Chairman, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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HDFC Bank, largest lender by market capital, has created a new business segment of commercial and rural banking to capture the next wave of growth, said Atanu Chakraborty, the bank’s non-executive chairman, in the annual general meeting held on July 17.

“This will not only reinforce your bank’s top position in the MSME segment but also strengthen efforts to serve customers in both India and Bharat,” Chakraborty said, adding that the tech savvy young customers too would be benefited out of this move.

The delivery channels will be complemented with digital marketing, even as your bank leverages the branch channel and virtual relationship channel.

This was Chakraborty’s first AGM after the Reserve Bank of India approved his appointment in April for a period of three years. Chakraborty, a 1985 batch IAS officer of Gujarat cadre, earlier retired as secretary of department of economic affairs in the central government more than a year ago.

The bank continues its focus on corporate and Government business to drive growth.

Chakraborty put emphasis on being “future ready”, a key lubricant for growth in coming days. This, according to him, means that growth engines of corporate banking, MSME, agricultural and rural, government and institutions banking and others will be powered by robust technology and digital platforms.

“These growth engines will account for the bulk of our future investments and can be broadly classified as Business Verticals and Delivery Channels,” said Chakraborty.

During April-June quarter, HDFC Bank reported a 16.1 percent year-on-year growth in standalone profit at Rs 7,730 crore, its slowest pace since December 2016. It was lower than Rs 7,931 crore estimated by analysts in a Bloomberg poll.

In between, the chairman highlighted the lender’s efforts for environment, social and government or ESG, a global cult that qualifies for a cheap international cash pool.

“The bank has taken cognizance of ESG in its business plans and has put in place a broad strategy, which will be fine-tuned as we move ahead,” said Chakraborty.

“Your bank realizes the importance of environment protection and that it is a vital aspect within the ESG framework.”

During the pandemic many bank employees suffered due to the infection. The chairman made a special mention for those as he credited the bank for running bank operations seamlessly braving the odds.

“Many of them lost their lives. They are our unsung heroes. I join all of you in paying my respects to them,” he said.



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Inside BharatPe-Centrum proposed JV to acquire troubled PMC Bank, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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BharatPe’s proposed joint venture with non-banking financial company Centrum Finance to set up a Small Finance Bank (SFB) that will acquire troubled Punjab and Maharashtra Co-operative (PMC) Bank is a landmark event for fintech players harbouring banking ambitions.

The deal, however, has not been easy to stitch up.

The story of how a startup has within three years partnered a 44-year-old NBFC led by veteran banker Jaspal Bindra to acquire a banking licence has more to it than meets the eye.

The idea behind this SFB is anything but conventional – considering BharatPe’s leadership dynamics to the Reserve Bank of India’s approach towards reviving a dying bank.

“As far as resolution plans go (for PMC Bank), this is a highly unusual one,” a senior banker at a private sector lender said. “While there is no set resolution framework to revive a dying bank, it is definitely a measure RBI has taken out of desperation rather than choice.”

Over the last two weeks, ET spoke to more than a dozen sources to make sense of the Centrum-BharatPe SFB.

We asked them what the central bank’s thinking was, how soon PMC Bank’s depositors could access their hard-earned deposits and what were the conditions that RBI had conveyed to stakeholders in private before giving approval to set up the SFB.

Special Exemption
The alleged Rs 6,500-crore fraud at PMC Bank is one where several regulatory and audit checks had been given the go-by over the last two decades.

The bank’s board had for many years allegedly concealed loan defaults by real estate firm Housing Development and Infrastructure Ltd (HDIL) of the Wadhawan Group.

Ultimately, the RBI had to step in to freeze depositors’ accounts last year. In light of this, the resolution plan has to be completed at the earliest since retail depositors’ withdrawal limits have been capped at Rs 50,000.

Even as the Centrum-BharatPe bid received its nod, the banking regulator has been at the forefront of drafting the resolution plan, which includes repaying depositors’ principal along with interest.

“The sense is that while a significant portion, or 45% of deposits less than Rs 5 lakh, will be returned as soon as the Deposit Insurance Scheme kicks in, the rest – amounting to deposits of nearly Rs 5,000 crore – will be converted into a low-yielding debt instrument, likely a 10-year bond,” a source privy to the plan told ET.

RBI has yet to finalise these though.

Ashneer Grover, the cofounder of BharatPe, said operationalisation of the SFB was still “3-4 months away.”

There are other deal riders not yet in the public domain.

These include the future structuring and listing propositions for the SFB, sources close to the company said.

The as-yet unnamed SFB will be a 50-50% partnership between BharatPe’s parent Resilient Innovations and Centrum Finance.

A typical NBFC converted to an SFB is given three years’ time after achieving a net worth of Rs 500 crore before its mandatory Initial Public Offering (IPO). The proposed JV has been provided a special exemption to go in for an IPO in six years.

Second, Centrum and BharatPe must also reduce their combined shareholding to less than 50% from the current 100%.

RBI has sought that the process be completed in eight years.

While Centrum can hold 40% stake, Resilient Innovations has been told to cut its stake to a maximum of 10%.

This effectively means that BharatPe will lose majority ownership of the banking venture by 2030.

The SFB will also not be allowed to offer housing loans or microcredit until Centrum Group is able to hive off its own housing finance and microfinance arms.

Both the owners had agreed to these conditions before RBI gave the in-principle approval.

A merchant-focussed bank
According to sources, the bank will be positioned as “India’s first merchant-focused bank.”“BharatPe is planning on building a lot of its offerings around merchant-focused credit and savings products,” a person directly aware of the matter said.

According to sources, the SFB is likely to offer loans to small and medium enterprises as well as unsecured retail loans lower than Rs 50,000.

BharatPe is likely to take the lead in acquiring merchants and providing technology support to the banking entity, while Centrum will handle financials and compliances.

BharatPe will not transfer its existing merchant base of around six million small vendors to the new SFB as most are with its existing banking partners, ICICI Bank and Yes Bank. These merchants could, however, be a base for cross selling its loan products.

The firm is also expected to retain its autonomous identity as a payment-focused fintech.

The SFB could also leverage BharatPe’s digital payment capabilities while building out new products, just like the operational structure currently followed by fintech unicorn Paytm and its Payments Bank entity.

“We will continue to operate as an independent entity,” Grover told ET. “For its payments business, BharatPe works with multiple banks (ICICI, Yes Bank) and will continue to do so. There are no plans to transition the existing base to the new SFB. We will work with the new SFB in areas where it adds value to our existing and to-be-acquired merchant base.”

Centrum Finance did not respond to ET’s queries.

The promoters of Centrum and BharatPe are expected to commit Rs 1,800 crore to the SFB, of which Rs 900 crore will be infused in the first year, Grover said. The remaining will be infused “when needed,” he added.

Next leg of growth?
Centrum Finance’s Bindra, a veteran banker and formerly head of Standard Chartered’s Asia unit, has reportedly been influential in getting RBI’s approval in the JV’s favour.

The banking foray by BharatPe – which has been working with Centrum Finance for the last three years – is expected to boost its next leg of growth for several reasons.

While there is an obvious opportunity to increase margins on loans through lowered cost of acquiring funds, there could be a greater purpose, sources said.

Payments companies no longer command the same valuation premiums as they did a few years back.

Competition from players such as Walmart, Google and Amazon mean that a company looking to build a profitable payment business will need to compete effectively with these tech giants – an endeavour where Paytm has also failed.

The differentiator is, therefore, in having a banking licence, which is not easy to get for companies outside India’s legacy banking ecosystem.

This not only increases the entry barrier to compete at the same scale but allows the company to expand its product portfolio significantly.

“What is happening here is BharatPe wants to emulate Paytm, but on steroids,” said an industry expert.

“As a banking entity where the entry barriers are high, BharatPe will bypass the competitive challenges it was set for several years before making a meaningful dent. It will now be a banking entity and have access to cheaper funds and the margins will be much higher. As a bank, you are destined to be profitable, and that for an Indian fintech is invaluable,” the expert said.

BharatPe is on the verge of closing a $350 million funding round led by Tiger Global, which will likely make it a unicorn, valuing it at around $2.8 billion, a person directly aware of the matter said.

Leadership changes
BharatPe has made at least six senior management hires in the last year. It expects to do the same this year as well.

Suhail Sameer was brought in last year as group president and has emerged as an influential voice within the company. He is expected to assume the role of ‘founder’. Sameer is also now positioned as the only other public face of the startup besides Grover.

Bhavik Koladiya and Shashvat Nakrani are the other cofounders of BharatPe.

Koladiya has largely been under the radar but sources aware of BharatPe’s origin said he has been hands-on as a founder from the beginning. In fact, Grover met Koladiya and firmed up plans to set up BharatPe and soon Nakrani joined as well, a person aware of the matter said.

Earlier this year, Guatam Kaushik joined BharatPe as group president, the second executive at this level after Sameer.

Kaushik was CEO of loyalty platform Payback India, which was acquired by BharatPe in June.

Sameer has been virtually leading all the funding talks and been a core part of strategic decision making at BharatPe.

“He has been actively involved in all the fundraising discussions with investors — for both equity and debt rounds. As the company moves to the next stage of its journey -especially with banking aspirations – it’s important to have senior experienced executives at the helm and that’s why Sameer has become critical to BharatPe’s strategic decision making,” a person aware of the thinking of the company and its investors said.

BharatPe also hired Parth Joshi as chief marketing officer in June.

While senior executives like Sameer and others strengthen its leadership team, sources said some of BharatPe’s investors have not been comfortable with Grover’s mercurial style of leadership.

Grover said this was not true.

“We have a strong leadership team of 14 people, including the founders. All of us are well established professionals in our respective domains and bring enormous credibility and expertise to BharatPe. We all have our role to play for the success of BharatPe. Suhail is a critical member of this leadership team, like others,” he said.

Grover’s public remarks on disputes with rivals like PhonePe have not helped in addressing these concerns, the sources added.

“Our investors are extremely supportive of BharatPe and what we have built in such a short span of time. Leadership hiring is done in sync with the business requirements,” Grover said.

One of the sources said: “Look, every founder has his way of doing things and not everyone will like it. Some have had concerns but that doesn’t dilute Grover’s position as a cofounder.”

BharatPe is also on the lookout for senior management roles in compliance, finance and legal departments to strengthen its entry into the world of banking.

“The other younger members of the founding team have done well but the need for more experienced hands was felt and thus they continue to beef up the senior positions,” one person said.



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NPCI in talks to take UPI, RuPay to global markets, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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National Payment Corporation of India (NPCI) is in talks with several global agencies to expand the global footprint of indigenous payment networks RuPay and UPI (unified payment interface), possibly in West Asia, the United States, and Europe.

“We are aiming to expand RuPay and UPI acceptance across world destinations, where Indians travel for holidays, study or profession or even stay,” said Ritesh Shukla, chief executive of NPCI International Payments (NIPL), a wholly-owned subsidiary of NPCI for international business. “We are in talks with global agencies through which we are looking to introduce RuPay and UPI to the world.”

Those international agencies may include regulatory authorities, large banks, fintech companies, or even umbrella payment organisations from respective countries.

Some of the likely destinations include Gulf countries like Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Bahrain, European and North American countries, Mauritius and Singapore, payment industry insiders said.

Shukla did not disclose names of agencies NIPL is in talks with, but a senior payment industry executive told ET, “US-based Zelle or The Clearing House could well be partners.”

Zelle Network is a payment platform in the US that deals with banks and credit unions while The Clearing House Payments Company operates core payments system infrastructure in the US.

Zelle Network and The Clearing House did not reply to ET’s queries as of press time Sunday.

The development comes at a time when global payment giant MasterCard is facing regulatory roadblocks in India.

The Reserve Bank of India had last week banned MasterCard from issuing new cards for non-compliance with data storage localisation rules. The development will likely prompt some banks using its services to reach out to RuPay, industry experts said.

RuPay already holds more than 60 per cent market share in terms of number of cards in India, outpacing both MasterCard and Visa which had till recently dominated the turf.

Launched in 2016, UPI reported a 285 per cent compounded annual growth rate (CAGR) in payment volume since 2017 to hit $457 billion in 2020.

To take UPI payment system to global markets, NIPL would be reaching out to tie up with existing QR (quick response) code infrastructure operators.

RuPay acceptance can be made available through point of sale (PoS) terminals and ATMs.

Bhutan recently became the first country to adopt UPI standards for its QR code. It is also the second country after Singapore to have Bhim-UPI acceptance at merchant locations, NIPL had said last week.

Both UPI and RuPay are payment services delivered through NPCI’s multi-rail payment network.



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IBA to soon move application to RBI for setting up Rs 6,000-cr bad bank, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Having secured licence from the Registrar of Companies, the Indian Banks’ Association (IBA) will soon move an application to the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) to set up a Rs 6,000-crore National Asset Reconstruction Company Ltd (NARCL) or bad bank, according to sources.

With registration of the company, the process for putting an initial capital of Rs 100 crore is on as per the guidelines, the sources said adding that the next step will be audit and then move application to the RBI seeking licence for the asset reconstruction company.

The RBI in 2017 raised capital requirement to Rs 100 crore from the earlier level of Rs 2 crore keeping in mind higher amount of cash required to buy bad loans.

Legal consultant AZB & Partners has been engaged for seeking various regulatory approvals and fulfilling other legal formalities.

The initial capital would come from eight banks who have committed, and the NARCL would expand the capital base to Rs 6,000 crore subsequently after the RBI’s nod, the sources said.

Other equity partners would join after the RBI’s licence and even the board would be expanded, the sources added.

IBA, entrusted with the task of setting up a bad bank, has put a preliminary board for NARCL in place. The company has hired P M Nair, a stressed assets expert from State Bank of India (SBI), as the managing director. The other directors on the board are IBA Chief Executive Sunil Mehta, SBI Deputy Managing Director S S Nair and Canara Bank‘s Chief General Manager Ajit Krishnan Nair.

Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman in Budget 2021-22 announced that the high level of provisioning by public sector banks of their stressed assets calls for measures to clean up the bank books.

“Asset Reconstruction Company Limited and Asset Management Company would be set up to consolidate and take over the existing stressed debt,” she had said in the Budget Speech. It will manage and dispose the assets to alternative investment funds and other potential investors for eventual value realisation, she had said.

Last year, IBA made a proposal for the creation of a bad bank for swift resolution of non-performing assets. The government accepted the proposal and decided to go for an asset reconstruction company and asset management company model in this regard.

Meanwhile, state-owned Canara Bank has expressed its intent to be the lead sponsor of NARCL with a 12 per cent stake.

The proposed NARCL would be 51 per cent owned by PSBs and the remaining by private sector lenders.

NARCL will take over identified bad loans of lenders. The lead bank with an offer in hand of NARCL will go for a ‘Swiss Challenge‘, wherein other asset reconstruction players will be invited to better the offer made by a chosen bidder for finding higher valuation of a non-performing asset on sale.

The company has picked up those assets that are 100 per cent provided for by the lenders. Banks have identified around 22 bad loans worth Rs 89,000 crore to be transferred to NARCL in the initial phase.



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RBI, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Mumbai: The Reserve Bank of India on Thursday said the next purchase of government securities for an aggregate amount of Rs 20,000 crore under the G-sec Acquisition Programme (G-SAP 2.0) will be conducted on July 22. On June 4, RBI Governor Shaktikanta Das had announced that the central bank will conduct the open market purchase of government securities of Rs 1.2 lakh crore under the G-SAP 2.0 in the second quarter of 2021-22 to support the market.

On July 22, the RBI will purchase four government securities of different maturities through a multi-security auction using the multiple price method.

The central bank said it reserves the right to decide on the quantum of purchase of individual securities, and purchase marginally higher/lower than the aggregate amount due to rounding-off.

The result of the auctions will be announced on the same day, it added.

The first purchase under G-SAP 2.0 aggregating to Rs 20,000 crore was conducted on July 8.

The RBI had conducted an open market purchase of government securities of Rs 1 lakh crore under the G-SAP 1.0 in the first quarter of 2021-22.



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RBL, Yes Bank, Bajaj Finserv most impacted by RBI curbs on Mastercard, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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New Delhi, After the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) restricted Mastercard from on-boarding new customers, among the credit card issuers, including co-brand partners, RBL Bank, Yes Bank and Bajaj Finserv are the most impacted as their entire card schemes are allied with Mastercard.

Japanese brokerage Nomura said in a note that these three entities are the most impacted by the RBI move.

HDFC Bank has 60 per cent of its card schemes tied to Mastercard, Amex and Diners, while for Axis Bank and ICICI Bank, this is about 35-36 per cent.

“That said, we don’t know the individual card schemes’ contribution to the overall profitability of the issuers to assess the potential impact,” it added.

HDFC Bank is already restricted from issuing new cards, and hence is not incrementally impacted. On the other hand, Kotak’s card portfolio is entirely allied to Visa and hence it won’t face any issues.

The managements of both Axis Bank and ICICI Bank have in the recent past talked about their cobranded cards with Flipkart and Amazon, respectively, to be the fastest-growing card schemes. These card schemes are 14 per cent and 15 per cent of outstanding cards for Axis and ICICI, respectively.

While the Amazon ICICI card is allied to Visa, the Flipkart Axis card is allied to Mastercard, and hence is a potential medium-term risk, should the current status-quo continue, Nomura said.

The RBI on Wednesday restricted Mastercard Asia/Pacific Pte Ltd from onboarding new customers across all its card products (debit, credit and prepaid) from July 22, 2021.

The RBI had earlier put similar restrictions on both American Express Bank (Amex) and Diners Club International (Discover Financial Services).

“This leaves only Visa Inc and homegrown NPCI’s RuPay as payment providers under no restrictions currently. We don’t know if Visa has fulfilled all the requirements of data localisation as envisaged in the Storage of Payment System Data circular of the RBI,” Nomura said.

“In the near term, we don’t foresee any material impact on card issuers (especially credit card issuers), but there could be a medium-term impact if this situation persists,” it added.



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RBI proposes changes in fund raising norms of urban co-operative banks, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has proposed changes in rules for fundraising by primary (urban) co-operative banks. On Wednesday, the central bank released a draft circular for issue and regulation of share capital and securities of primary (urban) co-operative banks.

“UCBs are permitted to raise equity share capital, as hitherto, by way of issue of equity shares to persons within their area of operation enrolled as members, in accordance with the provisions of their bye-laws, and issue of additional equity shares to the existing members,” it said.

The RBI has proposed that any refund of share capital to members, or their nominees, should be subject to the certain conditions — the bank’s capital adequacy ratio is 9 per cent or above, both as per the latest audited financial statements and the last CRAR as assessed by the RBI during statutory inspection.

Such refund should not result in the bank’s capital adequacy falling below regulatory minimum of 9 per cent. The RBI has directed cooperative banks to ensure their investors are educated on the risk characteristics of regulatory capital requirements.

It has also asked cooperative banks to have a specific sign-off from the investors to ensure they have understood the features and risks of the instruments. The urban co-operative banks have been asked to not benchmark floating rate instruments to the fixed deposit rate.



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Banks get time till March 2022 to implement lockable cassettes swap system for ATMs, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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MUMBAI: The Reserve Bank has extended the deadline till March 2022 for banks to use only lockable cassettes for replenishing cash in ATMs.

Currently, most of the ATMs (automated teller machines) are replenished by way of open cash top-up or by loading cash in the machines on the spot.

To do away with the current system, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) had asked banks to ensure that lockable cassettes are swapped at the time of cash replenishment in the ATMs.

Following representations received from banks citing difficulties in moving towards the lockable cassettes system, RBI has decided to extend the deadline for its implementation till March next year, according to a notification issued on Wednesday.

In April 2018, the apex bank had asked banks to consider using lockable cassettes in their ATMs which shall be swapped at the time of cash replenishment. It was to be implemented in a phased manner covering at least one-third ATMs operated by the banks every year, such that all ATMs achieve cassette swap by March 31, 2021.

“In this regard, representations have been received from Indian Banks’ Association on behalf of various banks expressing difficulties in meeting this timeline. Accordingly, it has been decided to extend the timeline for implementation of cassette swap in all ATMs till March 31, 2022,” RBI said.

Banks have also been asked to monitor progress and make the required course correction at the end of every quarter and report status to the RBI.

The recommendation to switch to lockable cassettes in ATMs was based on report of Committee on Currency Movement that was set up by the central bank.

At the end of May, there were 1,10,623 ATMs on site of banks and 1,04,031 of site-ATMs in the country.



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Mastercard ban gives opportunity to RuPay, digital credit card firms, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The ban on Mastercard for onboarding new customers by the Reserve Bank of India is set to hit new card issuances in the country, and give an opportunity to other players like Visa and RuPay to raise their market share.

Indian banks may see card spends and new card issuance take a beating after the RBI ban on Mastercard.

Mastercard’s has a one-third share of the Indian card market where Visa is the biggest player. The ban may also impact credit card spends, which are already down due to the Covid pandemic.

Banks have been swift to move on with RBL announcing a partnership with Visa just a day after the ban on Mastercard.

Digital credit card companies that use multiple tech innovations and do not rely on Visa, Mastercard rails are also likely to gain. They use UPI, which is said to have a larger acceptance for both P2P and P2M payments.

RuPay cards

India’s indigenous payment network RuPay has cornered a significant market share in the domestic card market since its launch. As of November 30, 2020, RuPay’s market share has increased to more than 60 per cent of total cards issued, from merely 17 per cent market share in 2017, according to RBI data.

As of November 2020, around 603.6-million RuPay cards have been issued by nearly 1,158 banks. But a majority of these are debit cards and only 970,000 are credit cards.

The number of debit cards issued in the country between 2010-11 and 2019-20 increased from 227.8 million to 828.6 million, of which around 300 million were RuPay debit cards issued to basic savings bank deposit account holders.

On the other hand, during the same period, the number of credit cards issued also increased from 18 million to 57.7 million.

The value of transactions for debit cards is lower than credit cards. In credit cards, Visa and Mastercard are at the top with the value of total credit card transactions in PoS system being much higher than the value of all debit card transactions. The government has also been pushing banks to focus more on RuPay cards and provide them as the first option to customers.

With this ban, RuPay can target high-value credit card transactions, which are dominated by Visa and Mastercard.

The Mastercard ban

In a major supervisory action, the Reserve Bank on Wednesday indefinitely barred the US-based Mastercard from issuing new credit, debit and prepaid cards with effect from July 22 for its failure to comply with data storage norms.

Mastercard, a major card issuing entity in the country, is the third company to have been barred by RBI from acquiring new customers after American Express Banking Corp and Diners Club International over data storage issue.

In a statement, Mastercard said it is disappointed with the stance taken by RBI.

The RBI, however, clarified that its supervisory action will not impact the services of the existing customers of Mastercard in the country.

Announcing the ban on Mastercard, RBI said, “notwithstanding lapse of considerable time and adequate opportunities being given, the entity has been found to be non-compliant with the directions on Storage of Payment System Data“.

Mastercard is a payment system operator authorised to operate a card network in the country under the Payment and Settlement Systems Act, 2007 (PSS Act).

In terms of RBI’s circular on Storage of Payment System Data on April 6, 2018, all system providers were directed to ensure that within a period of six months the entire data relating to payment systems is stored only in India.



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How RBI’s current a/c norms have put smaller banks at a disadvantage, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The Reserve Bank of India‘s (RBI) insistence on companies opening current accounts with banks is among the factors that have helped large lenders such as HDFC Bank, ICICI Bank and SBI raise their shares of the competitive corporate banking market in 2020, according to a report.

Apart from the RBI rules, the government’s mega merger to reduce the number of state-owned banks has also helped in the trend, rating agency Crisil said on Wednesday in the report.

In mid-2020, the RBI had come up with the circular that specified which bank can open a current account for a borrower, in order to check any misuse through multiple current accounts.

A fourth of the large and medium corporates said they were banking with at least one among ICICI Bank, Axis Bank and HDFC Bank as against 17 per cent in 2016, it said adding that the private sector banks have grown at over 25 per cent per year.

In most of the four-year period, SBI defended its market-leading penetration levels but in 2020, the lender expanded its footprint. Now, nearly a third of corporates do business with the largest lender and 30 per cent name it as their cash management provider.

The RBI circular

In its August 6, 2020, circular, the regulator had mandated that no bank shall open current accounts for customers who have availed credit facilities in the form of CC/OD from the banking system, and all transactions shall be routed through the CC/OD account. The RBI moved was targeted to ensure greater discipline and transparency in the way large borrowers move funds.

It had said that in case where a bank’s exposure to a borrower was less than 10% of the banking system’s exposure to that borrower, debits to the CC/OD account can only be for credit to the CC/OD account of that borrower with a bank that has 10% or more of the exposure of the banking system to that borrower.

“Several trends have contributed to the pick-up in market penetration among the leading banks, including the ‘mega merger’ of the country’s public sector banks and the Reserve Bank of India’s ‘circular on current accounts’, which essentially rules that banks can only open current accounts for companies to whom they are also major credit providers, the report said.

Consolidation

It said the pressures exerted by the pandemic will accelerate the consolidation of the Indian corporate banking industry, as the market’s biggest banks prove themselves best-positioned to help large- and middle-market companies overcome crisis disruptions.

“When the pandemic sent the country into lockdown last year, companies needed immediate assistance from banks, at first to ensure financial stability, and then to keep businesses running,” says Gaurav Arora, head of Asia at Coalition Greenwich, part of Crisil, said.

The 2021 ‘Coalition Greenwich’ research study mentioned State Bank of India, along with leading private sector banks Axis Bank and HDFC Bank, and foreign banks Citi and HSBC, as companies’ top sources of support during the crisis.

The report said that even before the start of the global pandemic, India’s corporate banking market was on a consolidation path, driven by decisive steps by regulators to solidify the country’s banking sector, and the rapid evolution and growth of the leading private banks.



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