Reliance partners Google, Facebook in seeking NUE licence from RBI, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Mumbai: Reliance has partnered Google and Facebook to set up a New Umbrella Entity (NUE) that will allow them to create a payment network similar to the Unified Payments Interface (UPI) to gain a share of India’s burgeoning digital payments market. The NUE will be jointly promoted by an RIL unit and Infibeam Avenue subsidiary So Hum Bharat. Facebook and Google will hold smaller stakes. The companies are in advanced stages of submitting their proposal to the RBI, three people with knowledge of the matter told ET.

Deadline extended to March 31

Former Itzcash founder and payment industry veteran Navin Surya has been appointed MD and chief executive, said the people cited above. Reliance, Google and Facebook didn’t respond to queries. “We are bound by the confidentiality of the process and cannot comment,” an Infibeam Avenues spokesperson said. “A proposal will be presented to the Reserve Bank of India on detailing the consortium’s plan to strengthen India’s digital economy,” said one of the people with knowledge of the matter. “Representatives of these companies have been in talks with the central bank over the past few months to ensure compliance ahead of the formal presentation of the bid.”

The RBI is expected to take another six months to study the proposal along with other bids. RBI said Friday that the deadline to submit applications had been extended to March 31, following a plea by the Indian Banks’ Association. ET had reported on February 19 that the regulator may consider extending the deadline, keeping in mind Covid-related disruptions.



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Deccan Urban Co-op Bank put under RBI ‘Directions’ as of Feb 19

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The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has issued Directions to Deccan Urban Co-operative Bank (Vijayapur, Karnataka), whereby, as from the close of business on February 19, 2021, deposit withdrawals have been capped at ₹1,000 per depositor.

“Considering the bank’s present liquidity position, a sum not exceeding ₹1000 of the total balance across all savings bank or current accounts or any other account of a depositor, may be allowed to be withdrawn, but are allowed to set off loans against deposits subject to the conditions stated in the above RBI Directions.

Also read: Banks under Directions: Govt, RBI working on allowing depositors withdraw up to ₹5 lakh

“However, 99.58 per cent of the depositors are fully covered by the DICGC insurance scheme,” the central bank said in a statement.

According to the Directions, the chief executive officer of the bank shall not, without prior approval of RBI in writing 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 issue of the above Directions by the RBI should not per se be construed as cancellation of banking license by RBI.

“The bank will continue to undertake banking business with restrictions till its financial position improves. The Reserve Bank may consider modifications of these Directions depending upon circumstances,” the central bank said.

Besides Deccan Urban Co-operative Bank, RBI has imposed directions on two other urban co-operative banks — Sarjeraodada Naik Shirala Sahakari Bank (Shirala, Sangli District, Maharashtra) with effect from close of business on February 3, and Independence Co-operative Bank (Nashik, Maharashtra) with effect from close of business on February 10 — since the beginning of 2021. .

According to the RBI’s report on Trend and Progress of Banking in India 2019-20 (released on December 29, 2020), since April 1, 2015, 52 UCBs have been placed under All Inclusive Directions by the RBI.

Of the total claims settled by the Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporation (DICGC) since inception, around 94.3 per cent of claims pertained to co-operative banks that were liquidated, amalgamated, or restructured.

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Deccan Urban Co-op Bank withdrawals capped at Rs 1000 per customer; RBI bars from lending, investing

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(Image- REUTERS)

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) on Friday imposed a Rs 1,000 cap on withdrawals from all savings, current or any other accounts of Deccan Urban Cooperative Bank. The restrictions shall stay in force for a period of six months as RBI looks to improve the bank’s liquidity position, the central bank said in a statement late Friday. The curbs come into force from the close of business on Friday, February 19, 2021. The withdrawal limit imposed on the bank is similar to that imposed on PMC Bank, Lakshmi Vilas Bank, and Mantha Urban Cooperative Bank in the past.

Deccan Urban Co-operative Bank, a Karnataka-based lender, has also been barred from granting or renewing any loans and advances. It has also been barred from making any investment; incurring any liability including borrowal of funds and acceptance of fresh deposits; disbursing or agreeing to disburse any payment, whether in the discharge of its liabilities and obligations, or otherwise.

The move will also restrict Deccan Urban Co-operative Bank’s ability to enter into any compromise or arrangement and sell, transfer or otherwise dispose of any of its properties or assets except as notified in the RBI in its direction sent to the bank.

Although the withdrawal limit has been capped to just Rs 1,000 per account, RBI has said that depositors will be allowed to set off loans against deposits subject to some conditions. “The issue of the above Directions by the RBI should not per se be construed as a cancellation of the banking license by RBI. The bank will continue to undertake banking business with restrictions till its financial position improves,” the Reserve Bank of India said.

RBI had earlier in November last year imposed a penalty of Rs 1 lakh on Deccan Urban Co-operative Bank, for contravention of the directions issued by it on the prohibition of loans and advances to directors. The central bank has earlier placed similar restrictions on banks such as Yes Bank where the withdrawal limit was capped to Rs 50,000. Similarly, PMC Bank’s withdrawal limit was also capped to Rs 50,000 but was later revised t0 Rs 1 lakh. Lakshmi Vilas Bank was the latest in the line where the withdrawal limit was capped at Rs 25,000 per account.

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All you need to know about the potential privatisation of 4 mid-sized banks, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Share prices of Bank of India, Bank of Maharashtra, Indian Overseas Bank and Central Bank of India rallied more than 10 percent each in early trade on Tuesday amid reports that the government may privatise these banks.

Government has shortlisted these four mid-sized state-run banks for privatisation, under a new push to sell state assets and shore up government revenues, three government sources said. Two of those banks will be selected for sale in the 2021/2022 financial year which begins in April, the officials said. The shortlist has not previously been reported.

The government is considering mid-sized to small banks for its first round of privatisation to test the waters. In the coming years it could also look at some of the country’s bigger banks, the officials said.

Bank of India has a workforce of about 50,000 and Central Bank of India has 33,000 staff, while Indian Overseas Bank employs 26,000 and Bank of Maharashtra has about 13,000 employees, according to estimates from bank unions.

PM Modi’s office initially wanted four banks to be put up for sale in the coming fiscal year, but officials have advised caution fearing resistance from unions representing the employees. The actual privatisation process may take 5-6 months to start, one of the government sources said.

To facilitate the privatisation of public sector banks, the government is likely to bring amendments to two legislations later this year. Amendments would be required in the Banking Companies (Acquisition and Transfer of Undertakings) Act, 1970 and the Banking Companies (Acquisition and Transfer of Undertakings) Act, 1980 for privatisation, sources said.

The government hopes that the Reserve Bank of India, the country’s banking regulator, will soon ease lending restrictions on Indian Overseas Bank after an improvement in the lender’s finances that could help its sale.

“The government should consider what gives it a better pricing without compromising its long-term goal of financing the growing Indian economy,” said Devendra Pant, chief economist at India Ratings, the Indian arm of Fitch ratings agency.

(With Inputs from Reuters)



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RBI sets up panel to suggest steps for strengthening, consolidating urban co-operative banks, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Mumbai: The Reserve Bank on Monday set up a committee to draw a vision document for strengthening urban co-operative banks (UCBs) and exploring the potential of consolidation in the sector. The committee, to be headed by former RBI Deputy Governor N S Vishwanathan, will suggest “effective measures for faster rehabilitation and resolution of Urban Cooperative Banks (UCBs) and also assess their potential for consolidation in the sector.”

The panel will “draw up a vision document for a vibrant and resilient urban co-operative banking sector having regards to the Principles of Cooperation as well as depositors’ interest and systemic issues,” said the terms of reference of the committee which will be required to submit its report to the RBI in three months.

The eight-member panel, including former chairman of Nabard Harsh Kumar Bhanwala, will also review the current regulatory and supervisory approach and recommend suitable measures to strengthen the sector, taking into account recent amendments to the Banking Regulation Act, 1949.

As per the terms of reference of the committee, it will “take stock of the regulatory measures taken by the Reserve Bank and other authorities in respect of UCBs and assess their impact over the last five years to identify key constraints and enablers, if any, in fulfilment of their socio-economic objective.”

Among other things, the committee will consider the need for differential regulations and examine prospects to allow more leeway in permissible activities for UCBs with a view to enhancing their resilience.

As part of the Statement on Developmental and Regulatory Policies released along with the Monetary Policy Statement on February 5, the Reserve Bank has announced setting up of an Expert Committee on UCBs to examine the issues and to provide a road map for strengthening the sector, leveraging on the recent amendments to Banking Regulation Act, 1949.

Following the amendment all urban cooperative banks and multi-state cooperative banks have come under the supervision of the Reserve Bank of India.

There are 1,482 urban cooperative banks and 58 multi-state cooperative banks having about 8.6 crore depositors with total savings deposit of about Rs 4.85 lakh crore.



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Srei reports whopping loss of Rs 3,810cr in Q3, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Srei Infrastructure Finance Ltd on Sunday said it has posted a consolidated net loss of Rs 3,810 crore during the third quarter of the current fiscal on account of higher and accelerated provisioning as a prudent measure. The company had reported a net profit of Rs 60 crore in the year-ago period.

Its revenue from operations for the October-December period of the current fiscal stood at Rs 490 crore as against Rs 1,450 crore in the corresponding quarter last year.

The company said its total consolidated provisioning was at Rs 3,100 crore for the period under review and the net worth stood at Rs 296 crore as of December quarter of FY21.

The Kolkata-based company claimed that the COVID-19 pandemic had impacted its recovery, leading to an asset- liability mismatch.

“The current financial year has been one of the most challenging years in our history of more than three decades.

“The COVID-19 induced stress on our asset quality coupled with the credit squeeze in the NBFC sector has created an unprecedented situation. As a matter of prudence…we have decided to increase our provisions significantly,” Srei chairman Hemant Kanoria said.

The lender had in November 2020 said a special audit of the company and its subsidiary, Srei Equipment Finance Ltd, was undertaken by an auditor appointed by the Reserve Bank of India.

A special audit is typically undertaken if there is a sharp deterioration in the quality of a lender’s book.



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Exim Bank to provide $400 mn funding for Maldives project, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Export-Import Bank of India (Exim Bank) will provide USD 400 million to Maldives to fund Greater Male Connectivity Project, the Reserve Bank of India said on Thursday. Exim Bank had entered into an agreement on October 12, 2020, with the Maldives government for making available to the latter, Government of India supported Line of Credit (LoC) of USD 400 million for undertaking the Greater Male Connectivity – (Male to Thilafushi Link) project in Maldives, the RBI said in a release.

The agreement under the LoC is effective from January 28, 2021. The terminal utilisation period is 60 months after the scheduled completion date of the project, it added.

The 6.7 km Greater Male Connectivity Project (GMCP) will be the largest civilian infrastructure project in Maldives, connecting Male with three neighbouring islands – Villingili, Gulhifahu and Thilafushi.

India will fund the implementation of a major connectivity project in Maldives through a USD 400 million line of credit and USD 100 million grant, External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar had earlier said in August 2020. KPM BAL



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HC to RBI, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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After finding that the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) is taking a lenient approach towards erring officials of various banks where scams were detected, the Nagpur bench of Bombay High Court directed it to act tough in such situation.

Expressing concern over increasing numbers of bank frauds and scams coming to fore, a division bench comprising justices Sunil Shukre and Avinash Gharote further asked the apex bank to take penal action against erring officials, in whichever position they are, for not complying with its guidelines.

The directives came while hearing a suo moto criminal PIL (No. 614/2017) regarding Rs25 crore losses caused to the UCO Bank due to alleged embezzlement of funds by its own officers. The HC had appointed Rajnish Vyas as amicus curiae to plead the PIL.

While adjourning the hearing by three weeks, the bench told the top bank that its earlier affidavit was “unsatisfactory” and asked it to file a detailed reply on action it has taken or proposed to take against the UCO bank officials concerned.

“The RBI is required to play the role of a real sentinel. Therefore, we expect that its reply would reflect its concern about prevention of such frauds and scams and taking punitive action against those responsible for it,” the bench said.

The judges noted that the RBI doesn’t have any independent machinery to carry out the investigation into any fraud, but it can certainly take penal action under the powers conferred upon it in Banking Regulation Act, 1949, and the RBI Act, 1934, against the erring banks and also the officials concerned.

“On going through various provisions made in Banking Regulation Act, 1949, one would not require any time to grasp the fact that the powers of RBI in controlling the affairs of the banks are enormous. That’s the reason why it is called the central bank having the supervision and control over all the banks and financial institutions engaged in the business of banking in India,” the judges said.

Way paved way for confiscating MSCB assets

The Nagpur bench of the High Court on Thursday vacated the stay on confiscation of movable assets of Maharashtra State Cooperative Bank (MSCB) in Mahal. The orders came while hearing a bank’s petition for staying the confiscation orders in a case filed by Bhandara’s Wainganga Cooperative Sugar Mill workers alleging Rs13.89 crore misappropriation by its officials.

The case was listed before a division bench comprising justices Nitin Jamdar and Anil Kilor, which rejected the bank’s contention.

Earlier, the Supreme Court on December 4, 2019, had ordered recovering the amount from the bank within six months.



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India has a backdoor entry into digital currency. Will it take it?

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India’s central bank is opening its balance sheet to the public. Retail investors will have online access to the government bond market via investment accounts with the Reserve Bank.

As the government’s investment bank, the RBI manages institutional buying and selling in gilt securities. Scepticism is high about ‘Retail Direct’ because previous attempts at bringing public debt to the masses haven’t gone anywhere. But if the initiative takes off, it could be a precursor to an interest-paying digital currency competing with bank deposits.

Also read: Bill to regulate cryptocurrencies being finalised: Thakur

The idea of a central bank digital currency, which will reside on smartphones but as a direct claim on the state (rather than a bank) is gaining ground everywhere. Covid-19 has made people reluctant to handle cash for fear of infection. The pandemic has also underscored the need to extend timely financial support to people who don’t have bank accounts.

The rise of cryptocurrencies and Facebook Inc’s Libra initiative, now known as Diem, have made authorities sit up and take note. If they don’t offer their own official tokens, private coins — or another country’s virtual cash — might fill the vacuum. Any semblance of monetary sovereignty in emerging markets may be compromised.

A quarter of the world’s population is likely to get access to a general purpose central bank digital currency in one to three years, according to the latest Bank for International Settlements survey of monetary authorities. Regulators in another 21 per cent of jurisdictions aren’t ruling out the possibility that they, too, might join in. That number is up from 14 per cent in a 2019 BIS poll.

Unlike China, which is running pilots, and the European Central Bank, which will soon publish results of its public consultations, India is not a frontrunner in the race to issue virtual cash. While summing up the many changes in the payments landscape over the past decade, the RBI said last month that it’s “exploring the possibility as to whether there is a need for a digital version of fiat currency and in case there is, then how to operationalise it.”

Also read: Cryptocurrency surge may continue, but regulatory uncertainties create bottlenecks

That’s why Retail Direct assumes significance, says Krishna Hegde, head of strategy at Setu, a Bangalore-based fintech firm. Rather than taking the weight of individual investors on its core banking system, perhaps the RBI will only allow their banks to act as custodians. Individual investors will come to the government securities marketplace through their banks’ so-called Constituents’ Subsidiary General Ledger accounts with the monetary authority. But if money can move quickly and without friction between these accounts at the central bank, India may get a version of official digital cash.

This could have long-run implications for the banking system. State Bank of India, the country’s biggest lender, offers 2.7 per cent interest on demand deposits, and 5.4 per cent on five-year deposits. A seven-day treasury bill yields 3 per cent, and a five-year government bond trades at 5.8 per cent. Banks with large deposit bases may not want to popularise a product that could undermine their hold on low-cost household savings. But newer institutions like payments banks, which take small deposits and aren’t allowed to lend commercially, will run with it. Vijay Shekhar Sharma, a fintech pioneer and chairman of Paytm Payments Bank, says he’ll make Retail Direct a key feature. “By offering gilt securities, we’ll be able to offer high yields and super safe products to consumers,” he told me.

Whether meaningful excess yield will actually be available will depend on liquidity, and the cost for market makers to provide it. That’s where blockchain might come in handy. Self-executing contracts programmed into virtual tokens can help fractionalise and democratise finance by automating trade settlement, making it both quicker and less expensive. Once they’re widely used as a store of value, the tokens could also start circulating as a means of exchange. Anyone may be able to pay for a coffee using her account with the central bank, just as she does today by debiting her balance with a commercial bank.

An interest-bearing virtual currency may help counter the appeal of other private and official digital cash to India’s millennial savers. The federal and state governments will obtain financing for a part of their chronic budget deficits — which have ballooned after the pandemic — directly from households. They can do so even now by scooping up postal and other small savings. But those borrowings are more expensive than what it costs to raise funds in the bond market. Without guaranteed recourse to cheap and sticky current and savings account balances, banks will have to work harder to earn a return on equity.

Perhaps the central bank doesn’t have any of these objectives in mind, and it’s giving retail investors direct access to the bond market only to protect its turf from the Securities and Exchange Board of India, the securities regulator. Whatever the motivation, once it gets off the ground, the RBI should consider Retail Direct as a prototype for digital cash, and allow experimentation in a supervised environment. It’s an idea that could go far.

(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. He previously was a columnist for Reuters Breakingviews. He has also worked for the Straits Times, ET NOW and Bloomberg News.)

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RBI seeks details of Punjab National Bank’s capital raising plans, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The Reserve Bank of India wanted to know about Punjab National Bank’s (PNB) future capital projection as the regulator examines the lender’s proposal to infuse Rs 600 crore in PNB Housing Finance.

PNB, the promoter of the mortgage lender, had sought the regulator’s approval about seven months’ back. RBI’s decision is still awaited, delaying PNB Housing Finance’s capital raising plan.

PNB’s chief executive SS Mallikarjuna Rao is expecting a positive note from RBI soon. “It’s not that the issue is stalled or there is no communication. The regulator was seeking details on the bank’s capital position and capital raising plans,” he said.

PNB, with a 32.65% ownership, proposed to infuse equity capital in PNB Housing through rights or preferential issue of shares. The bank augmented its capital by Rs 3,788 crore in December in qualified institutional placement even as it was looking to raise Rs 7,000 crore.

On August 19, 2020, the PNB Housing Finance board had approved Rs 1,800 crore capital raising through rights and preferential issue of shares. “Before that the PNB had approached the Reserve Bank of India for permission to infuse equity into the company. Since they had actually asked that the equity infusion can take place either through rights issue or preferential, we were awaiting permission from the Reserve Bank of India,” PNB Housing Finance chief executive Hardayal Prasad told analysts after the company’s third quarter results.

With the delay in getting the regulator’s nod, PNB Housing board last month approved share sales to other institutional investors as the lender needs capital for its medium-term growth plans.

“We are hopeful that PNB would be able to get its approval. Once that approval comes, we still can issue the rights or the preferential,” Prasad said.

Meanwhile, PNB is planning to go to investors again to raise Rs 3,200 crore from share sales. It would also look to issue additional tier-1 bonds (AT-1 bonds) worth Rs 2500 crore before March 31.

The lender has garnered Rs 4,000 crore in tier-II bonds and Rs 495 crore in AT-1 bonds in the last few months.



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