Four applicants each apply for ‘on tap’ licenses to start universal banks, small finance banks

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The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) on Thursday said four applicants each have applied for “on tap” licenses to start Universal Banks and Small Finance Banks in the private sector.

The applicants under guidelines for ‘on tap’ licensing of Universal Banks are — UAE Exchange and Financial Services Ltd, The Repatriates Cooperative Finance and Development Bank Ltd (REPCO Bank), Chaitanya India Fin Credit Private Ltd and Pankaj Vaish and others, RBI said in a statement.

The applicants under guidelines for ‘on tap’ licensing of Small Finance Banks are — VSoft Technologies Private Ltd, Calicut City Service Co-operative Bank Ltd, Akhil Kumar Gupta and Dvara Kshetriya Gramin Financial Services Private Ltd, it added.

The guidelines for ‘on tap’ licensing of Universal Banks and Small Finance Banks in the private sector, were issued on August 1, 2016 and December 5, 2019 respectively.

The constitution and composition of the Standing External Advisory Committee for evaluating the applications received under the aforementioned guidelines was announced on March 22, 2021.

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Piramal Retail Finance enters consumer & used car finance

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With a focus on retail lending, Piramal Retail Finance on Thursday announced its foray into consumer and used car finance, even as it expects the retail share of the lending book of the Piramal Group to increase to over 40 per cent with the merger of Dewan Housing Finance Corporation Ltd (DHFL) with Piramal Capital and Housing Finance Ltd.

“The overall lending book is at about ₹45,000 crore, of which ₹5,000 crore or 11 per cent of the total lending book is from retail. DHFL book has got a substantial retail portion as well. By end of the fiscal year, retail share of the financial services business is likely to grow to mid-40s,” said Jairam Sridharan, Chief Executive Officer, Piramal Retail Finance.

focus on Non-mortgage products

In the medium term, it plans to grow the retail book to about two-thirds of the financial services business.

“With DHFL, though we have launched a lot of non-mortgage products, our business will become very mortgage heavy. We are keen to launch more non-mortgage products so that we can cross sell products to these consumers as and when the transaction happens,” Sridharan told reporters at a virtual press conference.

“The acquisition of DHFL fits perfectly into our overall retail strategy,” he said.

Earlier this week, the Competition Commission of India gave its nod to the acquisition of DHFL by PCHFL. Sridharan did not give a timeline for the expected approval from the National Company Law Tribunal but said the process is going as per expectations.

The Reserve Bank of India had in February this year approved the resolution plan for DHFL submitted by the Piramal Group.

Expansion plans

Meanwhile, elaborating on plans for Piramal Retail Finance, Sridharan said it aims to be one of the top five non-bank retail lenders over the next five years.

On Thursday, it announced the launch of its expanded multi-product retail financing platform. It is targeting ₹3,000 crore of new loan originations organically in next 12 months, in addition to inorganic growth.

Sridharan said the company, which plans to launch four more products this fiscal, is also looking at two wheeler financing and education financing in the next 12 months.

“We are working on a loans-against-shares product as well. We will also grow unsecured and multi-collateral lending products for small businesses,” he said.

At present, Piramal Retail offers seven products in its target markets –affordable housing loans, mass affluent housing loans, loans against property, secured small business loans, purchase finance, unsecured loans, and used-car loans. It is also looking to expand to 10 more locations in the next three months over the 40 locations it is already present in.

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RBI, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) announced that the RTGS (Real Time Gross Settlement) service for fund transfers will not be available for 14 hours on Sunday, April 18.

RBI stated, that after the close of business on April 17, 2021, a technological update to RTGS is planned, with the aim of improving the system’s resilience and Disaster Recovery Time. As a result, on Sunday, April 18, 2021, from 00:00 hrs to 14.00 hrs, RTGS service will be unavailable. However, The NEFT system will continue to be operational as usual during this period.

Central bank further added that, “Member banks may inform their customers to plan their payment operations accordingly. RTGS Members will continue to receive event updates through system broadcasts.”

Last week, the central bank had proposed to gradually extend RTGS and NEFT facilities to non-bank payment system firms. RTGS and NEFT were allowed only for banks and specialised entities like clearing corporations and select development financial institutions.

The move is intended to encourage non-bank participation across payment systems. RBI said. “This facility is expected to minimise settlement risk in the financial system and enhance the reach of digital financial services to all user segments.”



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Cryptos put India’s richie rich in a catch-22 situation, legality of transaction may be questioned, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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It’s a Catch-22 situation for wealthy Indians who bought Bitcoins from overseas markets and held them in offshore wallets as the fate of cryptos hangs in limbo in India. They are now in a quandary over how to account for, and whether to disclose, these ‘digital assets’.

If they hide these investments from the taxman, they may be pulled up later. But if they share the information while filing their annual income tax returns, they may be questioned on the legality of transactions they undertook. Some have acquired Bitcoins and other popular crypto currencies from international sellers by transferring funds from India under the Reserve Bank of India’s liberalised remittance scheme (LRS) which allows a resident to invest up to $250,000 a year abroad in stocks, bonds and properties among other things.

Others have purchased cryptos online from foreign sellers using their debit and credit cards. But there are question marks whether the LRS route and bank cards can be used to buy cryptos abroad. Bankers who remit LRS money say the facility cannot be used for direct purchase of Bitcoins from India as it does not figure in the permissible list of capital account transactions.

It’s one thing to subscribe to Coinbase IPO, but it’s another thing to buy Bitcoins directly. At least, that’s the impression they gather in their interactions with RBI.

But what if a person avails the LRS window to open a dollar or Euro account with a bank overseas and subsequently uses the money to buy Bitcoins abroad? Well, it’s none of our business, the bankers say. But is it beyond RBI’s jurisdiction as well? A RBI spokesman declined to comment on whether one can invest in cryptos under LRS. The use of debit or credit cards is done under the pretext that trades in cryptos are ‘current account’ (not capital account) transactions—a stand that can be challenged.

“While there is no specific provision dealing with purchase of Bitcoins under the LRS and while RBI has not specifically banned crypto currencies in India, there remains ambiguity whether individuals would be permitted to purchase the same. Further, in the absence of clarity on whether crypto currencies amount to “currencies” or merely a “contract / digital asset” in the hands of the recipient, it would be difficult to classify the same for reporting under the LRS since the fields provided for reporting under the form do not provide for such a disclosure,” said Tushar Ajinkya, founder and managing partner, ThinkLaw. However, according to Jaideep Reddy, leader (technology law) at Nishith Desai Associates, the RBI has not clarified the treatment of crypto-assets under FEMA but has stated that they do not amount to currency.

“They could hence be treated as intangible assets like intellectual property or software. Import of an intangible asset is permitted as a current account transaction. However, every transaction has to be analysed according to its specific facts and context,” said Reddy. Even as ambiguity prevails on the use of LRS, investors are now grappling with the dilemma over disclosure. Resident Indians are required to mention details of foreign bank accounts (including accounts in which they are signing authorities), immovable properties, or other assets located outside the country.

Here, the question that crops up is: should resident Indians disclose their overseas crypto holdings while filing returns for the assessment year 2021-22? A spokesperson for the direct tax body CBDT refused to comment while the professional accounting body ICAI had no views to share on the subject. Some of the tax professionals have told their clients to avoid cryptos while investing under LRS. “We believe RBI does not allow the use of LRS for purchase of crypto currencies as these are not in the list of permitted securities specified for purchase under LRS. However, no action has been taken by RBI till now as it may not have collected the data,” said Rajesh P Shah, who heads the research committee of The Chamber of tax Consultants.



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RBI monetary policy: Calms some nerves; just what the doctor ordered

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Through the variable reverse repo, RBI will also manage the lower end of the curve suitably.

By KVS Manian

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has clearly kept its ears to the ground in framing the last monetary policy. The surge in Covid-19 cases, leading to a seemingly vicious second wave, has definitely pushed the recovery trajectory by a quarter, if not two.

The pace of the Covid-19 vaccination has been slower than anticipated, adding to the worries on the time frame to get a control over the pandemic. Just now, in the most optimistic scenario, this looks like a 9-10 month vaccination programme to reach the thresholds of comfort. I am sure the government is thinking about speeding up the delivery mechanisms, as also ensuring optimum supply of vaccines itself. So, over the next few months, selective lockdowns/locational disruptions and other constraints will continue. This will lead to some demand disruptions as well as supply disruptions.

All this is bound to have an adverse impact on the economy, with some downside risk to the growth projections we had expected, even a month ago.

In such a scenario, that the RBI stance will be more accommodative and supportive of growth follows quite naturally. As all the countries attempt to do this over the next 12 months, we will see significant difference in the quality of execution amongst them.

Hopefully, India will be one of the countries that will emerge from this year with a strong tailwind ready to launch into a strong positive growth cycle.

Like most other central banks across the world, RBI is also clearly prioritising growth over incipient inflation worries. However, this remains a risk over the period of this financial year. While the headline inflation looks to be under control, the saviour has been the inflation in food prices, and core inflation numbers are already flirting with 6%. The risk to inflation is coming in a complicated manner, both from supply-side constraints in some areas and from demand-side pressures in others. This balancing act between supporting growth and curbing inflation is going to be the key challenge of the central bank this year.

The bond markets were very pleased with the announcement of the Rs 1 lakh crore open market operation (OMO) programme (christened as G-SAP, or the G-Sec Acquisition Programme) for the first quarter of FY22. It was precisely what the doctor ordered. This has cooled the yields over the long end of the curve. Through the variable reverse repo, RBI will also manage the lower end of the curve suitably. This may lead to some increase in yields in the short end, flattening the yield curve. The liquidity in the system will continue to be good, and with the above developments, the expectations of rise in policy rates over this year have significantly receded till late this financial year.

It will be interesting to see how the rupee reacts in the coming months. Global liquidity leading to strong flows into the Indian equity markets has helped bolster the rupee until now. Purportedly, RBI’s announcement of bond purchases and unwinding of positions by traders, who were already nervous due to the emerging Covid-19 second wave data, led to a fall in the value of the rupee. However, in the medium term, signals from the US and European markets on economic recovery and interest rates will be a more important factor. Just now, the US Treasury as well as European central banks seem quite determined to keep liquidity high and bond yields low, almost challenging the bond dealers to trade against them. Given these, the flow into attractive emerging markets is likely to continue, keeping the rupee reasonably stable.

The not-so-great news in all this is that the likely economic disruptions, caused by the next wave of Covid-19, could mute credit growth at a juncture when it was just showing green shoots of recovery. Asset quality issues in the financial sector could re-emerge. Coordinated steps by both the government and RBI through the last year helped ensure flow of credit and financial support to the segments in the economy that were the most susceptible, such as the MSMEs and other Covid-19-impacted sectors, and helped these segments tide through the crisis. Going forward, RBI and the government have to work towards a calibrated and smooth exit from this situation.

Another important announcement from RBI was that of permitting fintech companies to join the digital payment systems of the central bank. This is a progressive step, and will speed up digital adoption in financial transactions. India’s progress in this direction has been particularly noteworthy, and this announcement has signalled RBI’s continued and proactive focus in this area.

Overall, the policy is in sync with the times and recognises the need to navigate this uncertain period with an open mind.

The author is whole-time director and member of Group Management Council at Kotak Mahindra Bank. Views are personal

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Banks to remain closed on April 14 in these cities, open in these 7 states; check full list

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Even as banks in most of the states will remain shut on Wednesday but services such as ATM access, mobile banking, and online banking will remain available

Banks will remain closed in most of the states on Wednesday, 14 April 2021, on account of Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar Jayanti. Only the gazetted holidays are observed by banks all over the country. According to the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), barring 7 states, all the states will observe a holiday on Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar Jayanti. On this day, some states will celebrate Tamil New Year’s Day, Vishu, Biju Festival, Cheiraoba and Bohag Bihu. This has been notified by RBI under the Negotiable Instruments Act. Including weekends and festivals, up to 15 holidays have been notified by RBI for this month, which may vary state to state and be different in various banks.

Banks to remain functional on April 14 in these states

On April 14, 2021, banks in states such as Aizawl, Bhopal, Chandigarh, New Delhi, Raipur, Shillong and Shimla will remain functional. Referred to as Puthandu, this day is also observed as Tamil New Year’s Day.

Banks to remain shut on Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar Jayanti

Banks across Agartala, Ahmedabad, Belapur, Bengaluru, Bhubaneswar, Chandigarh, Chennai, Dehradun, Gangtok, Guwahati, Hyderabad, Imphal, Jaipur, Jammu, Kanpur, Lochi, Kolkata, Lucknow, Mumbai, Nagpur, New Delhi, Panaji, Patna, Ranchi, Srinagar and Thiruvananthapuram, will observe a holiday on April 14, 2021.

Even as banks in most of the states will remain shut on Wednesday but services such as ATM access, mobile banking, and online banking will remain available. However, people may not be able to deposit cheque, withdraw or deposit cash on this day.

18 April 2021- Weekly off (Sunday)
21 April 2021- Shree Ram Navmi (Chaite Dashain)/Garia Puja
24 April 2021- Fourth Saturday
25 April 2021- Weekly off (Sunday)

Apart from Wednesday, the banks will also remain closed on April 18 (Sunday), April 21 on account of Ram Navmi, April 24 (fourth Saturday) and April 25 (Sunday).

Other state-specific holidays this week

15 April 2021- Himachal Day/Bengali New Year’s Day/Bohag Bihu/Sarhul
16 April 2021- Bohag Bihu (Guwahati)

On April 15, banks in only five states — Agartala, Guwahati, Kolkata, Ranchi and Shimla will remain closed. While only Guwahati will observe a holiday on April 16, 2021.

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Remain watchful of evolving situation, push credit flows: RBI Guv to banks

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Deputy Governors M K Jain, M Rajeswar Rao and a few other senior officials of RBI also attended the meetings.

RBI Governor Shaktikanta Das on Monday asked banks to remain watchful of the evolving situation and emphasised the importance of credit flow to sustain the nascent economic recovery amid rising coronavirus cases.

In his meeting with MD/CEOs of public sector banks and select private sector lenders, Das also highlighted the recent policy measures taken by RBI to further support the ongoing recovery while preserving financial stability, the central bank said in a statement.

Das touched upon the importance of credit flows in sustaining the nascent economic recovery and advised banks to remain watchful of the evolving situation and continue taking measures proactively for maintaining their business continuity, sharpening business strategies and raising adequate capital for strengthening balance sheets.

“He also emphasised the need for banks to maintain a close vigil on the payments and other IT systems operated by banks and fortifying those for enhanced efficiency and resilience so as to offer seamless and uninterrupted customer service,” RBI said.

Among other matters, progress in the implementation of COVID Resolution Framework, outlook on stresses assets and capital augmentation came up for discussion.

The liquidity scenario and monetary transmission, and credit flows to different sectors, including MSMEs, and retail, were also discussed during the meeting held through video-conferencing.

Deputy Governors M K Jain, M Rajeswar Rao and a few other senior officials of RBI also attended the meetings.

There are concerns that surging coronavirus cases and resulting localised restrictions might hamper cash flow and result in stressed assets.

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For technical upgrade, RTGS will not be available on April 18

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The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) on Monday said Real Time Gross Settlement (RTGS) system service will not be available from 00:00 hrs to 14.00 hrs on April 18, 2021 (Sunday).

The central bank said RTGS will not be available on April 18 as a technical upgrade of the system, aimed at enhancing the resilience and further improving the Disaster Recovery Time of the system, is scheduled after the close of business of April 17, 2021 (Saturday).

The NEFT (National Electronic Funds Transfer) system will continue to be operational as usual during this period.

 

RBI asked Member banks to inform their customers to plan their payment operations accordingly. RTGS Members will continue to receive event update(s) through system broadcasts.

Under RTGS, there is a continuous and real-time settlement of fund transfers, individually on a transaction-by-transaction basis (without netting).

The RTGS system is primarily meant for large value transactions. The minimum amount to be remitted through RTGS is ₹ 2 lakh with no upper or maximum ceiling. It is available on a 24x7x365 basis.

NEFT is an electronic fund transfer system, which is available round the clock throughout the year on all days — on a 24x7x365 basis. NEFT presently operates in batches on half-hourly intervals throughout the day.

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RBI withdraws directions on Kolikata Mahila Co-op Bank

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The Reserve Bank of India on Saturday withdrew its directions issued to Kolkata-based Kolikata Mahila Co-operative Bank.

The RBI had issued directions to the bank from the close of business on July 9, 2019.

“Reserve Bank, on being satisfied that in the public interest it is necessary to do so, in exercise of the powers vested in it under…the Banking Regulation Act, 1949 (AACS), hereby withdraws with effect from April 10, 2021, the said directions so issued to Kolikata Mahila Co-operative Bank Limited, Kolkata, West Bengal,” the central bank said in a statement.

Under the directions, which were issued in 2019, the bank, without prior approval of RBI, could not grant or renew any loans and advances, make any investment, incur any liability including borrowal of funds and acceptance of fresh deposits, among others.

The directions also capped deposit withdrawal at ₹1,000 of the total balance held by depositors in every savings bank or current account or any other deposit account. With the withdrawal of the directions, the cap on deposit withdrawal also goes.

Earlier this week, RBI withdrew the All Inclusive Directions it issued to Kolhapur-based Youth Development Cooperative Bank Ltd.

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India’s Central Bank Says ‘Boo.’ Carry Traders Faint

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“India joins the money printers.”

That’s how an ING Bank research note describes the Reserve Bank of India’s explicit commitment to buy ₹1 lakh crore ($14 billion) in government bonds this quarter. Since this new move has been given a fancy name — Government Securities Acquisition Program — it will probably both extend and expand.

Large-scale bond-buying and money-printing may result in a glut of rupees, causing them to depreciate against the dollar. Which is why the foreign-exchange market pushed the dollar 1.56% higher against the rupee, one of the largest one-day moves in the past decade.

Quantitative easing

Is this the start of quantitative easing? Robert Carnell, ING’s head of Asia-Pacific research, thinks so: “QE, once the preserve of reserve currency central banks, is now becoming pretty mainstream,” he writes. With its new program, India has “joined the ranks of Indonesia and the Philippines in Asia who have dabbled with this policy.”

 

Bond traders aren’t all so sure. The yardstick for a monetary bazooka is Mario Draghi’s “whatever it takes” moment at the European Central Bank in the summer of 2012, or Haruhiko Kuroda’s bold 2013 campaign at the Bank of Japan to end 15 years of deflation. RBI Governor Shaktikanta Das’s manoeuvre isn’t in the same league. It’s just a formal announcement of open market bond purchases the authority does on an ad hoc basis anyway. How can you get excited about $14 billion of debt-buying this quarter, when the preceding three months’ total was $20 billion?

Rather than chalking up the program as full-fledged quantitative easing, traders like Arvind Chari, chief investment officer at Quantum Advisors Pvt., are more comfortable calling it a yield-curve flattener, which should help the central bank manage a bloated government borrowing program. The benchmark 10-year yield has indeed shifted lower over the past two trading sessions.

Crowded carry trade

The fixed-income folks probably have it right: This isn’t the start of a new monetary policy regime. As for the massive move in the currency, Mumbai-based finance professor and Observatory Group analyst Ananth Narayan has a simple explanation. The carry trade in the Indian rupee has been getting crowded, he says.

These are bets where speculators borrow a low-yielding currency, such as the dollar, to buy a high-yielding emerging market currency. As long as what they’re buying (the rupee in this case) doesn’t drop like a stone, they come out ahead. A fall like Wednesday’s would scare them off and lead to an unwinding of positions, which in Narayan’s calculations had swelled in just five months through February to $40 billion.

What has been bringing carry traders to India, besides the chance to earn a three-month yield of 3.3%, by swapping into rupees the dollars they borrowed at the three-month Libor rate of less than 0.2%? Before Wednesday, they could be reasonably sure that the rupee, the best-performing emerging-market currency in the first quarter, would remain propped up by strong capital inflows: Overseas investors have ploughed $37 billion into India’s frothy equity market over the past year.

With inflation one percentage point above the mid-point of the central bank’s 2%-6% target range, and local savers grumbling about unremunerative deposits, there was little risk that the RBI would go down the path of adventurism. The opportunity for unconventional action was last year, when Bank Indonesia decided to directly fund its government’s fight against the coronavirus. Now markets are starting to expect the U.S. Federal Reserve to raise interest rates sooner than it has indicated so far, leading to a flight of capital from emerging markets.

This is a time for policy prudence and currency stability. Or that’s what the carry traders were betting.

They expected the RBI to gradually withdraw the $89 billion of surplus domestic liquidity in the banking system. The monetary authority had opened the floodgates last year to fill the cracks caused by Covid-19 dislocation. Since removing this excess by selling interest-bearing central bank paper would entail a visible fiscal expenditure, the RBI was doing it by converting some of its spot dollar purchases (which keep the rupee competitive for exports) into forward purchases, accompanied by spot dollar sales. The latter sucked out the rupee liquidity.

The implied rupee interest rate involved in this minor operation is much higher than the local money market rate, says Narayan, but it’s not a cost that has to be explicitly acknowledged. The message to carry traders was clear: Who wouldn’t want to buy a currency whose sole issuer wants them so severely as to implicitly pay a hefty premium to have them back for one year?

But then the RBI cried “boo” in a crowded room. Its bond-buying announcement came amid a sinister-looking resurgence of the pandemic that could drag out the recovery from last year’s harsh lockdown. New cases reported Thursday spiked to a daily record of more than 126,700, and vaccine stocks dwindled to three days in Maharashtra, the worst-affected state and home to Mumbai, India’s financial capital.

Moody’s Investors Service flagged this second wave as a risk to domestic air travel and of airport operators’ credit quality. ICRA Ltd., the local Moody’s affiliate, said a jump in infections could spook investors, making it more challenging for home financiers and other shadow banks to securitize retail assets. The banking system was in poor health even before the virus outbreak. Nonperforming loans this year could be at a 20-year high, Capital Economics says.

This sudden surge in economic uncertainty provided the RBI with elbow room to talk yields down. It took the chance and unveiled what’s billed as a big-ticket easing program, but in reality, it may be more water pistol than a bazooka. Carry traders got shocked, nonetheless.

People are so jumpy nowadays.

This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners.

Andy Mukherjee is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering industrial companies and financial services.

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