Rupee Coop Bank depositors oppose DICGIC decision to pay Rs 5 lakh to account holders of stressed coop banks

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Rupee Cooperative Bank, headquartered in Pune, has been under strict banking restrictions because of mounting debt.

A group of people claiming to represent the interests of account holders and depositors of Rupee Cooperative Bank has opposed the decision taken by the Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporation (DICGC) to pay depositors of 21 stressed cooperative banks a sum of Rs 5 lakh within 90 days.

The DICGC has said that, following the amendment of the DICGC Act, it will make payments to depositors within 90 days. Besides PMC, the large banks include Rupee Cooperative Bank, Kapol Cooperative Bank, Maratha Coop Bank, and City Coop Ban, all from Maharashtra. Depositors in these banks have been waiting for years for their money. RBI had placed the banks under its all-inclusive directions, which included restrictions on withdrawal of deposits.

Dhananjay Khanzode, one of the depositors of the Rupee Cooperative Bank, said that depositors should be given their entire amounts and not just Rs 5 lakh since they have been waiting for years for their money. He asked depositors to wait for a month since the decision of the Bombay High Court is still awaited. The Rupee Cooperative Bank depositors had filed a civil writ petition with the Bombay High Court, seeking release of their deposits and action against the current administrators of the bank.

Khandzode said that he would approach depositors of the other stressed banks as well to jointly tackle this issue.

DICGIC has said that banks will have to submit a claim list by October 15 and update the position as of November 29 with principal and interest in a final updated list.

Rupee Cooperative Bank, headquartered in Pune, has been under strict banking restrictions because of mounting debt.

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RBI extends banking license of Rupee Co-operative Bank till August 31, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The Reserve Bank of India has extended the banking license of the Rupee Co-operative Bank till August 31. Till March-2021, the Bank has made total recovery of Rs.263.93 crores and aggregate operating profit of Rs.70.70 crores during the last five years, a release from the Bank said.

“The Bank has taken steps like attachment of properties of defaulter borrowers, public auctions of the same, filing criminal suits against defaulter borrowers/guarantors, etc. The Bank has also informed the names of its defaulter borrowers/guarantors to other banks for effective recovery,” said Sudhir Pandit, administrator, Rupee Bank.

Till March-2021, the Bank had paid Rs.366.54 Crores to 92602 needy depositors under the Hardship Scheme. “The proposal for merger with The Maharashtra State Co-op. Bank Ltd., (MSC Bank) is pending with RBI. In the meantime, the Bank is exploring the possibility of various options such as merger with any other strong bank including co-operative banks, conversion into a Small Finance Bank with the help of a strategic investor and Reconstruction or Revival of the Bank. The Bank has requested the RBI to extend its co-operation and guide to explore these options which also require a significant amount of cooperation from high value depositors,” said Pandit.

“The Bank has five lakh depositors with aggregate deposits of Rs.1297 crores out of which around 99% depositors i.e.4,84,336 have deposits less than insurance cover limit of Rs 5 lakh. Their total deposits are to the tune of Rs.714 crores. While hardly 1% i.e. 4562 depositors have total deposits of Rs.583 crores which are above the deposit insurance cover. Therefore, RBI thinks it logical to liquidate the bank and fully refund deposits under insurance cover. Moreover RBI/DIC may get hold of banks liquidity of Rs.870 crores consisting of Government securities and banks’ own premises. Hence in the process, it has to lose very negligible funds of its own. If the bank is liquidated, high value depositors having deposits of more than Rs 5 lakh may lose around 65% of their total deposits irrespective of the option to save the bank ,” a release from the Bank said.



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Rupee Co-op Bank granted extension of banking licence

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Barring negative net worth, there are not any adverse remarks, either in the statutory audit or RBI annual inspection, a statement issued by the bank said. 

Rupee Co-operative Bank has been granted an extension for its banking license by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) for another three months up to August 31, 2021. Till March 2021, the bank made total recovery of Rs 263.93 crore and aggregate operating profit of Rs 70.70 crore during the last five years.

The bank is earning profit consecutively for the last five years. Till March-2021, bank had paid Rs 366.54 crore to 92602 depositors under the Hardship Scheme.

Barring negative net worth, there are not any adverse remarks, either in the statutory audit or RBI annual inspection, a statement issued by the bank said.

The proposal for merger with Maharashtra State Co-Op Bank, (MSC Bank) is pending with the RBI, Sudhir Pandit, chairman, board of administrators, Rupee Cooperative Bank, said.

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Road ahead for co-operative banks

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Distressed depositors of several Urban Co-operative Banks (UCBs), including Punjab and Maharashtra Co-operative (PMC) Bank, Sri Guru Raghavendra Sahakara Bank, Rupee Co-operative Bank and Kapol Co-operative Bank, have been at their wits end.

With their hard-earned money stuck in these banks, which got into trouble for various reasons – deterioration in financial position, irregularities and deficiency in governance – the depositors have been desperately looking to the banking regulator for succour.

But the wait to get their money back is becoming excruciatingly long and arduous as the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) keeps extending its directions to these banks (ironically seeking to protect depositors’ interest) by three to six months. Depositors of Mumbai-based PMC Bank and Bengaluru-based Sri Guru Raghavendra Sahakara Bank have taken to the streets in the last one year or so amid the raging pandemic to draw the attention of the authorities to get their money back.

They have moved courts, written to the RBI Governor, Finance Minister, and Prime Minister’s Office. However, the uncertainty regarding the fate of their deposits, persists.

 

Faster resolution agenda

In its 2019-20 Annual Report, released on August 25, 2020, the RBI set for itself an agenda for “faster resolution of weak UCBs which are under All-Inclusive Directions” in 2020-21.

Also read: Tax query: What’s the taxability of interest on FD credited by a co-operative bank?

So, in a way, the clock is ticking for the regulator as it has to disclose the ‘implementation status’ with respect to the aforementioned agenda in its 2020-21 Annual Report, which is likely to be released in May-June 2021.

With the Banking Regulation (Amendment) Act 2020 handing the RBI powers to regulate and supervise UCBs on par with commercial banks, aggrieved depositors are hoping that the central bank will exercise the newly conferred powers to tackle some of the ills afflicting UCBs. Under the Act, the RBI now has powers relating to voluntary/compulsory amalgamation and preparation of scheme of reconstruction .

Once a UCB is placed under direction, deposit withdrawals are severely curtailed, acceptance of fresh deposits is prohibited, and grant or renewal any loans and advances are disallowed, among others.

‘No remedial measures’

Jyotindra Mehta, President, National Federation of UCBs and Credit Societies, alleged that while the government and the RBI take swift and timely action when public sector and private sector banks get into trouble, no remedial measures are initiated when UCBs find themselves in a similar predicament.

“On the contrary, penalties and directions are heaped on such banks in the name of safeguarding depositors’ interest,” he said, adding that this only hastens the deterioration of these banks’ health, paving the way for cancellation of licence, and resulting in a section of the depositors losing their deposits.

Mehta emphasised the need for a time-bound resolution of UCBs that can help restore depositors’ trust in these banks. Financial soundness of the UCB sector has been a matter of concern for the RBI over the last few years. According to the RBI’s latest Report on Trend and Progress of Banking, since April 1, 2015, 52 UCBs (till December-end 2020) have been placed under Directions.

As of March-end 2020, there were 1,539 UCBs operating in the country, with total business (deposits₹5,01,208 crore, plus advances ₹3,05,453 crore) aggregating ₹8,06,661 crore. 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, amalgamatedor restructured, the report said.

UCBs’ deposit and loan growth

The RBI observed that as UCBs faced competition from small finance banks (SFBs) and non-banking financial companies (NBFCs) in recent years, and also had to reaffirm their credibility to depositors, their balance sheet growth has moderated.

It underscored that the recent collapse of a large UCB (PMC Bank) due to fraud and deficient corporate governance has dented public confidence in UCBs. Since 2017-18, the deposit deceleration in UCBs was starker than in scheduled commercial banks (SCBs), pointing to the difficulties faced by the former in raising resources, according to the RBI. In FY20, UCBs’ deposit growth was at 3.50 per cent year-on-year (y-o-y) (6.1 per cent in FY19). SCBs recorded a 8.44 per cent growth in deposits in FY20 vis-a-vis 9.26 per cent in the preceding year. Supervisory data available with the RBI suggest continuation of deceleration well into 2020-21, the report said.

Regulator tightening the screws

The central bank has tightened the screws on UCBs. However, it has also dangled sort of a carrot in front of them – conversion into a small finance bank (SFB) with lower capital requirement to begin with. UCBs have to comply with priority sector lending (PSL) target on par with SFBs –75 per cent of adjusted net bank credit or credit equivalent amount of off-balance sheet exposure, whichever is higher–by March 31, 2024.

Further, these banks have to ensure that 50 per cent of loans comprise loans of up to ₹25 lakh or 0.2 per cent of Tier I capital, whichever is higher, subject to a maximum of ₹1 crore per borrower or party by March 31, 2024.

Also read: Govt to soon initiate Bank Investment Company

UCBs with deposits of ₹100 crore and above have been asked to constitute Board of Management (BoM), in addition to the Board of Directors (BoD). Following the amendment to the BR Act, Mehta said the requirement of constituting a BoM becomes redundant as BoD is now under complete RBI control.

Referring to the RBI dropping enough hints about its preference for the larger UCBs to get converted into SFBs/commercial banks, the NAFCUB President wants the central bank to abandon its push for UCBs to become private banks in view of the full regulatory control it now has over co-operative banks.

In this regard, the NAFCUB is of the view that changes in regulations should be made taking the UCB sector into confidence and without diluting their co-operative character and democratic functioning.

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