BCs emerging as predominant delivery channels for banks to expand last mile outreach: RBI study

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From being an alternate model, the Business Correspondent (BC) model is emerging as the predominant delivery model for banks to expand their last mile outreach in unserved/ underserved areas of the country, per a Reserve Bank of India (RBI) study.

The number of BCs across the country have grown at a compounded annual growth rate (CAGR) of 13.05 per cent to 11,76,221 as at March-end 2020 from 6,37,029 as at March-end 2016. However, the number of branches/ banking outlets in villages have only increased at a CAGR of 2.29 per cent to 58,042 as at March-end 2020 from 51,830 as at March-end 2016.

“Over the years, the BC model has assumed greater prominence over the traditional brick and mortar branches. Increasingly, the access to banking services in rural areas, particularly in the unserved/ underserved parts, is being provisioned through BC outlets,” according to the study by RBI officials Sushmita Phukan, Saju Thomas Punnoose, Abhishek Kumar, Dineshkumar S and Abhishek Kumar.

Retail agents

BCs are retail agents engaged by banks for providing banking services at locations other than a bank branch/ATM. BCs perform a variety of activities which include identification of borrowers, collection and preliminary processing of loan applications including verification of primary information/data, collection of small value deposit, disbursal of small value credit, and recovery of principal/ collection of interest.

They also undertake sale of micro insurance/ mutual fund products/ pension products/ other third party products and receipt and delivery of small value remittances/ other payment instruments. “While the growth in number of rural branches remained subdued during the review period (2016-2020), there was a significant growth in BC outlets in both villages and urban pockets providing formal financial services at the doorstep of large number of unserved/ underserved population,” the study, published in RBI’s latest monthly bulletin, said.

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The study noted that about 56 per cent of total Basic Savings Bank Deposit Accounts (BSBDAs) and 65 per cent of General Credit Cards (GCCs) were channelled through BCs. While BCs of public sector banks (PSBs) dominated the deposit space, private sector banks (PVBs) accounted for a major share in GCCs through BCs.

During the review period, the total transactions routed through BC outlets increased considerably both in terms of volume as well as value, the authors said.

Financial inclusion

Through the review of FIP data furnished by banks (PSBs, PVBs and Regional Rural Banks/RRBs) over the five years (2016- 2020), the study observed that the dominance of PSBs has continued in the financial inclusion space.

PSBs accounted for about 56 per cent of total rural branches in 2020. They were also predominantly present in the rural areas accounting for 60 per cent of total BC outlets in villages in 2020. “Similarly, of the total BSBDAs, the contribution of PSBs remained over 70 per cent during the review period. Further, among the credit products, KCCs were channeled mainly through PSBs, which accounted for 58 per cent of the total number of KCCs (Kisan Credit Cards) in 2020,” the authors said.

As PSBs continued to maintain their hold, the authors underscored that PVBs too registered a higher growth in both access and usage indicators during the review period.

The study noted that there was a growth in BC outlets in villages for PVBs with the growth being significantly high for the northeastern, eastern and central regions, surpassing the growth of PSBs and RRBs together. PVBs also significantly improved their tally of urban BC outlets during the five years with their share growing from 77 per cent in 2016 to 97 per cent in 2020, the authors said.

On similar lines, contribution of PVBs in the total number of BC agents too grew exponentially from 37 per cent in 2016 to 80 per cent in 2020.

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Large corporates no longer borrowing engine for banks as retail borrowing rises, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The dominance of large corporate accounts in banks’ loan portfolio that lasted until 2014 has shrunk, giving way for retail borrowing to rise, according to a study by the Reserve Bank of India.

An analysis of the sectoral composition of non-food credit by a team of RBI economists reveals that the share of the industrial sector in overall non-food credit offtake, which stood at over 45% in 2013-14, declined to around 30% by 2020-21.

Over the years, retail and services sector loans have gained more prominence.

Capital investment shrinking

Capital investment by private companies could slide this financial year as well, after shrinking in the previous year due to COVID-19 lockdowns, a central bank forecast shows.

A study of the phasing profile, i.e., stage wise implementation over three or four years, of planned capex of pipeline projects could shrink 27% on year to Rs 68,469 crore. The phasing profile of the capital expenditure based on the pipeline of sanctioned projects in the previous years indicates a decline from Rs 94,227 crore in 2020-21 to Rs 68,469 crore.

The pandemic impacted adversely appetite for new projects during 2020-21, and also posed impediments to timely completion of projects in the pipeline, the RBI said.

The regulator assessed that a total capex of Rs 1.60 lakh crore would be incurred by the private corporate sector in FY21, translating into a sharp dip of 30% from the previous year.

Retail going strong

The outstanding retail loans are higher at Rs 28.6 lakh crore against Rs 28.2 lakh crore for industry that includes MSMEs and large corporates at the end of July. The outstanding loans to the services sector stand at Rs 26 lakh crore.

The growth rate of the retail/personal loans segment stood at 11.2% in July 2021, higher by 220 basis points when compared with July 2020.

In absolute terms, credit outstanding has increased from Rs 25.7 lakh crore in July 2020 to Rs 28.6 lakh crore in July 2021.

The growth in retail loans has been driven by personal unsecured, vehicle loans and gold loan lending by some banks. The growth rate came in higher by 120 bps as compared with March 2021.

Industry loans

The industry segment witnessed a growth of 1% on a year-on-year basis in July 2021, after witnessing a de-growth in previous month. Large industries account for 80.5% share (83.8% share in July 2020) in the total outstanding credit to industries, and this segment reported a drop of 2.9% in July 2021 versus a growth of 1.4% in July 2020.

The growth movement is weak as corporates continue to de-leverage and select large corporates access to bond markets. MSME industries grew by 21.3% in July 2021, which partially offset the fall in large segments, compared with a drop of 1.8% in July 2020. The growth in lending to industry and services was almost entirely led by the MSME segment, which was driven by disbursements under ECLGS scheme, wherein Rs 2.14 lakh crore were disbursed up till date.

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