RBI‘s prompt corrective action (PCA) framework earlier in March this year, said its turnaround strategies led to the transformation.

Total income during Q4FY21 rose to Rs 6,969.59 crore from Rs 6,924.94 crore in the same period of 2019-20.

The full year income, however, was down at Rs 24,557 crore as against Rs 25,295 crore.

Gross NPA (non-performing asset) ratio improved to 22.37 per cent as on March 31, 2021 as against 27.53 per cent in the year-ago period. Net NPA improved to 1.97 per cent from 4.19 per cent, IDBI Bank said.

The bank said its recovery from technically written off accounts improved to Rs 269 crore in Q4FY21 as against Rs 105 crore in the third quarter FY21.

Provisions for bad loans and contingencies were raised to Rs 2,457 crore during the reported quarter as against Rs 1,584 crore.

The bank said it has made Covid-related provisions of Rs 363 crore at the end of March 2021.

IDBI Bank shares traded at Rs 36.25 on BSE, up 2.69 per cent from the previous close.



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IDBI Bank to focus on retail loans in life out of PCA, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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After its exit from Reserve Bank’s stringent prompt corrective action (PCA) framework, IDBI Bank is looking to return to the growth league as the government looks to sell it to a strategic investor and current promoter LIC seeks attractive valuations in its upcoming IPO.

The bank’s capital adequacy ratio is 14.77 per cent and has earned profit continuously for the last five quarters while its other ratios such as liquidity coverage ratio are much above the RBI’s norms.

Under PCA

Under the PCA imposed by RBI in 2017, the bank’s balance-sheet shrank as it could not extend loans to corporates and was not allowed to open branches.

It used the four years of PCA to restructure its business, cut exposure to large loans and bulk deposits and create verticals for various lending businesses to speed up turnaround time.

The bank has worked for the last four years on various parameters, done recoveries and raised its provision coverage ratio to 97%.

The lender is looking at Rs 4,000 crore of recoveries in the next fiscal.

Retail loans

The share of corporate loans, which was about 67% four years back when it went under PCR, has shrunk to 40% now with 60% loans being retail. The bank is now targeting 55% loan book as retail and rest corporate. It wants to maintain low costs retail deposits at 48% of total deposits.

As a result, the institution has transformed from a project financier to a retail lender.

The company is looking to target the mid-corporate segment and will now avoid overexposure to certain industries and grow the business in a calibrated manner.

It sees over 12% growth in retail loans and 8-10% rise in corporate loans.

Growth

IDBI Bank plans to ramp up growth, regain lost corporate customers and sell stakes in its insurance, capital markets and technology arms. The lender plans to grow the loan book at 8-10% in the next fiscal and raise net interest margin beyond 3%.

The bank will focus on lending to manufacturing and maintain selective exposure to infrastructure.

The lender is looking to bring down the cost to income ratio to below 50% by pushing up income.

Stake sales

It willing to sell a 25% stake in Ageas Federal Life to the foreign partner if they wanted to acquire the stake after the increase in foreign direct investment (FDI) is allowed and also in other subsidiaries.

IDBI Fintech is a 100% subsidiary of the bank, which provides end-to-end IT services to IDBI Bank, its group companies, its ultimate parent company LIC, as well as other external clients in the BFSI sector. The company was currently in the process of appointing merchant bankers to help identify a strategic joint venture partner. IDBI Capital Markets is the merchant banking arm of IDBI Bank and the lender is looking for a strategic partner in this company as well.

Borrowings

Earlier this month, IDBI Bank’s board approved borrowing up to Rs 8,000 crore through rupee-denominated bonds in one or two tranches for FY2021-22.

Of the total, the bank will borrow up to Rs 3,000 crore via additional tier-I (AT1) bonds in one or more tranches, and up to Rs 1,000 crore in senior/infrastructure bonds by way of private placement.



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IDBI Bank eyes stake sales in subsidiaries, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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MUMBAI: IDBI Bank plans to ramp up growth, regain lost corporate customers and sell stakes in its insurance, capital markets and technology arms following its exit from the banking regulator’s prompt corrective action (PCA) framework for weak lenders.

IDBI Bank MD & CEO Rakesh Sharma told TOI that the bank had used the four-year interregnum to restructure its business, cut exposure to large loans and bulk deposits and create verticals for various lending businesses to speed up turnaround time. As a result, the institution has transformed from a project financier to a retail lender.

“While our retail portfolio grew during the moratorium period, we were not able to cater to the corporates. We are now looking at the mid-corporate segment, particularly the good companies which were our partners earlier and we could not extend loans because of restrictions under the PCA,” said Sharma.

He said that the bank was looking at Rs 4,000 crore of recoveries in the next fiscal year. In addition, it was willing to sell a 25% stake in Ageas Federal Life (formerly IDBI Federal Life) to the foreign partner if they wanted to acquire the stake once the increase in foreign direct investment (FDI) is allowed.

IDBI Fintech is a 100% subsidiary of the bank. The company provides end-to-end IT services to IDBI Bank, its group companies, its ultimate parent company LIC, as well as other external clients in the BFSI sector. The company was currently in the process of appointing merchant bankers to help identify a strategic joint venture partner. IDBI Capital Markets is the merchant banking arm of IDBI Bank and the lender is looking for a strategic partner in this company as well.

The RBI’s PCA places restrictions on weak banks from offering large loans to corporates and offering salary hikes for management and from expanding business. Sharma said that the bank did hire specialists from the market, but now that it was out of PCA it would do more lateral recruitments and continue to hire from campuses.



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