Redistribution of former RBI Deputy Governor’s portfolios

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The portfolios of BP Kanungo, who demitted office as Deputy Governor, Reserve Bank of India (RBI) on April 2, have been redistributed among the remaining three Deputy Governors – MK Jain, MD Patra and M Rajeshwar Rao – with effect from April 5.

Kanungo was overseeing the functioning of 10 departments, including Currency Management, External Investments And Operations, Government and Banks Accounts, Information Technology, Payment and Settlement Systems, Foreign Exchange Department, and Internal Debt Management.

He held the Deputy Governor’s position for four years with effect from April 3, 2017.

 

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RBI’s MPC starts deliberating on next monetary policy

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Reserve Bank of India Governor Shaktikanta Das-headed rate-setting panel MPC started its three-day deliberations on the next monetary policy on Monday amid a sudden surge in Covid-19 cases and the government’s recent mandate asking the central bank to keep retail inflation around 4 per cent.

The RBI will announce the resolution of the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) on April 7.

Also read: RBI seen leaving repo rate unchanged in first review of FY22

Experts are of the view that the RBI will maintain status quo on policy rates at its first bi-monthly monetary policy review for the current fiscal. It is also likely to maintain an accommodative policy stance.

The policy repo rate or the short-term lending rate is currently at 4 per cent, and the reverse repo rate is 3.35 per cent.

Last month, the government had asked the RBI to maintain retail inflation at 4 per cent with a margin of 2 per cent on either side for another five-year period ending March 2026.

Also read: Govt’s borrowing plan to mount pressure on G-Sec yields in H1

M Govinda Rao, Chief Economic Advisor, Brickwork Ratings (BWR), said given the rise in the spread of coronavirus infections and the imposition of fresh restrictions to contain the virus spread in the major parts of the country, RBI is likely to continue with its accommodative monetary policy stance in the upcoming MPC meeting.

“Considering the elevated inflation levels, BWR expects the RBI MPC to adopt a cautious approach and hold the repo rate at 4 per cent,” Rao said.

Rao noted that in the last MPC, RBI initiated measures towards the rationalisation of excess liquidity from the system by announcing a phased hike in the cash reserve ratio (CRR) for restoration to 4 per cent.

“In the current scenario, the RBI may like to drain in excess liquidity, while higher borrowings and the frontloading of 60 per cent borrowings in H1 FY21 may put pressure on yields, and hence, the RBI may go slow in reversing its liquidity measures announced as a Covid-19 stimulus since March 2020,” Rao added.

Meanwhile, G Murlidhar, MD and CEO, Kotak Mahindra Life Insurance Company, said 2021 has seen a rise in yields across the globe in line with the vaccination-led optimism.

“However, the case for India is a little different this time, with a rapid rise in new Covid-19 cases over the last few weeks. In the upcoming policy, MPC may continue to emphasise the importance of ‘orderly evolution of the yield curve’ given benign inflation trajectory and second wave headwinds to nascent growth recovery,” said Murlidhar.

In a bid to control the price rise, the government in 2016 had given a mandate to RBI to keep retail inflation at 4 per cent, with a margin of 2 per cent on either side, for a five-year period ending March 31, 2021.

The central bank mainly factors in the retail inflation based on Consumer Price Index while arriving at its monetary policy. On February 5, after the last MPC meet, the central bank had kept the key interest rate (repo) unchanged citing inflationary concerns.

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Jana Small Finance Bank files DRHP for IPO after missing deadline, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Kolkata: TPG-backed Jana Small Finance Bank has on Thursday filed its draft red herring prospectus with Securities & Exchange Board of India for an initial public offer, almost a week after missing the listing deadline.

Jana was supposed to be listed on or before March 27, 2021, according to the licensing agreement with Reserve Bank of India.

The bank had applied to the RBI for an extension till March 28, 2022 but the regulator turn it down.

“The RBI may take regulatory action against us, which could include imposition of monetary penalties, revocation of the RBI final approval or such other penal actions”, if it fails to make satisfactory progress towards the listing of equity shares or do not comply with the provisions of the extant RBI guidelines, the bank said in its prospectus.

The regulator has mandated small finance banks to get listed within three years from the date of commencement of our banking business or withing three from reaching a net worth of Rs 500 crore.

Jana received the banking license in 2015 along with nine other financial services firms.

The bank would be looking to raise up to Rs 700 crore through the proposed share sale. The bank may also consider a pre-IPO placement for raising up to Rs 500 crore, the bank said in the prospectus.

The IPO would include an offer for sale of up to 9,253,659 equity shares.

Bajaj Allianz Life Insurance Company, ICICI Prudential Life Insurance, Enam Securities and Hero Ventures will be looking to partly offload their holdings in Jana Small Finance Bank when the bank will float the IPO.

Some 18 existing investors would be looking to sell their holding, the bank said. The selling shareholders includes Gawa Capital, Client Rosehill Ltd, Tree Line Investment Management, North Haven Private Equity Asia Platinum Pte Ltd, QRG Enterprises and Bajaj Allianz General Insurance Company.

North Haven is the biggest shareholder with 8.18% holding who will be looking to sell shares while all the other selling shareholders hold less than 5%.

Promoters hold 42% in the bank while investment firm TPG holds 9.44%. Other investors include HarbourVest, Morgan Stanley and Tata Capital.

The bank’s genesis dates back to 2006 when it was founded as Janalakshmi Financial Services by former Citibank executive Ramesh Ramanathan, who is now non-executive chairman.



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SBI digital services affected due to maintenance issues, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Mumbai, Apr 1 () The country’s largest lender State Bank of India’s customers had to face issues on Thursday due to the unavailability of various digital services on account of upgradation of the bank’s digital banking platforms. The bank informed its customers on Thursday morning that it is upgrading its digital banking platforms, including Yono, Yono lite, internet banking, Unified Payments Interface (UPI).

“We will be undertaking maintenance activities between 2:10 PM to 5:40 PM on April 1, 2021. During the period, INB/YONO/YONO Lite/UPI will be unavailable. We regret the inconvenience caused and request you to bear with us,” the bank said on Twitter.

SBI has the largest network with over 22,000 branches and more than 57,889 ATMs across the country. As of December 31, 2020, it had 85 million internet banking and 19 million mobile banking users. The bank’s number of UPI users stood at 135 million at December-end.

At present, the bank has 35 million registered users of Yono, the digital lending platform.

It can be noted that on March 29, customers of the country’s largest private sector lender HDFC Bank faced problems in accessing its services due to glitches in its digital banking platform.

“Some customers are facing intermittent issues accessing our NetBanking /MobileBanking App. We are looking into it on priority for resolution. We apologize for the inconvenience and request you to try again after sometime. Thank you,” HDFC Bank had said in a tweet.

This is not the first time that the customers of HDFC Bank have faced service outage. In fact, the bank has been penalised by the Reserve bank of India (RBI) for two major outages in the past. HV BAL BAL



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After recapitalisation, IOB, Central Bank move closer to privatisation, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The government has infused Rs 14,500 crore, mainly into banks that are under the RBI’s prompt corrective action framework to improve their financial health.

Two of these banks, Indian Overseas Bank and Central Bank of India are among the four banks shortlisted by the government for privatisation.

Indian Overseas Bank, Central Bank of India and UCO Bank are currently under Reserve Bank of India’s prompt corrective action (PCA) framework that puts several restrictions on them, including on lending, management compensation and directors’ fees.

Capital infusion

Of the total infusion, Rs 11,500 crore has gone to these three banks under PCA while the remaining Rs 3,000 crore has been infused into Bank of India. According to a government notification, Rs 4,800 crore has been provided to Central Bank of India, Rs 4,100 crore to Indian Overseas Bank and Kolkata-based UCO Bank has got Rs 2,600 crore.Government Notification

The capital infusion will help these banks to come out of the Reserve Bank of India’s prompt corrective action framework.

Bringing the banks out of PCA could boost their valuations in the event of privatisation.

Central Bank of India has 33,000 staff, while Indian Overseas Bank employs 26,000.

The PCA status

All three banks under PCA Indian Overseas Bank, UCO Bank and Central Bank have reported net non-performing assets (NPAs) below levels that trigger PCA. However, on the proforma net NPA front, Central Bank falls short as its NNPA is 6.58% against the 6% required to be out of PCA.

Even after PCA exit, these banks may still be under RBI watch.

Most of the large state-owned lenders — including State Bank of India, Punjab National Bank, Bank of Baroda, Canara Bank, Union Bank of India, and Indian Bank — have already raised money from various market sources, including share sale on a private placement basis.

Rs 3.5 lakh crore bet

The government in the last five years, apart from merging some smaller banks with bigger ones, has spent Rs 3.5 lakh crore in the last five years on recapitalising public sector banks.

This has been financed partly by taxpayer money and partly recapitalisation bonds, including the discounted zero-coupon bonds sold to PSBs that are to be recapitalized.

Zero-coupon bonds

The government is unlikely to take zero-coupon bond route to further recapitalise public sector banks after the Reserve Bank expressed some concerns in this regard, sources said. The government, they said, would resort back to recapitalisation bonds bearing a coupon rate for capital infusion in these banks.

To save the interest burden and ease the fiscal pressure, the government last year decided to issue zero-coupon bonds for meeting the capital needs of the banks.

The first test case of the new mechanism was a capital infusion of Rs 5,500 crore into Punjab and Sind Bank by issuing zero-coupon bonds of six different maturities last year. These special securities with tenure of 10-15 years are non-interest bearing and valued at par.

However, the RBI raised some concerns with regard to the calculation of an effective capital infusion made in any bank through this instrument issued at par.

Since such bonds usually are non-interest bearing but issued at a deep discount to the face value, it is difficult to ascertain net present value.



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Government infuses Rs 14,500 crore capital into four public sector banks, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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NEW DELHI: The government has infused Rs 14,500 crore, mainly into banks that are under the RBI’s prompt corrective action framework to improve their financial health.

Indian Overseas Bank, Central Bank of India and UCO Bank are currently under this framework that puts several restrictions on them, including on lending, management compensation and directors’ fees.

Of the total infusion, Rs 11,500 crore has gone to these three banks while the remaining Rs 3,000 crore has been infused into Bank of India.

According to a government notification, Rs 4,800 crore has been provided to Central Bank of India, Rs 4,100 crore to Indian Overseas Bank and Kolkata-based UCO Bank has got Rs 2,600 crore.

The capital infusion will help these banks to come out of the Reserve Bank of India‘s prompt corrective action framework.

The fund infusion has been done through non-interest bearing recapitalisation bonds with maturity varying between March 31, 2031 and March 31, 2036.

The investment in the special securities by public sector banks would not be considered as an eligible investment which is required to made in government securities in pursuance of any statutory provisions or directions applicable to the investing bank, it said.

Most of the large state-owned lenders — including State Bank of India, Punjab National Bank, Bank of Baroda, Canara Bank, Union Bank of India, and Indian Bank — have already raised money from various market sources, including share sale on a private placement basis.

For the current financial year, the government had allocated Rs 20,000 crore for capital infusion into the public sector banks for meeting regulatory requirements.

Punjab & Sind Bank was given Rs 5,500 crore in November last year.

Separately, Central Bank of India and Bank of India informed stock exchanges about the fund infusion by the government.



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India to inject $2 billion capital in four weakened state banks, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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By Suvashree Ghosh

India will infuse 145 billion rupees ($2 billion) into four state-run banks to help strengthen capital buffers and potentially free some of the lenders from regulatory curbs.

Central Bank of India, Indian Overseas Bank, Bank of India and UCO Bank will receive the funds through zero-coupon bonds, according to a government notification dated Tuesday. All these lenders, except Bank of India, are under the Reserve Bank of India’s sanctions as their bad loans rose.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government needs a healthier banking sector to boost lending and revive an economy set for a steep contraction. It is also looking to sell its stakes in certain lenders to earn cash and improve competitiveness. The industry’s bad-loan ratio is forecast to double in the year through September, with most of the soured assets held by state-run banks.

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MPC meet dates announced – The Hindu BusinessLine

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The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) on Wednesday announced the bi-monthly meeting schedule of the six-member rate-setting monetary policy committee (MPC) for FY2022.

Also read: Jarring signals on economy as inflation is rising, factory output shrinking

Unlike last year, when the first MPC meeting (originally scheduled for March 31, April 1 and 3, 2020) was advanced to March 24, 26 and 27, 2020, and the Governor issued a statement on April 17, 2020 in view of the Covid-19 pandemic, the meeting schedule for FY2022 is spread out evenly.

According to RBI, MPC’s first meeting is scheduled from April 5 to 7, 2021. The subsequent meetings will be held from June 2 to 4, August 4 to 6, October 6 to 8, December 6 to 8, and February 7 to 9, 2022.

Last year, the repo rate (the interest rate at which banks borrow funds from RBI to overcome short-term liquidity mismatches) was cumulatively cut by 115 basis points in two tranches (to 4.40 per cent from 5.15 per cent on March 27, 2020 and to 4 per cent from 4.40 per cent on May 22, 2020), with the accommodative policy stance continuing throughout.

The reverse repo rate (the interest rate banks earn for parking surplus liquidity with RBI) was also cumulatively cut by 65 basis points in two tranches (to 3.75 per cent from 4 per cent on April 17, 2020 and to 3.35 per cent from 3.75 per cent on May 22, 2020).

According to a Barclays report, RBI may maintain its monetary accommodation for a while longer in order to enable the recovery to become entrenched.

Also read: Ten questions for the MPC to consider

The report, ‘Monetary policy: Talking the walk’, observed that recovering output lost to the pandemic could take longer than anticipated, and policy makers will be best served by letting the economy run ‘hot’ for a few quarters.

“The RBI will also need to balance nurturing the recovery and financial stability risks.

“Estimates show that the output gap will be negative well into 2022, and we believe monetary accommodation will be required to support growth recovery,” Rahul Bajoria, Chief India Economist, Barclays Securities (India) Pvt Ltd, and Shreya Sodhani, Research Analyst, Barclays Investment Bank, Singapore.

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RBI extends timeline for processing of recurring online transactions till Sept 2021, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The Reserve Bank of India had issued a framework for processing of e-mandates on recurring online transaction with additional factor of authentication.

First issued in August 2021, the framework was extended in January 2020 and 31st March, 2021 was the last deadline, however noting that the framework has not been fully implemented across the industry the RBI is looking at it as a serious concern.

The RBI said, “This non-compliance is noted with serious concern and will be dealt with separately. The delay in implementation by some stakeholders has given rise to a situation of possible large-scale customer inconvenience and default. To prevent any inconvenience to the customers, Reserve Bank has decided to extend the timeline for the stakeholders to migrate to the framework by six months, i.e., till September 30, 2021. Any further delay in ensuring complete adherence to the framework beyond the extended timeline will attract stringent supervisory action.”

The requirement of additional factor of authentication made digital payments in India safe and secure. Initially the framework mandated use of AFA for transactions above Rs 2,000 which was later enhanced to Rs 5,000.

The primary objective with AFA by RBI was to protect customers from fraudulent transactions and enhance customer convenience. A request from Indian Banks’ Association led to RBI extending the deadline till March 31, 2021 to enable banks to complete the migration and RBI had advised the stakeholders in December 2020 to mitigate to the framework by March 31, 2021.

However the payments industry wasn’t ready for the transition and could have led to customer inconvenience along with a loss of Rs 2,000 crore estimated by the Payments Council of India.



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Automatic recurring payment to comply with RBI direction from April 1, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Come April there will be no automatic recurring payment for various services including recharge and utility bill as RBI has made Additional Factor of Authentication (AFA) mandatory after March 31.

However, banks and payment gateways are seeking additional time to comply with the RBI directive on automatic recurring payment.

On December 4, RBI had directed all banks including RRBs, NBFCs, and payment gateways that the processing of recurring transactions (domestic or cross-border) using cards or Prepaid Payment Instruments (PPIs) or Unified Payments Interface (UPI) under arrangements/practices not compliant with AFA would not be continued beyond March 31, 2021.

As part of risk mitigation measure, RBI announced this step to bolster safety and security of card transactions.

Non-readiness of some of the players could impact recurring payment such as of utility bills, recharge of phone, DTH and OTT, among others, post March 31.

Recently, RBI enhanced the limit for contactless card transactions and e-mandates for recurring transactions through cards (and UPI) from Rs 2,000 to Rs 5,000 from January 1, 2021 with a view to further the adoption of digital payments in a safe and secure manner.

Under the new norms, banks will be required to inform customers in advance about recurring payment due and transaction would be carried following nod from the customer. So the transaction would not be automatic but would be done after authentication from the customer.

For recurring payments above Rs 5,000, banks are required to send one-time password to customer as per the new guidelines.

“All the ecosystem players, be it banks and payment gateways, are guilty of not taking RBI directive seriously from 2019 and not being able to come on a single platform, which we should have done at least a couple of months back, so that there could have been a smooth transition to the new way of doing recurring transactions,” Payments Council Of India (PCI) Chairman Vishwas Patel said.

So, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) requested to consider giving at least one month extension so that players meet RBI directives, Patel, who is executive director of Infibeam Avenues, said.

“Everybody has understood the seriousness of it because it is Rs 2,000 crore a month business, as per PCI estimates. We hope that the cycle is not broken and the end consumers and merchants are not inconvenienced,” he added.

A senior executive at an e-commerce company said the industry is not prepared to implement the e-mandate framework issued by RBI.

Starting April 1, customer e-mandate transactions will be declined by banks, if further extension is not granted by RBI, the official said, adding, this will cause major disruption to recurring transactions and will erode customer trust in digital payments.



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