Only card networks and issuing banks may get to tokenise data, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Only card-issuing banks and card scheme operators, such as the National Payments Corporation of India, Visa and Mastercard, would be allowed to tokenise customer card data, Reserve Bank of India (RBI) is said to have indicated to the industry in a meeting Monday.

The central bank has clarified to the industry that none of the intermediaries, even licensed payment gateways and acquiring banks, would be allowed to store card data and offer tokenised files to merchants under the upcoming payment aggregator and payment gateway regulatory regime kicking in from 2022, two sources aware of the matter told ET.

Under the new norms, every online merchant processing transactions for customers will only have access to a ‘tokenised’ key linked with the consumer’s cards instead of the entire card file. The meeting saw participation of members from industry pockets such as payments, banking and web-commerce, the sources added.

“The central bank has reiterated its stance that it only sees tokenisation as an alternative solution for merchants aiming to offer a one-click checkout facility to customers,” said a source present at the meeting.

“It has also been made clear that only card networks and issuing banks will be allowed to tokenise files corresponding to customer card details. Payment aggregators and merchants will have to devise systems to avail this tokenised link from their respective banks or networks,” the person added.

Tokenisation is an encryption technology that enables card operators to mask actual details of a debit or credit card by substituting with a secure, unique digital token linked to a customer device.

Only this proxy token can be stored by merchants and aggregators to process payments to offer one-click checkouts. Those merchants without access to tokenised links will have to ask customers to fill in the entire details of their card including the 16-digit number every time they make a payment.

The central bank’s insistence on strict card storage norms is on the back of several recent high-profile cyber attacks such as those on JusPay, Mobikwik, Big Basket, Air India and Upstox.

RBI is said to be firm on its stand on customer security where it doesn’t want entities that are not under its direct supervision to be storing card details of customers on servers.

While payment aggregators will be allowed to store card details for processing of redressals and chargebacks, the new rules will stipulate a fixed time under which this data will have to be deleted.

ET reported last week that industry forums, including the Payments Council of India (PCI), have suggested alternative solutions beyond encryption through tokenisation – such as secure reference on files – to minimise customer inconvenience to the central bank.

RBI didn’t respond to ET’s mailed queries.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

RBI extends scope of tokenisation to laptops, wearable devices, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


The Reserve Bank on Wednesday extended the scope of ‘tokenisation‘ to several consumer devices, including laptops, desktops, wearables like wristwatches and bands, as well as Internet of Things (IoT) devices. Tokenisation, which aims at improving the safety and security of the payment system, refers to the replacement of actual card details with a unique alternate code called the ‘token’, which is unique for a combination of card, token requestor and identified device.

The RBI had earlier permitted ‘tokenisation’ services, under which a unique alternate code is generated for transaction purposes, on mobile phones and tablets of cardholders.

“On a review of the framework and keeping in view stakeholder feedback, it has been decided to extend the scope of tokenisation to include consumer devices — laptops, desktops, wearables (wristwatches, bands, etc.), Internet of Things (IoT) devices, etc,” the RBI said in a circular.

The initiative is expected to make card transactions more safe, secure and convenient for the users, it added.

In January, 2019 the RBI had issued guidelines on “Tokenisation – Card transactions”, permitting authorised card networks to offer card tokenisation services to any token requestor, subject to conditions.

Prior to the latest circular, the facility was available only for mobile phones and tablets of interested cardholders.

RBI also noted that there has been an uptake in the volume of tokenised card transactions during recent months.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

RBI imposes Rs 15 lakh penalty on Baghat Urban Co-operative Bank, Solan, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


The RBI on Wednesday said it has imposed a penalty of Rs 15 lakh on The Baghat Urban Co-operative Bank Limited, Solan, for violation of certain norms, including, those related to NPA classification. In another statement, the RBI said it has imposed a penalty of Rs 1 lakh on Delhi Nagrik Sehkari Bank Limited, New Delhi, for non-compliance with certain directions issued by the central bank.

The RBI said inspection report of The Baghat Urban Co-operative Bank, based on its financial position as on March 31, 2019, revealed non-adherence with/violation of directions, including non-identification of NPAs, wrong classification of assets, inadequate provisions made due to wrong classification of assets and non-adherence to exposure norms for housing, real estate and commercial real estate (CRE).

A notice was issued to the bank to show cause as to why a penalty should not be imposed for violation of the said directions.

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) said after considering the bank’s reply and oral submissions, it came to the conclusion that the charges were substantiated and warranted imposition of monetary penalty.

The inspection report of Delhi Nagrik Sehkari Bank, based on its financial position as on March 31, 2019, revealed non-adherence with prudential inter-bank (gross) exposure limit, RBI said.

For both cases, the RBI said the penalties are based on deficiencies in regulatory compliance and are not intended to pronounce upon the validity of any transaction or agreement entered into by them with their customers.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Industry working with RBI on secured card data storage: Payments Council of India

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


The idea behind this is to ensure that customers paying online continue to enjoy the convenience of not keying in all their card details each time they make a payment.

Payment industry stakeholders are working with the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) to develop solutions for smooth checkouts on card-based payments, starting January 2022, industry body Payments Council of India (PCI) said on Wednesday.

“The industry and PCI are working in alignment with RBI on possible secure card on file solutions which will ensure a near similar customer experience for online purchases whilst enhancing the security of the storage of card credentials of customers,” PCI said in a statement.

The idea behind this is to ensure that customers paying online continue to enjoy the convenience of not keying in all their card details each time they make a payment.

At present, customers can choose to save their card details with payment aggregators (PAs) and payment gateways (PGs). That system of faster checkouts was expected to change next year with the regulator’s guidelines on regulation of payment aggregators and payment gateways kicking in.

On March 31, 2020, the RBI had issued a notification directing payment system providers and participants to put in place workable solutions such as tokenisation to enhance the security of storage of customers’ card credentials, within the framework of the relevant guidelines issued by the RBI. PCI said it has shared with the RBI the principles which can be adopted by the industry to develop such secure card on file solutions.

“We are working closely with the RBI on charting a roadmap of the possible solutions that could be adopted by the industry for securing the storage of raw card data. Solutions being worked upon would not require the customers to enter their card number manually every time they make an online purchase,” PCI said. The solutions will adhere to the security checks, controls and frameworks prescribed by the RBI, the association added.

Get live Stock Prices from BSE, NSE, US Market and latest NAV, portfolio of Mutual Funds, Check out latest IPO News, Best Performing IPOs, calculate your tax by Income Tax Calculator, know market’s Top Gainers, Top Losers & Best Equity Funds. Like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter.

Financial Express is now on Telegram. Click here to join our channel and stay updated with the latest Biz news and updates.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Tokenised card transactions: RBI extends scope of devices

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


The Reserve Bank of India has extended the scope of permitted devices for undertaking tokenised card transactions to include consumer devices such as laptops, desktops, wearables (wrist watches, bands, etc.), and Internet of Things (IoT) devices.

This is in view of uptake in the volume of such transactions during the recent months.

The RBI, in a circular to authorised card networks, said this initiative is expected to make card transactions more safe, secure, and convenient for the users.

Hitherto, the tokenised card transaction facility was available only for mobile phones and tablets of interested cardholders.

Tokenisation means the replacement of actual card details with a unique alternate code called the “token”, which will be unique for a combination of card, token requestor and device.

Authorised networks

In January 2019, the central bank had permitted authorised card payment networks to offer card tokenisation services to any token requestor (that is third-party app provider), subject to the conditions.

There are five authorised card payment networks — American Express Banking Corp, Diners Club International Ltd, MasterCard Asia/ Pacific Pte Ltd, National Payments Corporation of India and Visa Worldwide Pte Ltd — operating in India.

In the January 2019 circular, the RBI said its permission to card networks for tokenisation in card transactions extends to all use cases/channels [for example: near field communication/ magnetic secure transmission-based contactless transactions, in-app payments, QR code-based payments, etc.] or token storage mechanisms (cloud, secure element, trusted execution environment, etc.).

All extant instructions of RBI on safety and security of card transactions, including the mandate for Additional Factor of Authentication (AFA)/PIN entry, are applicable for tokenised card transactions also.

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Policy action for recovery has to be carefully calibrated: RBI chief

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Normalisation of liquidity management operations has commenced and, going forward, the evolving macroeconomic situation will determine our future approach and how we deal with it,” said Reserve Bank of India Governor Shaktikanta Das.

In an interview with BusinessLine, Das said that by end-September, the size of the fortnightly VRRR auction will be ₹4-lakh crore but the system liquidity will still be in the order of about ₹4-lakh crore at least. Edited excerpts:

Since the last monetary policy statement, have you seen any positive signs in the economy?

Whatever I said in my last interview, by and large, holds good even today. There are signs of recovery; there are signs of some of the fast moving indicators improving.

Passenger vehicles, sequentially, have improved marginally. Several of the fast moving indicators that include GST collections, e-way bills, railway freight, have improved over the position a month ago.

Manufacturing PMI has come back to the expansion zone, as per the latest data. Services PMI is still in the contraction zone. Though below 50, it is sequentially better than the previous data.

So, on the economic activity and the revival front, whatever was stated in my statement on August 6, holds good and it is showing the kind of momentum and revival we were expecting. The latest inflation print for July is also on expected lines. We expected it to moderate from a high of 6.3 per cent in May and 6.26 per cent in June. It has now moderated to 5.6.

So, therefore, by and large, things are on expected lines so far. But having said that, we are constantly watchful of the situation because things can change rapidly.

Your 5.7 per cent CPI inflation projection for FY22 is very close to the MPC’s upper tolerance level. You also said inflationary pressures are transitory. Is there a risk in following the “look through” approach of the other central banks on inflation?

Now, first thing is that our monetary policy is determined primarily by domestic factors. We do watch the kind of stance or policy the US Fed or the ECB or the central banks of other advanced economies and the emerging market economies take. We do keep a watch because that has certain spillovers to our economy also. But I would like to re-emphasise that our monetary policy is determined primarily by domestic macroeconomic considerations. At this point of time, I would like to highlight three points.

One, the process of economic revival is very delicately poised. And ever since the pandemic began, we have carefully endeavoured to nurture and revive the process of growth. We have provided congenial financial conditions in the financial markets. The bond markets and the money markets, which were almost frozen last year, in March and April, we de-freezed that. Not only that, we revived the activity in the bond market. Last year (FY21), the corporate bond issuances were higher than the previous year. Each sector or sub-sector witnessed temporary shocks. But the activities, broadly speaking, in the financial markets revived, thanks to the kind of policy the RBI has adopted.

Apart from the financial markets, there is the larger real economy. We have contributed to lot to reviving the real economy also. So, together with the government policies, the fiscal policies and the monetary policy, we have ensured that the real economy also kept functioning. We have endeavoured our best to see that the revival of economic activities is nurtured. So, at this critical time, anything that we do has to be very carefully calibrated and well-timed.

Two, with regard to inflation, as stated in the MPC and the Governor’s statements, we do expect the inflation spike to moderate in the coming quarters. Currently, the inflation is largely driven by supply-side factors. So, we should give the supply-side factors some chance and some time to correct themselves and restore the demand-supply balance.

Three, it’s an extraordinary situation that we are dealing with and the situation can change in no time. On April 7, when I made my monetary policy statement, the things looked so good.

But on May 5, I made an unscheduled announcement of measures because in that one month, infections had suddenly surged. So, therefore we have to be careful.

It is also the prime responsibility of the RBI to maintain financial stability. So, we don’t want to do anything hastily which may undermine financial stability in the medium term.

We need to wait for the growth signals to become more sustainable. We need to see that the growth signals, the economic revival, you know, the fast moving indicators are not just fast moving, but take some roots. So, the process of revival becomes more sustainable.

All that I am saying is that any policy action by the RBI, particularly monetary policy action, has to be very carefully calibrated and well-timed.

So, from the consumption point of view, what more can be done?

Our responsibility is to provide congenial financial conditions to create an ecosystem where the economic revival and restoration of growth will be assisted. And credit offtake is just one segment. We took various measures last year such as the LTROs, the TLTROs and liquidity support to Nabard, NHB, and SIDBI. And then we announced liquidity support to the stressed sectors, identified by Kamath committee, to the healthcare sector and the contact intensive services sector.

So, we are doing whatever is in our domain and it will definitely contribute to the creation of aggregate demand.

Demand creation is only one of the determinants of monetary policy, not the sole one. Monetary policy also takes into account several other aspects. For example, when we reduce the rates or take an accommodative stance and the market rates come down, it gets reflected in the G-Sec segment which, in turn, transmits to the bond markets. It also translates itself into the interest rates adopted by the banks. The housing loans are at an all-time low in several years. And naturally, several experts have told me that the revival of activity in the real estate sector and, in particular, in the housing sector, has been largely facilitated because of the RBI’s monetary and liquidity policies.

We are providing an ecosystem and I think it seems to be working. If you just pick up one of the items and say that it doesn’t work, well, it may not be working. I am not saying that it works everywhere because demand revival will depend on so many factors. Aggregate demand is still low. There is still a lot of slack in the economy; it is catching up.

All the policies the RBI has taken have worked over the last one-and-a-half years and they continue to work even now. That is why I have used the word — should we pull the rug? Should we reverse now? Should we change course now? Changing of course has to be very, very carefully done because there is a larger economy outside. The RBI being an institution responsible for financial stability in the country, we have to be very mindful of that. Even monetary policy says, the Act also says, that target 4 per cent inflation, while keeping in mind, the objective of growth. And RBI is a full service central bank.

Though you have flooded the market with liquidity, credit demand is tepid and there are pressures on the NPA front. So how do you deal with this situation?

There is credit demand in certain segments. For example, I mentioned about retail housing loans. But yes, in terms of aggregate numbers, bank credit growth is about 6 per cent. A point to be noted is that the liquidity is not just coming out of the RBI injecting liquidity through G-SAP or through TLTRO. Liquidity is also coming out of our forex interventions to maintain the stability of the rupee. We have to do that intervention.

In January this year, we normalised our liquidity management policy. In February 2020, we released our liquidity management policy in which we said that this 14-day variable rate reverse repo (VRRR) operations that we do is the standard liquidity management operating instrument. . In January this year, we started with ₹2-lakh crore of absorption every 14 days. Now, every fortnight we are increasing it by ₹50,000 crore. So, by end- September, the size of VRRR — the fortnightly auction size — will be ₹4-lakh crore. We have already started normalising our liquidity operations and I would like to emphasise normalising. It is different from draining out liquidity because VRRR money also remains a part of the surplus liquidity. Even at the end of September, with ₹4-lakh crore of VRRR, the system liquidity will still be in the order of about ₹4-lakh crore at least. Therefore, normalisation of liquidity management operations has commenced and, going forward, the evolving macroeconomic situation will determine our future approach and how we deal with it.

But aren’t NPAs getting masked due to the loan restructuring?

They are not getting camouflaged. Because of the moratorium followed by the Supreme Court stay on asset classification, which got lifted in the third week of March, the position was not clear. But by March 31, we had a clear picture of the NPA situation. For restructuring, we had given a time limit till June 30. All the cases, which had to be restructured have been restructured. We have the exact numbers with us and the situation with regard to NPAs is definitely well under control.

Everybody talks about relief for borrowers but no one talks about the depositors, who are getting negative real interest rate. Why is it not a concern?

There are two points. First, it is a trade-off and you have to do a balancing act. On the one hand, the legitimate desire of depositors to get higher interest rates and, on the other hand, the legitimate requirement of business and industry is to get loans at a more reasonable rate to carry on with business activity. During the pandemic, the balance naturally tilted somewhat in favour of economic activity because economic activity has to go on, otherwise thousands of people will face a situation of zero income. This aspect had to be given importance and that is what we have done over the last year-and-a-half. It’s a trade off and the trade off will depend on the prevailing situation — the situation that prevailed in the last one-and-a-half-years or even a little before, because we had started the rate-cutting cycle prior to the pandemic. In the last one-and-a half or two years, the balance has tilted somewhat in favour of keeping the lending rates low.

Second, the small-saving schemes, which are offering higher interest rates, should be seen as a kind of a fiscal support being provided by the government to the depositors. The rates that are prevailing with regard to the small-saving schemes are much higher than the Shyamala Gopinath committee recommendation.

Depending on evolving macroeconomic conditions, we definitely keep in mind the requirement of depositors and with regard to regulation and supervision of the banking sector, the interest of the depositors is of highest importance

Professor JR Verma said the reverse repo rate should not find the mention in the MPC and only the Governor should speak about it. Your thoughts on this?

We released the Report on Currency and Finance or RCF in January, which focused on monetary policy. There, it has been explained that the reverse repo rate is a part of the RBI’s liquidity management toolkit. It is not in MPC’s domain. It is the RBI which decides the reverse repo rate.

Second, if you look at all the MPC minutes from 2016, in every one of them, the reverse report rate is mentioned. We have to maintain consistency with the past trend. Also, the repo and reverse repos are the two supporting pillars of the monetary and liquidity policy approach of the central bank.

So for the sake of consistency and completeness of the monetary policy statement, that it is a statement of the committee and not the Governor’s statement, the reverse repo is also mentioned. But it is well understood that reverse repo is decided by the RBI.

There is the feeling that the RBI is entering a dangerous territory by trying to duel with the market in trying to manage the yield curve. Your thoughts?

Primarily, you are asking if we are interfering in the market? Right through the pandemic, even before and more during the pandemic,we have tried to be as transparent as possible. Therefore, I explicitly stated that evolution of the yield curve is a public good. And why I said and I have said it earlier also, the G-Sec yields act as a benchmark for the cost of borrowing in the market. And in a situation that the RBI was confronted with following the onset of the pandemic, we had to keep the markets running. We said what is important is orderly evolution of the yield curve and towards that we give very specific communication. We gave forward guidance. We also backed it up with our actions in terms of supporting the market with liquidity. So it was not just our communication.

It was also forward guidance. It was time-based guidance, it was our action, in terms of announcing TLTRO support, G-SAP, doing OMO or operation twist and it was also in terms of signals that we were giving to the market sometimes through devolvement or cancellation of auctions. It is not to subjugate the market, it is only to ensure that the yield curve has an orderly evolution and it evolves in an orderly fashion which is reflective of the fundamentals of the macroeconomic conditions. That is our endeavour. All our actions have been very transparent; it was towards achieving this orderly evolution of the yield curve. The objective behind it is to ensure better monetary policy transmission.

I think the market and the central bank need to understand each other better. There is a congenial atmosphere prevailing now. At times, there might have been some devolution or cancellations but that was more to give a signal. Suddenly, when you see the yields going up steeply, naturally, we were not in a position to accept. And we are the debt manager of the Government…Historically, last year saw the highest-ever borrowing by the Government of India and the State government at about ₹22-lakh crore. We managed that in a very orderly fashion. Our effort is to always manage the government borrowing at a low cost and minimising the rollover risks. So, there is no duel.

The issue starts when you are trying to artificially rein in rates to your comfort level…

The market players are independent entities; they take their own decisions. We keep on giving signals and it is not as if every bond auction we have cancelled or devolved… From time to time, we take certain measures towards the objective of ensuring the orderly evolution of the yield curve. I again and again restate that point. So, towards that objective, we do intervene from time to time and measures like the G-SAP or the Operation Twist or the OMO, they are more to support the market players.

There are calls for using the huge forex reserves for infrastructure development or recapitalisation of public sector banks. What do you think of these kinds of demands?

Such expectations are not new. They have come earlier also. Our forex reserves are not emanating from current account surplus. We are still a current account deficit country. Our forex earnings are not the trade surplus, it’s not from the current account surplus. That is the major difference between our foreign exchange reserves and the reserves of other countries, which have created sovereign wealth funds. Secondly, much of it has come through capital flows. Capital, which flows in, can also flow out. That also has to be kept in mind. And the purpose of building a forex reserve is to provide a buffer for the domestic currency markets, a buffer for the domestic financial system. In times when international factors turn adverse, or when due to international policy action like US Fed tightening or some other international development, when there is a reverse flow, it is the forex buffer which helps, which gives stability to our currency and stability to our financial system. Reserves are essential, they’re essentially meant to ensure stability of the domestic currency and financial markets. They have a certain role and they should play that role.

So, you prefer that the reserves should remain untouched?

Yes, because all of it doesn’t belong to the country. For a capital flow somebody has created or invested here, there is a liability outside.

The Government says it will go by the RBI’s advice on cryptocurrency. What are your thoughts on that and the central bank digital currency?

I have articulated it earlier. We have major concerns around private cryptocurrency from the point of view of financial stability. Private cryptocurrency is different from distributed ledger technology (DLT) or blockchain. They should not be mixed up. DLT or blockchain technology is nothing new. It’s an open source technology. It is being used even today by several corporates for their business operations. The technology part can continue to be used and exploited without a private cryptocurrency. You don’t need a private cryptocurrency or a private cryptocurrency market to support the growth or utilisation or exploitation of that technology. The technology is well known; the technology has been there; the technology is being used; and the technology can and will grow without private cryptocurrencies. We need to differentiate between both. A private cryptocurrency which is traded is our concern.

The cryptocurrency market is in chaos and all sorts of players are coming. Shouldn’t the RBI address this issue?

We have conveyed our concerns to the government and I think the matter is under consideration. So, I would expect some policy action to come from the government side.

But in the meanwhile, would you like to use the levers that you have in the commercial banks to cut off flow into these?

We had issued a circular which the Supreme Court struck down. We issued a circular on May 31 in which we clarified that banks cannot refer to that earlier circular because that has been already struck down. They cannot take action on the basis of a circular already struck down by Supreme Court. And in the second paragraph, we have mentioned as a guidance to the banks that they are required to follow all the due diligence requirements with regard to KYC and other aspects while opening an account, including accounts for doing crypto business. That is the only guidance we have given. It is for investors who are now investing to sort of be very careful.

When will retail participation in government securities via Retail Direct Scheme start?

We have already announced the guidelines last month. The technology platform is almost getting finalised. I would not like to give a timeline but the technology platform is in advanced stage of finalisation. For any new platform we create, we have to do a lot of dry run, a lot of testing, retesting, so that after it is launched, it will not face any glitches. And the customers should not be put into any inconvenience.

Small finance banks want to turn into universal banks. Your thoughts?

With regard to full service commercial banks, we have guidelines in terms of capital, networth and it is on tap. Anybody can apply to become a full service or scheduled commercial bank, including SFBs. And if the SFBs meet the requirements — all the financial parameters and also the fit and proper test — it is open and anybody can apply. It’s an emerging area. So far, no SFB has applied to become a universal bank. Hypothetically, if some SFB wants to become a universal bank, it is vacating some space. And in any case there is still more space for new SFBs to come. So, new players will come in. It’s a dynamic field. If somebody vacates a space, either one of the existing players or new players will fill that vacuum. I would also like to draw your attention to the report of the expert committee on urban cooperative banks, which the RBI released in the public domain, inviting comments and observations from all the stakeholders. One interesting thing that the report says is that they are calling it neighbourhood banks of choice. UCBs should eventually become the neighbourhood banks of choice. That is a very good signal that the committee has given. We want the UCB sector to function in a much more robust manner, much more professionally. Then there are SFBs and scheduled commercial banks or universal banks.

Are there any measures that the the RBI is looking at to ensure that India is included in the global bond index?

Both the government and RBI are in constant dialogue with the bond market index entities. It’s a process and it’s still going on. We are still in dialogue with them. There is also Euroclear for international settlement of bond trading. That is also parallelly going on.

In the last one-and-a half years, what was the toughest decision you took as RBI Governor?

It is very difficult to single out because for any central bank, surprises are always there. But the question is how big is the surprise. The Covid-19 pandemic has been a big surprise for every one under the sun — not just for the central bank in India, but for those across the world, for governments, for people. So it’s very difficult to say which is the toughest single decision. But it’s a part of the job, we go on.

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

RBI approves re-appointment of Sandeep Bakhshi as MD and CEO of ICICI Bank

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


The Reserve Bank of India has approved the re-appointment of Sandeep Bakhshi as Managing Director and CEO of ICICI Bank with effect from October 15, 2021 till October 3, 2023.

“…the shareholders at the annual general meeting held on August 9, 2019 had already approved the appointment of Bakhshi for a period effective from October 15, 2018 up to October 3, 2023,” the private sector lender said in a stock exchange filing.

Also read: ICICI Bank files cheating case against Karvy Stock Broking

Bakhshi was appointed as MD and CEO of ICICI Bank in October 2018 after the bank’s board had accepted the request of Chanda Kochhar to seek early retirement.

“His appointment will be for a period of five years until October 3, 2023, subject to regulatory and other approvals,” the bank had said at the time.

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Why controlling inflation is not the job of the RBI Governor alone, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


In 2021, the focus of policymakers across the globe is to not just recover and sustain growth but also to ensure price stability. Not only emerging economies, but even developed economies are dealing with price pressure. The rising inflation rate has prevented many economies from announcing further stimulus measures. Central banks in some countries have gone for a rate hike even when their own economies have not fully recovered from the pandemic-induced economic crisis.

One of the major contributors for the overall rise in inflation is the surge in commodity prices. Within commodities, rising crude oil prices has burdened oil importing countries including India. In July, India imported $12.89 billion worth of petroleum crude & products (POL). And, in the same month, POL accounted for a share of 27.7 percent of the total imports to the country.

In India, inflation rate, as measured by the Consumer Price Index (CPI), is used as RBI’s monetary policy anchor. Within CPI, fuel and light account for a share of 6.84 per cent. Though the share of fuel in the CPI basket is less than 10 per cent, crude prices have a huge impact on the overall inflation rate. Higher fuel prices have a ripple effect on other commodities. Crude oil is used as a raw material in various sectors, with petrol/diesel used in transportation of goods. When the cost of production goes up, it will be passed on to consumers.

In the current situation, higher prices for goods and services is an additional burden on both the consumers and producers. The Indian economy is still in a nascent stage of recovery. An economy in the recovery stage won’t be able to tolerate a higher inflation rate. Inflation rate in July has cooled off to 5.59 per cent, within the upper tolerance band of 6 per cent. However, we need to closely watch how inflation figures would turn out in the coming months. The fall in the overall inflation rate has been mainly contributed by the decline in food prices. Food inflation declined to 3.96 per cent YoY in July’21 from 5.15 per cent in June’21. Yet, during the same period, fuel and light inflation registered only a marginal decline to 12.4 per cent from 12.6 per cent.

At this juncture, both the central and state governments should consider ways to reduce the burden arising from increasing fuel prices. The RBI Governor has explicitly stated on many occasions the need for coordinated action between the Centre and states on tax reduction on fuel prices. Presently, the central government levies an excise duty of Rs 32.9 per litre on petrol while the VAT levied by state governments vary. A reduction in the excise duty and VAT could lead to an increase in disposable income in the hands of the common man. This, in turn, could improve consumer sentiments and prevent the heating up of the economy.

In India, controlling the inflation rate is not just the RBI’s job. The factors contributing to rising inflation in the country calls for a concerted effort from the central bank and Centre/state governments.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

FM to meet CEOs of public sector banks on Wednesday

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Finance Minister, Nirmala Sitharaman, will meet heads of public sector banks (PSB) on Wednesday to review the financial performance of the lenders and progress made by them in supporting the pandemic-hit economy, sources said.

The meeting with MD and CEOs of PSBs assumes significance given the importance of the banking sector in generating demand and boosting consumption.

Recently, the finance minister said the government is ready to do everything required to revive and support economic growth hit by the Covid-19 pandemic.

Agenda

The meeting is expected to take stock of the banking sector and its progress on the restructuring 2.0 scheme announced by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), the sources said, adding that banks may be nudged to push loan growth in productive sectors.

The revamped ₹4.5 lakh crore Emergency Credit Line Guarantee Scheme (ECLGS) would also be reviewed during the meeting, likely to be held in Mumbai, the sources said.

Besides, the finance minister is expected to take stock of the bad loans or non-performing assets (NPAs) situation, and discuss various recovery measures by banks, they said.

Also see: Protect dealers from sudden MNC exits, FADA tells govt

As a result of the government’s strategy of recognition, resolution, recapitalisation and reforms, NPAs have shown a declining trend, from ₹7,39,541 crore on March 31, 2019 to ₹6,78,317 crore on March 31, 2020 and further to ₹6,16,616 crore as of March 31, 2021 (provisional data).

At the same time, comprehensive steps were taken to control and effect recovery in NPAs, which enabled PSBs to recover ₹5,01,479 crore over the last six financial years, the government informed the parliament recently.

Besides, Sitharaman is expected to declare the results of Ease 3.0 Index for 2020-21, they said, adding that PSBs would be rated on various indexes for the year.

Launched in January 2018, Enhanced Access and Service Excellence (Ease) is the common reform agenda for all public sector banks aimed at institutionalising clean and smart banking.

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Barclays’ Bajoria says a lot of inflation risks priced in now, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


A lot has been said about recent inflationary trends in India with the Reserve Bank of India, for a long period, being caught between reining in elevated price pressures and doing all it can to revive economic growth. The central bank would undoubtedly have gained some solace from the fact that in July, the headline retail inflation dropped below the upper band of its 2-6% range for the first time in three months. Rahul Bajoria, Chief India Economist at Barclays, believes that there could be more reasons for cheer as according to him, early price trends seem to suggest that inflation could undershoot the RBI’s forecast. Edited excerpts:

In the backdrop of the RBI’s recent reiteration of policy support for economic growth and signs of improvement in high frequency indicators, what is your outlook on the growth-inflation mix?
The August policy meeting was in a way a mirror reflection of what happened in April, except that the growth and inflation risks were sort of interchanged.
In this particular meeting, it was evident that you are going to have lesser risks to your growth outlook because the economy was opening up.

Inflation out-turns have been greater than what the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) had been forecasting. so the natural bias was to say that inflation risks are tilted to the upside.

In terms of the broad policy stance, there is uncertainty going forward about whether we will have a third wave, and what kind of impact a possible third wave can have on our growth momentum. There are many questions – what does that mean for inflation, for supply dynamics, potential return of supply shocks to the inflation trajectory?

The fact that there is some improvement in the macro data has been well acknowledged by the RBI, I think the bias was clearly towards that.

But they are still grappling with the lingering uncertainty and that’s why it is very difficult for the RBI to really commit itself in the direction of normalisation.

We look at the new variable reverse repo rate (VRRR) as a step towards probably more balanced liquidity. It is not a new instrument. We have had VRRR in the system since January this year and there has not really been any commensurate material tightening of liquidity.

There have been periods when liquidity has shrunk, excess liquidity has come down but it is not really necessarily a step towards normalising. You could say it is a step, but it is a very gradual step. Our sense is that by the time we reach the October policy meeting, a lot of these variables will probably clear up and we will have a better sense of the direction.

But the broad message we took away from this meeting was that unless and until there is absolute clarity on the growth outlook, it is difficult to see how RBI will move towards a confident approach to normalising monetary conditions.

The preference for supporting growth over managing inflation is very clear and that comes across both in terms of the guidance from the MPC and from the RBI governor himself.

There has been much talk of the extent to which the liquidity surplus in the banking system has expanded over the last couple of months. It is true that the traditional channel of strong demand for credit is not really functioning at the present juncture. Are there any risks of overheating which are emanating from liquidity?
Not really. I would say the general sense of overheating is not there. I could possibly talk about the equity valuations and the governor has spoken on this issue but equity valuations are a function of flows and the flow dynamic in India has remained pretty strong.

Obviously there has been some excitement around the IPO cycle but that comes and goes. It is more of a seasonal thing. But when you look at say credit growth, you look at credit demand in the system, you look at capacity utilisation, a lot of these numbers are looking tepid and that is one of the reasons why I think the RBI may take some comfort in the fact that there are no real incipient signs of demand side pressures in the system.

Maybe they will emerge in six months as the economy normalises further but then there is no reason for the RBI to be really worried about major trouble spots being formed right away.

With the exception of equities, there is no other asset market in India which is doing outstandingly well, whether you look at the property sector, you look at say demand for gold, etc, that is not really showing any signs of major shift away from financial assets into fiscal assets and that I think will be taken as a sign as well by the RBI that maybe this excess liquidity in the system is not really causing dislocations that cannot be managed in the future through policy actions whether it is through rates or through macro prudential steps.

What, in your view, are the factors contributing to inflation expectations in India?
I would say that quite a few of the indicators which would typically drive inflation expectations in India — food prices, milk prices, vegetable prices, fuel prices, school fees — typically tend to increase at this time.

But, the sustainability of elevated inflation expectation has to be driven by some sustained improvement in demand because the flip side of this issue of inflation expectation is that when we look at the producer prices and what is happening with retail inflation, especially when we look at the PMI data — these input prices have been elevated for a long time as commodity prices globally have been rising.

We have seen input cost increase but output prices actually have remained very tepid.

There is a big gap between the imported price pressures and what the domestic price pressure story is telling.

This can be interpreted in two ways. One is that these increases in input costs are not going to materialise into higher output prices because pricing power is weak and demand is weak. If you do have a big demand revival, three-six months down the line, these price pressures can be translated into output prices.

Given the spirit of the K-shaped recovery, it will be very difficult to say that these are generalised price pressures. There will be a combination of some sectors seeing higher prices but certain sectors might not really see any major spillovers coming through. It will be difficult to navigate that kind of an environment which makes forecasting inflation a tad more difficult than what you would think of in a normal cycle.

The recent inflation print was less than 6%. Could this trend persist with more and more supply constraints loosening?
I think so. A lot of inflation risks are now already priced in, so basically it is within the forecast that the RBI has. What is very interesting is that we have always maintained that the current bout of inflation has been imported in nature. It is because of higher commodity prices whether food or whether it is fuel prices and a lot of imported food commodities.

Cooking oil is a primary example; meat prices have been elevated. We have to think of it from the perspective of levels versus rate of inflation and what we are seeing is that sequentially quite a few of these pressure points particularly are starting to dissipate. They are not falling aggressively month on month, but they are also no longer increasing 3-4%. There will be some level of comfort being derived from that front.

We think we are likely to see an undershooting of the inflation forecast. In our tracker we had come out with a number of 5.5% for the month of August, obviously it is still a bit early but price trends are indicating that it is not going to be closer to 6%.

Taking this forward, do you have any sort of internal estimate as to by when the RBI would start normalising policy?
We have been saying very consistently that the RBI will not have any kind of a front loaded normalisation cycle.
There is no real room for pre-emptive behaviour on their part because the growth picture does not clear up until very late in the fiscal year. We think that once the RBI has clarity on growth and that could mean they are looking at certain level of vaccinations, the global growth picture and signs of investment revival, or it could be a combination of these data points. The earliest we think the RBI could start hiking the reverse repo is in December.

It could be as early as December but in all likelihood, we do not think repo rate hikes will come into the picture anytime before the first quarter of the next fiscal year. It could either be the April or the June meeting depending on what the growth assessment is but it is not going to be a frontloaded action. Our sense is that the market also may be overpricing the extent of normalisation because unlike previous instances, we do not think the RBI is going to undertake a big normalisation.

We think that 2022 is probably the year when more signs of organic growth might start to return in the system and it will probably make the RBI a little bit more confident when they think about the normalisation cycle.Rahul Bajoria

RBI will probably have two repo rate hikes in 2022 and that is it! We are not going to see any further hikes from them because by that time the rate of inflation should also be slowing down and so the gap between the nominal policy rates and inflation is going to close as well. It is not like they are going to be aggressively hiking once they start normalising.

How will the next few months play out for the sovereign bond market? The RBI has permitted some degree of a rise in yields. What is your takeaway?
I think so in the sense that obviously there are two parts of the liquidity management strategy which is directly in control of the RBI; it involves domestic balance sheet growth, which is them buying bonds or calibrating currency in circulation requirements in the system.

The second is the FX reserves story which is not completely in control of the RBI but they tend to have some say in the way flows are being sterilised and whether we have sterilised or unsterilised FX intervention or the RBI can choose the level and the quantity of dollars they buy.

Here the general bias of RBI has been to go for growth and liquidity at a reasonably robust pace. Maybe at a later stage, that preference starts to tweak. But I do not think we are looking at any major inorganic steps on their part to draw down the liquidity.

Ideally what you want to see is that growth picks up, demand for currency, demand for credit picks up in the system and there is a bit of a runway for RBI to start normalising its liquidity in the system. We do not really see them aggressively stepping into take out liquidity right because that in itself could be in a 65 bps rate hike.

I would say the operating rate goes from the reverse repo to the repo and if they do that, it means that they are very confident about the growth outlook.

What do you think is going to be the general trend for the rupee this financial year?
Broadly speaking, the current account has seen the big delta swing between 2019 and 2020 and now in 2021 relative to 2020. The current account has gone from small deficit to a small surplus to a small deficit and this obviously has some implications for our reserve accretion strategy but what is reasonably evident is that our balance of payments is going to remain in a pretty decent size surplus right.

The size of monthly surpluses are coming down without doubt, but it is still going to be in a surplus and over the next six to 12 months, the flows are probably going to be a lot more evenly matched then what they were say in the last 12 months. From that perspective, it could mean that RBI’s reserve accretion strategy is going to carry on.

We also think the central bank has clearly been running down its forward book in order to build more reserves. So, there has been this trade off between forward reserves being traded off for current spot reserves and there is quite a bit of signalling effect from when we think about the global monetary policy cycle.

RBI clearly is going to lag any normalisation that is already underway. Within the emerging market, central banks of countries like Brazil has been hiking rates; Mexico has hiked rates, South Africa is talking about hiking rates. India is not doing that.

We will do that next year but we are not going to do that now but then the external pressure points are very limited for us because there is no imminent risk of large scale depreciation happening in the rupee because we are not keeping pace with the real rates kind of a framework.

Now within the domestic policy, both in the context of say the Aatmanirbhar Bharat programme and the PLI scheme, general interventionary trends that we have seen shows a bias for a stable to a slightly weaker rupee.

India’s fuel prices are not high only because of weaker currency or higher commodity prices. There is a taxation component to it which shows that there is a preference not to use the FX in order to lean into the inflation pressures. Our sense is that the rupee should generally find conditions to be stable with such a backdrop.

What are your estimates for GDP growth? When can we see a sustainable recovery?
We are sitting at about 9.2% for the current fiscal year and at the moment, we are picking up two clear messages from the data. First of all, the extent of growth loss or activity loss that was being estimated by us and generally by the markets as well appears to be much less. I do not think we really are in a position to predict whether a third wave happens or not.

We are not building any major impact of the third wave beyond the usual cyclical weaknesses. That sort of evens out the realised better activity levels with future risks of some loss coming. If we do not have the third wave, I would think there are very clear upside biases to our growth and we could even be again looking at maybe double digit GDP growth numbers in the current fiscal and it will be one recovery which is pretty much driven by the base effect and you are seeing normalisation of activity.

What would be very interesting to see is what happens with the 2022 growth story because right at the beginning of this year, a lot of analysts and a lot of people on the policy making side as well were getting pretty excited about maybe a new capex cycle emerging. Demand conditions were looking quite good and obviously the Budget added to that positivity. That optimism may start to have some effect on the 2020 story.

I would not say we are very bullish but we certainly think that India’s growth momentum can sustain into 2022 which will have a one leg of support coming from the investment cycle as well.

We think that 2022 is probably the year when more signs of organic growth might start to return in the system and it will probably make the RBI a little bit more confident when they think about the normalisation cycle. But then given that there are several risk factors around it, we are not exactly thumping the table but can see that happening as a pretty realistic likelihood. The probability of that turning out to be true appears reasonably high to us.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

1 36 37 38 39 40 95