Centre to amend banking laws to facilitate privatisation of two PSU banks, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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To facilitate privatisation of two public sector banks (PSBs), the government is all set to introduce a banking laws amendment bill in the upcoming winter session starting Monday. Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman while presenting Budget 2021-22 earlier this year had announced the privatisation of PSBs as part of disinvestment drive to garner Rs 1.75 lakh crore.

The Banking Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2021, to be introduced during the session is expected to bring down the minimum government holding in the PSBs from 51 percent to 26 percent, sources said.

However, sources said a final call in this respect would be taken by the Union Cabinet when it would vet the proposed legislation.

“To effect amendments in Banking Companies (Acquisition and Transfer of Undertakings) Acts, 1970 and 1980 and incidental amendments to Banking Regulation Act, 1949 in the context of Union Budget announcement 2021 regarding privatisation of two Public Sector Banks,” according to the list of legislative business for the Winter Session.

These Acts led to the nationalisation of banks in two phases and provisions of these laws have to be changed for the privatisation of banks, sources said.

In the last concluded session, Parliament passed a bill to allow privatisation of state-run general insurance companies.

The General Insurance Business (Nationalisation) Amendment Bill, 2021, removed the requirement of the central government to hold at least 51 per cent of the equity capital in a specified insurer.

The Act, which came into force in 1972, provided for the acquisition and transfer of shares of Indian insurance companies and undertakings of other existing insurers in order to better serve the needs of the economy by securing the development of general insurance business.

Government think-tank NITI Aayog has already suggested two banks and one insurance company to Core Group of Secretaries on Disinvestment for privatisation.

According to sources, Central Bank of India and Indian Overseas Bank are likely candidates for the privatisation.

As per the process, the Core Group of Secretaries, headed by the Cabinet Secretary, will send its recommendation to Alternative Mechanism (AM) for its approval and eventually to the Cabinet headed by the Prime Minister for the final nod.

The members of the Core Group of Secretaries include economic affairs secretary, revenue secretary, expenditure secretary, corporate affairs secretary, legal affairs secretary, Department of Public Enterprises secretary, Department of Investment and Public Asset Management (DIPAM) secretary and an administrative department secretary.



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Private banks lead, overall NPA provisioning falls in Q2, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The worst seems to be over for banks in the pandemic, going by the drop in bad loan provisioning numbers. The bad loan provisioning by banks fell sequentially for the second consecutive quarter in the three months ended September 2021, led by a significant drop in some of the private sector banks. The trend is likely to continue on account of improved collections and lower slippages.

The aggregate provisioning towards non-performing assets (NPA) or loan loss provision for a sample of 29 banks fell by 20.5 per cent sequentially and 10.9 per cent year-on-year to Rs 30,400 crore. It has softened over the past two quarters after peaking at Rs 65,986.9 crore in the March 2021 quarter when banks resumed accounting for slippages.

Private banks at the forefront

The fall in the September quarter was driven by a sharp 43.9 per cent drop in loan loss provisioning by the private sector banks at the aggregate level. Top banks including HDFC Bank, Axis Bank, Kotak Bank, and IndusInd Bank recorded a double-digit sequential drop in the NPA provisioning.

The public sector banks on the other hand reported a modest 1.6 per cent fall in the NPA provisioning. Their share in the sample’s NPA provisioning increased to 68.5 per cent from 55.3 per cent in the previous quarter.

Analysts expect the asset quality of banks to improve gradually in the coming quarters following a pick up in economic activity and recovery in collections.

“Banks slippage ratios reduced substantially by 100 basis points QoQ on an average in the September quarter. The asset quality situation is likely to improve further driven by a reduction in retail as well as SME nonperforming loans in the coming quarters,” a Macquarie Capital Securities (India) note said.

The banks’ net interest income increased by 3.7 per cent sequentially and 2.4 per cent year-on-year to Rs 1.3 lakh crore. The sequential growth was faster for PSU banks at 5 per cent compared with 2.1 per cent for the private sector banks.



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Consortium of PSU banks agrees to infuse funds for completion of stalled Amrapali projects: SC told

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On the occasion of Diwali, 150 flats completed by National Buildings Construction Corporation (NBCC) in a stalled project of Amrapali were given to the homebuyers in a small ceremony organised with the help of court receiver.

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What you learn from IRCTC’s dizzying journey

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Stocks of Public Sector Undertakings (PSUs) in India are generally held to be boring bets for investors, given that they operate in old economy businesses, rarely go in for exciting corporate moves such as new business forays, buyouts or mergers, and faithfully maintain a high dividend yield by coughing up payouts at their promoter’s behest.

But Indian Railway Catering and Tourism Corporation (IRCTC), the monopoly ticketing arm of Indian Railways, has behaved in a very non-PSU like fashion right from its IPO in October 2019. With the offer made at a throwaway price of ₹320, the share more than doubled on listing and was up fourfold within fifteen months, scaling ₹1400 by January 2021.

A dizzying rise….

It had good reason to do so. Though two waves of Covid had battered IRCTC’s revenues and profits in FY21 to a third of FY20 levels, IRCTC continued to seed new revenue streams during the pandemic.

It flagged off hotel, bus and airline ticketing services, launched domestic and international tour packages, debuted its own payment gateway and scaled up its insurance and co-branded credit card business, while bidding for private train routes put on block by the Railways. It also took the first steps towards monetising its mammoth 6 crore user base with cross-selling and advertising.

This helped the investor community forget its pathological aversion to PSUs, to imagine a rosy future for IRCTC. The stock’s PE scaled three digits as analysts modelled a fivefold bounce in its earnings by FY23. This was based on the Railways getting back to business-as-usual (which would restore IRCTC’s internet ticketing, catering and bottled water revenues) and adding to its bottomline from its nascent new businesses. Talk of new ticketing opportunities from AC 3 coaches and the pricing power enjoyed by IRCTC on convenience fees added to its bull case, helping the stock’s pricey PE of 150-200 times in mid-2021, scale dizzying heights of over 320 times by October 2021, prompting entertaining Twitter face-offs between IRCTC fans and haters.

And a sharp setback

But if private promoters in this situation would have done everything to keep the rosy narrative going, PSUs’ promoter – the Indian government – works in mysterious ways. A stock exchange intimation by IRCTC post-market hours on October 28 blandly intimating that the Ministry of Railways had ‘decided’ to ‘share’ 50 per cent of IRCTC’s convenience fees from November, dealt a nasty surprise to its fans.

Though internet ticketing brought in just 27 per cent of its revenues in FY20 and sharing it would deprive it of just ₹150-300 crore a year in convenience fees (depending on one’s forecast for FY23/24), ticketing is IRCTC’s key margin-generator accounting for over three-fourths of its earnings. A lot of the bullish narrative around an expanding profit pool for the company was also built around its ticketing business.

The filing therefore prompted sell-side analysts to burn the midnight oil to revise their excel models. Overnight IRCTC found its FY23/24 earnings projections lowered by 25-30 per cent, with a sharp PE de-rating predicted.

Stock price action on Friday did not disappoint the bears, with the stock losing 25 per cent shortly after opening to a post-split price of ₹639, erasing nearly ₹20,000 crore in market cap. Even as this prompted some teeth-gnashing about the Government’s folly in giving up ₹13,000 crore of market wealth (it owns 67 per cent) to gain ₹150-300 crore in revenue, pre-noon parleys between the company and the Railway Board seemed to yield results. By 11 am, business channels were beaming ‘breaking news’ on the Railway Ministry changing its mind, with the Secretary of DIPAM (earlier the disinvestment ministry) confirming that the Railways Ministry has rethought its decision. This caused the stock to forge an equally steep climb.

Lessons

The IRCTC saga reiterates some age-old learnings about PSU stocks that makes seasoned investors very choosy about them.

One, the left hand of the government may not know what the right hand is doing. Even if the Centre is a majority stake-holder in a listed PSU, the Ministry controlling it may make shareholder-unfriendly moves that prioritise its own interests over that of the shareholders.

Two, Government monopolies, unlike private monopolies, often do not have pricing power. They operate at the mercy of their respective ministries, which may prioritise social good or political popularity over shoring up the profits of the PSU. The losing battle that activist UK fund The Children’s Investment Fund fought with Coal India, about government interference in its pricing decisions and NMDC’s inability to fully cash in on global iron ore rallies, are evidence of this. IRCTC’s own convenience fees and the Railways’ share in it have been altered quite often in the past. Pre-listing, the Ministry of Railways used to share IRCTC’s convenience fees 50:50. Just before its IPO, the Centre took a decision to ‘waive’ IRCTC’s fee completely, decimating a key revenue and profit source. The fee was later partly restored post listing. Even last year, the Railways’ changing policies on catering contracts have raised doubts on the sustainability of IRCTC’s catering profits. The latest fee-sharing saga should therefore prompt IRCTC fans to keep the promoter risk in mind, while modelling earnings and according eye-watering valuations to the stock.

Three, despite the Centre’s keenness to divest, Ministries in it often prove clueless about the concept of corporate governance that requires giving minority shareholders a fair deal post-listing. Ministry bosses often continue to look upon listed PSUs as their fiefdom. The IRCTC saga has at least shown that DIPAM, under this government, is not asleep at the wheel and can act swiftly to reverse market-alienating decisions of babudom.

All this apart, the IRCTC roller-coaster also underlines the importance of investors in good companies, not giving in to hair-trigger reactions, when responding to market events. Investors who sold their IRCTC shares in panic at lows would be ruing their decision to jump off a still-racing train.

That the stock showed a build-up in buying volumes ahead of the official announcement to withdraw the sharing arrangement, also shows that the market (or insiders in it) often know far more about a company’s actions than you would imagine. If you find a stock behaving in a fashion that you think to be completely irrational after a news event, take time to digest it and gather all the information, without acting impulsively. Budget for the possibility that the market may be right and you may be wrong.

The IRCTC saga also demonstrates the brutality and quickness with which the market can punish a highly fancied (and expensively priced) ‘quality’ stock, when there’s an alteration to the bull case it has imagined. Taking the right decisions (to hold, sell or buy) through such periods of pain is an essential part of a multi-bagger journey, which is why equity returns are never easily made.

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Banks dole out over Rs 11,000 crore loans under govt’s credit outreach programme, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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State-owned banks and private banks have so far sanctioned loans worth over Rs 11,000 crore under the credit outreach programme. “As part of the government’s nationwide credit outreach programme that commenced on Oct 16, all PSU banks and private banks have sanctioned more than 193,000 loans totalling 111.68 bln rupees,” Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman‘s office tweeted.

Lenders sanctioned loans through 924 camps held in 405 districts from October 16-20.

The loan mela

Over 1 lakh borrowers availed business loans of about Rs 6,268 crore, followed by 62,616 borrowers availing agriculture loans of about Rs 1,874 crore.

Earlier this month, the finance ministry has asked PSU banks to start a nationwide loan outreach programme ahead of the festive season, and later.

Banks were asked to set targets of loans to be sanctioned during the district-wise outreach programme. They were also told to tie up with FinTech firms and non-banking financial companies to disburse loans to even small borrowers.

The banking system is bloated with liquidity, which has jumped from Rs 4.5 lakh crore in 2019 to over Rs 7.5 lakh crore currently, mainly due to weak credit demand.

The finance ministry feels that various sectors need credit support and asked banks to hold talks with exporters and various associations to support their loan needs.

FM announcement

Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman had announced a district-wise outreach to be undertaken by banks to help credit growth from October.

A push to credit growth from such outreach efforts will also help the momentum set by the stimulus packages, which have been extended by the government since the onset of the pandemic.

In late 2019, banks had conducted the “loan melas” in 400 districts to push up sagging credit growth. Even now, the credit growth is stuttering at around 6 per cent.

“I think it is too early to conclude whether there is a lack of demand… I don’t think it is time yet to conclude that there is no credit pick-up. Even without awaiting indications, we have taken steps to ramp up credit,” Sitharaman had said.

She noted that over Rs 4.94 lakh crore was disbursed by banks between October 2019 and March 2021 through the outreach initiatives.

Gross NPAs may rise

Gross non-performing assets (NPAs) of banks are expected to increase to 8-9 per cent in the current financial year, credit rating agency Crisil said in a report.

This will be well below the peak of 11.2 per cent seen at the end of fiscal 2018.

According to the agency, the COVID-19 relief measures such as the restructuring dispensation, and the Emergency Credit Line Guarantee Scheme (ECLGS) will help limit the rise in banks gross NPAs.

With around 2 per cent of bank credit expected under restructuring by the end of this fiscal, stressed assets comprising gross NPAs and loan book under restructuring should touch 10-11 per cent this fiscal, it said.

“The retail and MSME segments, which together form close to 40 per cent of bank credit, are expected to see higher accretion of NPAs and stressed assets this time around,” the agency’s senior director and deputy chief ratings officer Krishnan Sitaraman said in the report.

Stressed assets in these two segments are seen rising to 4-5 per cent and 17-18 per cent, respectively, by this fiscal end, he said.

The agency said the operationalisation of the National Asset Reconstruction Company Ltd (NARCL) by the end of this fiscal and the expected first-round sale of Rs 90,000 crore NPAs could lead to lower reported gross NPAs.

The report expects the corporate segment to be far more resilient. A large part of the stress in the corporate portfolio had already been recognised during the asset quality review initiated five years ago.



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Will profitable PSUs need capital support from govt this year?, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The government is likely to pump capital in public sector banks during the last quarter of the current financial year to meet regulatory requirements.

The government in Budget 2021-22 made an allocation of Rs 20,000 crore for capital infusion in the state-owned banks.The capital position of banks would be reviewed in the next quarter, and depending on the requirement, infusion will be made to meet the regulatory needs.

In the current fiscal so far, all 12 public sector banks have posted a profit, which is being ploughed back to bolster the balance sheet of the banks.

Going forward, the rise in stressed assets would determine capital requirement. If numbers are anything to go by, the financial health of public sector banks are showing gradual signs of improvement across the spectrum.

What Icra says

As per Icra’s estimates, public sector banks (PSBs) may not need the capital budgeted by the government for FY22, even with enhanced capital requirements.

However, banks are advised to keep provisions for any unforeseen events as it would provide confidence to banks, investors and credit growth. Icra said that large private sector banks (PVBs) also remain well-capitalised though few mid-sized ones could need to raise capital.

“We continue to maintain our credit growth estimate of 7.3-8.3 per cent for banks for FY2022 compared to 5.5 per cent for FY2021,” Icra said.

Despite expectations of moderation in gains on bond portfolios because of expectations of rising bond yields in FY22, the return on equity for banks is likely to remain steady at 4.4-7.6 per cent for PSBs (5.1 per cent in FY21) and 9.5-9.9 per cent for PVBs (10.5 per cent in FY2021), the report said.

PCA framework

Will profitable PSUs need capital support from govt this year?

Last month, the Reserve Bank of India removed UCO Bank and Indian Overseas Bank from its prompt corrective action framework, following improvement in various parameters and written commitment from them that would comply with the minimum capital norms.

The only public sector lender left under the PCA framework is Central Bank of India.

PCA is triggered when banks breach certain regulatory requirements such as return on asset, minimum capital, and quantum of the non-performing asset. These restrictions disable the bank in several ways to lend freely and force it to operate under a restrictive environment that turns out to be a hurdle to growth.

Last financial year, the government infused Rs 20,000 crore in the five public sector banks. Out of this, Rs 11,500 crore had gone to three banks under PCA — UCO Bank, Indian Overseas Bank, and Central Bank of India.

The government infused Rs 4,800 crore in Central Bank of India, Rs 4,100 crore in Indian Overseas Bank and Kolkata-based UCO Bank got Rs 2,600 crore. The government has infused over Rs 3.15 lakh crore into public sector banks (PSBs) in the 11 years through 2018-19.

In 2019-20, the government infused a capital of Rs 70,000 crore into PSBs to boost credit for a strong impetus to the economy.



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PSU banks likely to get capital support in Q4 to meet regulatory requirements, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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New Delhi, The government is likely to pump capital in public sector banks during the last quarter of the current financial year to meet the regulatory requirements. The government in the Budget 2021-22 has made an allocation of Rs 20,000 crore for the capital infusion in the state-owned banks.

bank

In the current fiscal so far, all 12 public sector banks have posted a profit, which is being ploughed back to bolster the balance sheet of the banks, sources said.

Going forward, they said, the rise in stressed assets would determine capital requirement.

If numbers are anything to go by, the sources said, the financial health of public sector banks are showing gradual signs of improvement across the spectrum.

Last month, the Reserve Bank removed UCO Bank and Indian Overseas Bank from prompt corrective action framework (PCAF), following improvement in various parameters and a written commitment that the state-owned lender will comply with the minimum capital norms.

However, the only public sector lender left under the PCA framework is Central Bank of India. PCA is triggered when banks breach certain regulatory requirements such as return on asset, minimum capital, and quantum of the non-performing asset.

PCA restrictions disable the bank in several ways to lend freely and force it to operate under a restrictive environment that turns out to be a hurdle to growth.

Last financial year, the government infused Rs 20,000 crore in the five public sector banks. Out of this, Rs 11,500 crore had gone to three banks under the PCA — UCO Bank, Indian Overseas Bank, and Central Bank of India.

The government infused Rs 4,800 crore in Central Bank of India, Rs 4,100 crore in Indian Overseas Bank and Kolkata-based UCO Bank got Rs 2,600 crore.

The government has infused over Rs 3.15 lakh crore into public sector banks (PSBs) in the 11 years through 2018-19. In 2019-20, the government infused Rs 70,000 crore capital into PSBs to boost credit for a strong impetus to the economy.



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5 things investors should know, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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1. Banking and PSU debt funds are mutual fund schemes that invest debt and money market instruments issued by banks and PSUs and public financial institutions.

2. At least 80% of the corpus of the scheme needs to be in instruments issued by banks and PSUs, and PFIs.

3. All these entities are either backed, regulated or controlled by the government which reduces default risk and hence the scheme is supposed to have low credit risk.

4. Fund manager takes the call on whether to be in the short-term instruments or long-term debt instruments and hence the scheme carries interest rate risk.

5. These funds may give higher returns than Bank FDs of similar duration.

(Content on this page is courtesy Centre for Investment Education and Learning (CIEL). Contributions by Girija Gadre, Arti Bhargava and Labdhi Mehta.)

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5 things investors should know, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Read More/Less


1. Banking and PSU debt funds are mutual fund schemes that invest debt and money market instruments issued by banks and PSUs and public financial institutions.

2. At least 80% of the corpus of the scheme needs to be in instruments issued by banks and PSUs, and PFIs.

3. All these entities are either backed, regulated or controlled by the government which reduces default risk and hence the scheme is supposed to have low credit risk.

4. Fund manager takes the call on whether to be in the short-term instruments or long-term debt instruments and hence the scheme carries interest rate risk.

5. These funds may give higher returns than Bank FDs of similar duration.

(Content on this page is courtesy Centre for Investment Education and Learning (CIEL). Contributions by Girija Gadre, Arti Bhargava and Labdhi Mehta.)

Follow and connect with us on , Facebook, Linkedin



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BoM tops PSU banks in terms of loan, saving deposit growth in Q1, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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New Delhi: State-owned Bank of Maharashtra (BoM) has emerged as the top performer among public sector lenders in terms of loan and savings deposit growth during the first quarter of the current financial year. The Pune-headquartered lender recorded 14.46 per cent increase in gross advances at Rs 1,10,592 lakh crore in April-June period of 2021-22, as per the published data of BoM.

It was followed by Punjab & Sind Bank which posted 10.13 per cent growth in advances with aggregate loans at Rs 67,933 crore at the end of June 2021.

When it came to deposit mobilisation, BoM with nearly 14 per cent growth was a notch behind Punjab and Sind Bank, while the country’s largest lender State Bank of India recorded 8.82 per cent rise.

However, in absolute terms SBI’s deposit base was 21 times higher at Rs 37.20 lakh crore as against Rs 1.74 lakh crore of BoM.

Current Account Savings Account (CASA) for BoM saw 22 per cent rise, the highest among the public sector lenders, during the quarter.

As a result, CASA was 53 per cent or Rs 92,491 crore of the total liability of the bank.

Total business of BoM increased 14.17 per cent to Rs 2.85 lakh crore at the end of June 2021.

For the first quarter, BoM’s standalone net profit more than doubled to Rs 208 crore as against Rs 101 crore in the same period a year ago.

The bank’s asset quality improved significantly as the gross bad loans or gross non-performing assets (NPAs) dipped to 6.35 per cent of gross advances by the end of June 2021 as against 10.93 per cent by the end of first quarter of the previous fiscal.

In absolute terms, gross bad loans stood at Rs 7,022 crore at the end of June 2021, lower than Rs 10,558.53 crore recorded in the same period a year ago.

Net NPAs nearly halved to 2.22 per cent (Rs 2,352.75 crore) from 4.10 per cent (Rs 3,677.39 crore).



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