Rajat Sharma, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The only thing I have done for a few of my client portfolios is that we have not sold off a lot of equity positions, but we purchased put options for the month ending January, says Rajat Sharma, CEO, Sana Securities.

Whether it is Tata Group, Birla Group, Indiabulls, or Reliance, all have done a lot of deleveraging during the Covid period. They got plenty of cost savings, and that led to debt improvement. Do you think those are some companies, sectors, groups that you would look at?
What the smarter companies do when interest rates are low, there is so much liquidity, is that they would do more issues of paper and reduce the leverage on their books. Reliance has done that. I was reading about their treasury operations, where they have picked up money at very, very good rates at this time.

I am not worried about what happens to the balance sheets of some of these larger companies. Instead, financial services-particularly large banks is the sector I am worried about.

For the last two years, since there has been a lockdown, nobody has compelled or at least I have not read anything about the amount of loan restructured, how many people took advantage of the moratorium and did not pay interest. Everything keeps getting delayed.

Auditors are being pushed to increase the time to six months, eight months and give us more time to make provisions or declare NPAs. If interest rates were to go up even by 25-50 bps and the cost of capital becomes expensive, you will see a lot of pain in financial services.

It may not be hard to believe right now because everything is hunky-dory. There is so much liquidity around, but this cannot go on forever. There must be some pain somewhere for people not working, not getting salaries and businesses shut. How could that all disappear? So I am more worried about how they will perform over the next four-five quarters.

Have you been a buyer in the recent decline that we have seen from the October highs?
No, not at all. The only thing I have done for a few of my client portfolios is that we have not sold off a lot of equity positions, but we purchased put options for the month ending January. That is to disclose about 1% of the total portfolio size. For example, if somebody has a portfolio of Rs.20 lakhs, then 1% would be something like Rs. 20,000 and so on. So three lots of Nifty for every Rs.20 lakhs, so that is the only thing we have done for clients where portfolios are in equity, and we have not sold off anything, but other than that, we sold off stocks and are holding cash.



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Reliance makes final call for payment on rights issue, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Reliance Industries Ltd (RIL) has a second and final payment from those who were issued 42.26 crore company shares in a rights issue. And to assist shareholders, it has re-activated WhatsApp Chatbot 7977111111.

In a regulatory filing, the company said a notice for payment of Second and Final Call on 42,26,26,894 partly paid-up equity shares of the face value of Rs 10 each issued and allotted on rights basis on May 15, 2020, has been issued.

Reliance had made a Rights Issue of 42.26 crore equity shares at Rs 1,257 each. The final call of 50 per cent of the amount – Rs 628.50 per share – has now become due.

Reliance’s rights issue at a total size of Rs 53,125 crore was the largest ever rights issue in India. This was the world’s largest rights issue by a non-financial company in the last 10 years.

The existing shareholders of the company were offered new shares of the company in a 1:15 ratio.

November 10, 2021, was the record date to decide holders of the Reliance Partly Paid-up shares, who need to pay the Second and Final Call.

On payment of the Second and Final Call amount, the partly paid-up shares will transition into fully paid-up shares of Reliance Industries, which are traded under symbol RELIANCE on both NSE and BSE.

To assist investors on the issue, Reliance has re-activated WhatsApp Chatbot.

The AI-enabled easy-to-use Chatbot is developed by Jio‘s group company Haptik and was previously used at the time of Rights Issue in May 2020, and the First call in May 2021.

Reliance in the notice said the Second and Final Call can be paid through online ASBA, Physical ASBA, 3-in-1 account, R-WAP facility (enabled for Net-banking, UPI, NEFT and RTGS payments) and payments through cheque/demand draft.

Payment of the Second and Final Call can be made from November 15 to November 29, 2021 (both days inclusive).

The credit of the fully paid-up equity shares on payment of the Second and Final Call is expected to take place within two weeks from the last date for payment mentioned in the Final Call Notice i.e. within two weeks from November 29, 2021. PTI ANZ BAL BAL



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Sensex scales 60k after RBI retains accommodative stance, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Mumbai, Oct 8 (PTI) The Sensex soared past the 60,000-level while the Nifty finished at an all-time high on Friday after the Reserve Bank kept the key interest rates unchanged but maintained its accommodative stance to bolster economic recovery. Market heavyweight Reliance Industries led the gains, while IT stocks too saw heavy buying ahead of TCS’ results.

The 30-share BSE Sensex jumped 381.23 points or 0.64 per cent to close at 60,059.06, just shy of its lifetime high.

The NSE Nifty rose 104.85 points or 0.59 per cent to its fresh closing peak of 17,895.20.

Reliance Industries was the top gainer in the Sensex pack, rallying 3.84 per cent, followed by Infosys, Tech Mahindra, HCL Tech, TCS, Tata Steel and L&T.

In contrast, HUL, NTPC, Kotak Bank, Maruti Suzuki, Dr Reddy’s and Titan were among the laggards, shedding up to 1.16 per cent.

Rate-sensitive banking and realty indices ended in the red, but auto closed with gains.

On a weekly basis, the Sensex rallied 1,293.48 points or 2.20 per cent, and the Nifty soared 363.15 points or 2.07 per cent.

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) expectedly kept interest rates unchanged at a record low but signalled the start of tapering pandemic-era stimulus measures on economic recovery taking root.

The six-member Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) kept the key lending rate or the repo rate unchanged at 4 per cent while the reverse repo rate or the borrowing rate was maintained at 3.35 per cent.

It voted 5-1 to retain the accommodative stance, RBI Governor Shaktikanta Das said.

The GSAP programme to purchase government securities from the market has been stopped for now to ensure that there is no further infusion of liquidity, he said, but stressed that the step is not a reversal of its accommodative policy stance and RBI will be ready to resume bond purchases if needed.

“With the RBI continuing with its accommodative policy, indices remained firmly bullish through the day led by the IT index as the street awaits TCS earnings and guidance,” said S Ranganathan, Head of Research at LKP Securities.

Reliance led from the front with the broader markets seeing action across pockets, he added.

Vinod Nair, Head of Research at Geojit Financial Services, said, “Domestic indices traded higher with optimism underpinned by dovish RBI policy and mixed global cues due to US jobs data awaited later in the day. RBI kept rates unchanged and maintained the status quo on accommodative stance.”

“FY22 GDP growth was maintained at 9.5 per cent while trimming inflation worries by lowering CPI forecast from 5.7 per cent to 5.3 per cent, provided the push to the market. On the sectoral front, the IT sector was in focus ahead of the result releases of sectoral majors while realty and FMCG succumbed to profit booking,” he added.

Sectorally, BSE energy, IT, teck, industrials, oil and gas, auto and basic materials indices spurted up to 2.69 per cent, while realty, power, FMCG and utilities closed lower.

Broader BSE midcap and smallcap indices climbed up to 0.83 per cent.

Asian stocks mustered gains, led by Chinese markets which returned from a week-long holiday. Bourses in Shanghai, Hong Kong and Tokyo ended with gains, while Seoul was in the red.

Stock exchanges in Europe were largely trading on a negative note in the afternoon session.

Meanwhile, international oil benchmark Brent crude rose 0.83 per cent to USD 82.63 per barrel.

The rupee tumbled 20 paise to close at 74.99 against the US dollar on Friday, as rising crude oil prices weighed on investor sentiment.

Foreign institutional investors were net sellers in the capital market on Thursday as they offloaded shares worth Rs 1,764.25 crore, as per exchange data. PTI ANS ABM ABM



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Mukesh Ambani’s $50 phone can unleash a credit revolution across the globe, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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A smartphone widely believed to be priced below $50, likely the world’s cheapest, will start selling a week from now. If Mukesh Ambani’s JioPhone Next, an Android device custom-built for India by Alphabet Inc.’s Google, is a hit in the price-conscious market, it will solve one problem for banks while posing another.

With the country’s remaining 300 million feature-phone users going online, there will be a surge of customer data that can stand in for collateral. The question is, how will banks get their hands on it?

An answer has come from iSPIRT, a small band of policy influencers quietly setting up technology standards for India’s digital markets, inducing firms to enter new, open-network markets from online payments to healthcare.

The Bangalore-based group is championing a fresh set of players — account aggregators — to unlock a much sought-after prize: Bringing into the folds of formal credit the 80% of adults in developing countries (40% in rich nations) who don’t borrow money from traditional institutions.

But these people and their micro enterprises are increasingly online thanks to innovations like JioPhone Next. They’re paying rents, rates and utility bills and receiving payments on their smartphones, scattering their footprints all over the internet. Account aggregators will gather those digital crumbs for people to share their own data in a machine-readable format for a bank loan application.

Introducing a layer of consent managers is important. Emerging-market borrowers can have many types of accounts-based relationships. Yet they can be useless to banks if they can’t present a composite picture of their financial lives to access formal loans that get monitored by credit bureaus. More than three-fifths of India’s adult population is either invisible to credit scorers or not considered worth the trouble by standard lending institutions.

In an advanced economy like the U.S., services such as Experian Boost and LenddoScore help narrow the subprime borrowers’ visibility gap by getting them to voluntarily submit their utility or video-streaming bills to demonstrate creditworthiness. But in an emerging market with low financial literacy, banks would rather leave the bottom of the pyramid to lenders who know the borrower in real life or have some social leverage on her — such as micro-finance firms that lend to groups of women.

Conversely, tech platforms, intimately aware of their customers’ online behavior, can match them with loans, collecting fees while leaving risks with the banks. Jack Ma’s Ant Group Co. cornered nearly a fifth of China’s short-term consumer debt before Beijing broke up the game.

Not every country can afford to bring out the heavy artillery against its private sector: Politics wouldn’t allow it. Aggregators can be a much softer tool for keeping the lending market fair, giving banks a reasonable economic chance to compete with data-rich tech giants.

Take JioPhone Next. It will spew out data about a large segment of sparsely banked population. Jio, Ambani’s 4G telecom network, will capture some of it as subscribers of its cheap data plans buy groceries from JioMart, an online partnership with neighborhood stores across India. Google will also get valuable data about users’ location and search queries. Facebook Inc. will exploit its own knowledge, as the social media giant adds to its half-a-billion-strong Indian customer base for WhatsApp and a growing craze for Instagram Reels, a video-sharing platform. Unsurprisingly then, Google wants to influence India’s deposit market, and Facebook is nibbling into the small business loans pie.

When it comes to real-time data, banks can never match the platforms’ clout. But account aggregators’ snapshots can help them catch a break.

Just enough additional data that will tell them if a customer is more creditworthy than suggested by a low (or no) credit score can make a big difference to profit, especially as banks won’t have to pay hefty fees to the likes of Jio, Google or Facebook for their proprietary assessments. By owning and explicitly sharing their data, customers will avoid getting trapped in the tech industry’s biased algorithms. Tiny enterprises will be able to show their cash flows to lenders by pooling everything from tax payments to customer receipts. Once telecom firms come on board, an affordable “buy-now-pay-later” plan on a refrigerator purchase will become possible for a low-income family that pays its phone bills regularly .

Aggregation, being a utility, will be like tap water to platforms’ Evian, and be priced accordingly. Who will own the pipes? Walmart Inc.’s PhonePe, which runs India’s most popular digital wallet, has received an in-principle approval to be an aggregator from the central bank. Eight banks, which between them account for 48% of all accounts in the country, have agreed to use the framework, which went live Thursday.

It’s a good start. Banks desperately need some help to stay in the money game. Or they’ll just go crying to regulators and ask them for special protections against Big Tech. That would hurt experimentation and delay the credit revolution that $50 phones can unleash.



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RIL cuts term SOFR deal with JP Morgan, heralds a new era, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Reliance Industries has cut a trade-financing deal with Wall Street bank JP Morgan using the Term SOFR (Secured Overnight Financing Rate), heralding a new era in loan-pricing benchmarks as the hitherto popular reference frame LIBOR is phased out after decades of international duty.

LIBOR is being replaced in phases by alternative rates for all loans and derivative deals starting January next year.

The financing deal was sealed at the bank’s overseas branch, likely in Singapore, and it involved discounting a Letter of Credit (LC). The amount involved was about $50 million.

Reliance is said to have obtained an LC from an Indian bank for procuring raw materials from the global market, three market sources familiar with the matter told ET. This LC will be discounted at a rate determined by SOFR Term rate with maturity running between two and three months.

“The financing will be provided by JP Morgan at the SOFR Term Rate,” said one of the persons cited above.

The SOFR Term rate, with a three-month maturity, yields 0.05043 percent.

Officials at Reliance and JP Morgan did not comment on the matter untill publication of this report.

“With a transition away from the LIBOR benchmark now inevitable, Indian users will have to start getting familiar with alternative reference benchmarks such as SOFR,” said Ananth Narayan, associate professor at the SP JAIN Institute of Management. “Larger corporates and banks leading the way in this transition is actually a good sign.”

CME group, the world’s largest derivative exchange, got the approval from the Alternative Reference Rates Committee (ARRC) to launch SOFR Term rates end-July.

“We…have been delivering robust, forward-looking SOFR term rates to the industry, based on our deep and liquid underlying CME SOFR futures market, since September 2020,” said Sean Tully, CME Group Global Head of Financial and OTC Products, in a statement.

SOFR is a benchmark rate administered by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, which has been selected to replace dollar-denominated LIBOR. SOFR is reportedly based on overnight transactions in the US Treasury repo market.

Nearly two months ago, India’s central bank warned banks and financial institutions against structuring deals linked to LIBOR.

In its bi-monthly monetary policy RBI relaxed norms to facilitate the financial industry’s migration to alternative reference rates instead of LIBOR. It directed banks and borrowers to work a smooth transition.



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What if Future Group heads to bankruptcy court?, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Future group lenders are staring at legal proceedings following the SC ruling against its deal with Reliance Retail.

They have more to worry about as $14 million of coupons, falling due later this month, could be a trigger for some debt investors to suggest legal measure against the Future Group if the local retailer fails to meet its financial commitment to bondholders.

Bond investors, who own a minority portion of Future Group’s aggregate debt liability of Rs 21,000 crore, may be more eager than banks to initiate legal proceedings in the event of missed coupon payments after the last week’s Supreme Court order stalled a vital deal with Reliance Retail.

Banks, although unsure about the recovery prospects of the bulk of the Rs 21,000-crore of debt they own, fear that the payout could be lower through the insolvency mechanism.

The group has very little immovable property that can be sold. All its assets are in the form of inventory and receivables that are very difficult to recover. The Reliance-led plan is the best option right now because the recovery will be very low in the bankruptcy courts.

The restructuring

Local and overseas banks — 28 of them led by Bank of India — were counting on Reliance Retail’s takeover of the Future Group for recovery of their dues.

In April, the K V Kamath Committee set up by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) approved a proposal by the lenders to restructure loans to Future Retail and

Future Enterprises, the main units of the Kishore Biyani-led group. Bank of India is the lead lender among the 28 local and overseas financiers that floated the loan recast plan.

According to that deal, Future Group had promised to pay banks Rs 6,900 crore in two tranches by the end of FY22, mainly by selling its small-format stores.

This would allow lenders to convert the short-term loans, non-convertible debentures and overdue working capital loans into term loans, which were to be repaid in two years. The group has not yet identified any buyers for these stores.

Bankers had agreed on the deal as a temporary arrangement on expectations that the Reliance takeover will be completed soon, meaning the lenders would no longer depend upon Future to make the payments.

With this latest court order, all such plans will have to be reconsidered.

The group firms

Future Retail is the largest debtor in the group, with about Rs 10,000 crore of dues. Two other listed companies — Future Enterprises that holds its supply chain, and Future Lifestyle Fashions that houses apparel brands such as Central and Brand Factory — add another Rs 11,000 crore to the debt pile.

Lenders had agreed to an interest moratorium between March 1, 2020 and September 30, 2021. They had also agreed upon waiving all penal interest and charges, default premiums and processing fees unpaid since March 2020 to the date of the implementation of the Reliance Retail takeover.

There is some respite in the central bank’s extension of the timeframe for meeting the financial parameters for companies undergoing restructuring.

What CARE said

Future Enterprise’s liquidity profile has been severely impacted on account of lockdown measures and weakened credit profile of its key customer, Future Retail, CARE Ratings had said in April this year.

“The inability of FEL to realise its debtors during the pandemic and shut down operations during Q1 of FY21 led to a cash crunch, increase in debtor days and subsequently default on its debt service obligations. There have been substantial delays in receipt from group entities and subsequent receipts have not been significant,” CARE had said in April.



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Future, Voda Idea rulings threaten Rs 50,000 crore loans, underscore legal risks for banks, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Banks have been cautious in big-ticket lendings, taking into consideration various parameters.

Now they need to be overcautious about the adverse court rulings as just two verdicts of Future Group and Vodafone Idea delivered last week have put over Rs 50,000 crore loans in jeopardy.

Last week, the Supreme Court effectively blocked Future Group’s $3.4 billion sale of retail assets to Reliance Industries, jeopardising nearly Rs 20,000 crore the retail conglomerate owes to Indian banks.

Loans to Future worth nearly 200 billion rupees were restructured earlier this year, giving it more time to come up with repayments due over the next two years, but that was on the premise that Reliance would bail it out,

That Future ruling was delivered days after the Supreme Court rejected a petition to allow telecom companies to approach the Department of Telecommunications to renegotiate outstanding dues in a long-runinng dispute with Indian telecom players.

That raises concerns over whether Vodafone Idea will repay some Rs 30,000 crore it owes to Indian banks and billions of dollars more in long-term dues to the government.

At the end of March, Indian banks had total non-performing assets of Rs 8.34 lakh crore, the government has said.

Vodafone Idea

If the telecom firm fails to repay its adjusted gross revenue dues to the government and its guarantees are invoked, it would immediately turn into debt and would soon be classified as a non-performing asset. The Supreme Court last week rejected telecom firms’ plea for reconsidering calculation of adujsted gross revenues.

The hit on PSU banks will not be as large as their exposure because in recent years lenders have been demanding a substantially higher cash margin for their guarantees. IDBI Bank is understood to have up to 40% margins for the guarantees it has extended. But even then it will be large enough to wipe out profits for many.

What ahead?

The insolvency process can work only when there are buyers. In the case of Vodafone, the Rs 53,000-crore AGR (adjusted gross revenue) dues to the Centre are a deterrent. This is despite Birla being willing to write down his entire equity. The government dues cannot be avoided as the Centre cannot make an exception for one company. Even in insolvency cases, the department of telecom has claimed its dues to be that of a financial creditor although there have been attempts to mark them as operational creditors.

The uncertainty over DoT’s claims, which is already being experienced by lenders in the Reliance Communications insolvency case, would make telecom resolutions a challenge. Lenders do not want to risk insolvency as this would result in the exit of customers which was the case with RCom.

With the company’s debt obligations being equal to 1.5% of the banking sector’s credit, experts have suggested the debt be converted into equity shares, the company be nationalised and perhaps merged with BSNL and MTNL. However, it seems highly unlikely the government will nationalise the company. On balance, they would reckon it is better to give up the revenues than act politically incorrectly in bailing out a private sector player—one with a foreign promoter.

The Future is bleak

Local and overseas banks — 28 of them led by Bank of India — were counting on Reliance Retail’s takeover of the Future Group for recovery of their dues.

In April, the KV Kamath Committee set up by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) approved a proposal by the lenders to restructure loans to Future Retail and

Future Enterprises, the main units of the Kishore Biyani-led group. Bank of India is the lead lender among the 28 local and overseas financiers that floated the loan recast plan.

According to that deal, Future Group had promised to pay banks Rs 6,900 crore in two tranches by the end of FY22, mainly by selling its small format stores.

This would allow lenders to convert the short-term loans, non-convertible debentures and overdue working capital loans into term loans, which were to be repaid in two years. The group has not yet identified any buyers for these stores.

Bankers had agreed on the deal as a temporary arrangement on expectations that the Reliance takeover will be completed soon, meaning the lenders would no longer depend upon Future to make the payments.

With this latest court order, all such plans will have to be reconsidered.

The group has very little immovable property that can be sold. All its assets are in the form of inventory and receivables that are very difficult to recover. The Reliance-led plan is the best option right now because the recovery will be very low in the bankruptcy courts.

Future Retail is the largest debtor in the group, with about Rs 10,000 crore of dues. Two other listed companies — Future Enterprises that holds its supply

chain, and Future Lifestyle Fashions that houses apparel brands such as Central and Brand Factory — add another Rs 11,000 crore to the debt pile.

Lenders had agreed to an interest moratorium between March 1, 2020 and September 30, 2021. They had also agreed upon waiving all penal interest and charges, default premiums and processing fees unpaid since March 2020 to the date of the implementation of the Reliance Retail takeover.

There is some respite in the central bank’s extension of the timeframe for meeting the financial parameters for companies undergoing restructuring.



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Indian bankers in talks as court rulings threaten over $6 billion in loans

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Informal talks are taking place to deal with the fall-out from two rulings by the Supreme Court that threaten the repayment of loans totalling nearly ₹500 billion ($6.73 billion) to some of India’s largest banks, bankers close to the matter say.

Any failure to recoup the money adds to stress in the banking sector, which is already dealing with an increased level of bad loans and reduced profits because of the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic.

Biyani-Ambani deal in trouble as Supreme Court rules in favour of Amazon

Last week, the Supreme Court effectively blocked Future Group’s $3.4-billion sale of retail assets to Reliance Industries, jeopardising nearly $2.69 billion the retail conglomerate owes to Indian banks.

That ruling was delivered days after the Supreme Court rejected a petition to allow telecom companies to approach the Department of Telecommunications to renegotiate outstanding dues in a long-running dispute with Indian telecom players.

Following SC ruling, NCLT to pause hearing on Future-Reliance deal

That raises concerns, bankers say, over whether Vodafone Idea will repay some ₹300 billion ($4.04 billion) it owes to Indian banks and billions of dollars more in long-term dues to the government.

Future of Future?

Two bankers, speaking on condition of anonymity, said negotiations were taking place to try to limit potentially severe consequences.

Loans to Future worth nearly ₹200 billion were restructured earlier this year, giving it more time to come up with repayments due over the next two years, but that was on the premise that Reliance would bail it out, the bankers said.

Future group did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Should Future be taken to a bankruptcy court, bankers say they are concerned they will have to take haircuts on the loans of more than 75 per cent.

“The immediate apprehension is that the restructuring deal will fall through for banks by December,” said a banker at a public sector bank that has lent money to Future.

Future’s leading financial creditors include India’s largest lender State Bank of India, along with smaller rivals Bank of Baroda and Bank of India.

Bank of India, the lead bank in the consortium lending to Future, did not immediately respond to an emailed request for comment.

Vodafone Idea

Banks have also started discussing Vodafone’s debt to lenders of nearly ₹300 billion. Top lenders to Vodafone include YES Bank, IDFC First Bank and IndusInd Bank, as well as other private and state-owned lenders.

Vodafone, YES Bank, IDFC First Bank and IndusInd did not immediately respond to a request seeking comment.

“Even though banks have the option of restructuring loans in case the company defaults, it will only make sense if there is clear cash flow visibility, which is not the case right now,” a senior banker at a public sector bank said on condition of anonymity.

Already, at the end of March, Indian banks had total non-performing assets of ₹8.34 trillion ($112.48 billion), the government has said. It has yet to provide more updated figures.

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Bankers in talks as court rulings threaten over $6 billion in loans, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Informal talks are taking place to deal with the fall-out from two rulings by Supreme Court that threaten the repayment of loans totalling nearly 500 billion rupees ($6.73 billion) to some of India’s largest banks, bankers close to the matter say.

Any failure to recoup the money adds to stress in the banking sector, which is already dealing with an increased level of bad loans and reduced profits because of the impact of the pandemic.

Last week, Supreme Court effectively blocked Future Group’s $3.4 billion sale of retail assets to Reliance Industries, jeopardising nearly $2.69 billion the retail conglomerate owes to Indian banks.

That ruling was delivered days after the Supreme Court rejected a petition to allow telecom companies to approach the Department of Telecommunications to renegotiate outstanding dues in a long-runinng dispute with Indian telecom players.

That raises concerns, bankers say, over whether Vodafone Idea will repay some 300 billion rupees ($4.04 billion) it owes to Indian banks and billions of dollars more in long-term dues to the government.

FUTURE OF FUTURE?

Two bankers, speaking on condition of anonymity said negotiations were taking place to try to limit potentially severe consequences.

Loans to Future worth nearly 200 billion rupees were restructured earlier this year, giving it more time to come up with repayments due over the next two years, but that was on the premise that Reliance would bail it out, the bankers said.

Future group did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Should Future be taken to a bankruptcy court, bankers say they are concerned they will have to take haircuts on the loans of more than 75%.

“The immediate apprehension is that the restructuring deal will fall through for banks by December,” said a banker at a public sector bank that has lent money to Future.

Future’s leading financial creditors include India’s largest lender State Bank of India, along with smaller rivals Bank of Baroda and Bank of India.

Bank of India, the lead bank in consortium lending to Future, did not immediately respond to an emailed request for comment.

VODAFONE IDEA

Banks have also started discussing Vodafone’s debt to lenders of nearly 300 billion rupees. Top lenders to Vodafone include Yes Bank, IDFC First Bank and IndusInd Bank, as well as other private and state-owned lenders.

Vodafone, Yes Bank, IDFC First Bank and IndusInd did not immediately respond to a request seeking comment.

“Even though banks have the option of restructuring loans in case the company defaults, it will only make sense if there is clear cash flow visibility, which is not the case right now,” a senior banker at a public sector bank said on condition of anonymity.

Already, at the end of March, Indian banks had total non-performing assets of 8.34 trillion rupees ($112.48 billion), the government has said. It has yet to provide more updated figures.



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Karnataka Bank reports frauds of ₹160.35 cr in 2 cases

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Karnataka Bank Ltd has informed the BSE that it has reported to the Reserve Bank of India frauds in the credit facilities extended to two listed companies. The total amount of fraud reported in these two credit facilities stood at ₹160.35 crore.

The bank said both these accounts were classified as NPA (non-performing asset), and have been fully provided for. “As such, there is no impact on the financials of the bank going forward,” it said. An outstanding amount of ₹138.41 crore has been treated as fraud in the case of Reliance Commercial Finance Ltd, and 100 per cent provision has been made. The percentage of bank’s share in the multiple banking arrangement was 1.98 per cent. There were 22 lenders under multiple banking arrangement in this case. It said the company was dealing with the bank since 2014.

Also read: Karnataka Bank gets additional director

In the case of Reliance Home Finance Ltd, an outstanding amount of ₹21.94 crore has been treated as fraud, and 100 per cent provision has been made. The percentage of bank’s share in the multiple banking arrangement was 0.39 per cent. There were 24 lenders under multiple banking arrangement in this case. It said the company was dealing with the bank since 2015.

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