Samit Ghosh, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


We would have to stabilise the organisation, reverse merge and then, we will take up the universal bank licence largely because it is more efficient to operate from a capital perspective because the capital adequacy requirement in small finance bank is 15% whereas an effective capital adequacy requirement in universal bank is about 8%, says Samit Ghosh, Founder, Ujjivan Financial Services.

Ujjivan Financial Services is the holding company of Ujjivan Small Finance Bank and we have seen the small finance bank reporting losses and higher NPAs which can be attributed to the second Covid wave. But what led to such losses and when can we expect to return to profitability?
As far as the business is concerned Nitin (Nitin Chugh, MD & CEO of Ujjivan SFB) is the right person to answer this question. From our perspective, obviously the impact was because of the second Covid wave, which took a toll on our portfolio and right now it is in recovery mode. But we do not know when the next wave is going to hit because not enough Indians have been vaccinated and with the festive season coming, there could be another knock down effect on us.

We have been very concerned about the portfolio quality and the management of the portfolio business. We are closely monitoring it and this is something we have been worried about not just now, but from last year itself. We are a very conservative organisation and we always believed that we should provide upfront and take appropriate action because that has been our philosophy in the past and that is what we would like to see again.

RBI has approved the merger of holding companies with small finance banks. When do you see that happening for your company?
We complete five years in the beginning of February and we can apply three months before that. So we would be applying three months before February, around November. Once RBI clears us for reverse merger, the whole process might take between 9 and 12 months. There are hurdles not only in the RBI but also from the Sebi perspective. There are a couple of issues for which they have to give us clearance. We are keenly watching what happens to Equitas because they are ahead of us in this process and we will follow suit. But our process will start in November and once our approval is there by February, it will take another 9 to 12 months.

A lot of people are watching very closely whether or not you have the intention to become a universal bank. Is that something that you are still considering and what work is being done towards that end?
Firstly we have to reverse merge. That is the first step and it will stabilise us. We are going through a very difficult time right now, not only from a portfolio quality point of view but also from a people retention point of view. Lot of the people who actually built Ujjivan have left and that makes life more difficult for us. We would have to stabilise the organisation, reverse merge and then, we will take up the universal bank licence largely because it is more efficient to operate from a capital perspective because the capital adequacy requirement in small finance bank is 15% whereas an effective capital adequacy requirement in universal bank is about 8%. That we will take up after our own reverse merger process is over,



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

RBI’s nod to SFBs and holding companies merger can unlock value for Ujjivan, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Ujjivan Small Finance Bank said it would initiate steps for the amalgamation of the holding company Ujjivan Financial Services Ltd with the bank after RBI’s nod. Samit Ghosh, Founder, Ujjivan Financial Services, helps us understand how it may be good news for shareholders.

Now that, RBI has given nod to SFBs and respective holding companies to apply for a merger, help us understand how really does this help in unlocking share value for you?
This is extremely good news which we were expecting for quite some time and the first in the line of course is Equitas. Equitas and us, we worked earlier on this and we are very glad, it has come through. Basically, there is a holding company structure in which is the Ujjivan Financial Services Ltd. which owns the bank Ujjivan Small Finance Bank and we own 83% of the bank so, what the RBI has committed is that the holding companies can reverse merge into the bank and there will be one entity. Before that, there was the uncertainty of this and consequently, we are the holding company stock– UFSL stock was anywhere between 40% to 50% discount. Now, this discount will gradually narrow, so, there is a tremendous upside on the Ujjivan Financial services stock.The bank stock depends on how the bank actually performs in terms of business, but this is extremely good news for the Ujjivan Financial Services stock- the holding company stock, and that was the original shareholders. We have about 80,000 retail shareholders out of which there are at least 10,000-15,000 employee shareholders, who originally invested in the bank and this is extremely good news for them.

Our fifth year is in February 2022, and we can apply three months before that -for the reverse merger—with the RBI as per its new direction. RBI will evaluate the proposal and see whether we can go ahead, chances are that things are normal, we will be allowed to reverse merge. There is one issue which was there, by the fifth year the shareholding of the holding company was required to come down to 40% but we are quite confident that since RBI is allowing us to totally reverse, much of it- at the end of five years, going to be waved, so we do not think that is an issue at all. It is good news for the holding company shareholders.

When will this merger process be completed?
We will apply late October-early November and then RBI will give us the approval, I think the process cannot start before our fifth anniversary, which is early February 2022 and the whole legal and all that clauses NCLT etc. can take anywhere between eight to 12 months, so, that is the kind of time frame we are looking at.

Post the merger which entity will remain listed?
The bank will remain, the holding company will completely disappear so all the shareholders of the holding company will then become shareholders of the bank.

What has been the impact of the second wave on your business, are you now seeing faster recovery as compared to what we have witnessed last year and in light of that what would be the outlook on your growth disbursements for FY22?
I am not part of the bank, I think this question you should raise with Nitin Chugh, who is the managing director of the bank but what I can tell you overall in the industry-the second wave has receded to a certain extent, things are much better now, but this kind of crisis, which we are facing is an unprecedented crisis. We had faced an earlier crisis, demonetisation, which was like one shock kind of crisis and we overcame, but here, because of the multiple waves of the COVID crisis–it hits our customer and business in waves and the ultimate solution getting the population of India 70% or 80% vaccinated. Unfortunately today, the vaccine availability is still an issue, hopefully, in a couple of months from the production of the vaccine to the scheduling of the production in India, there will be abundant supply. There was a hesitancy even among our customer base before the second wave, but post the second wave that hesitancy has also gone. As as soon as the vaccines are available and we are able to vaccinate all our customer base or the entire population in India, then there is going to be a solution to this problem.

So, the most important thing to do is proactively help our customer base to get vaccinated, meanwhile RBI has given a lot of restructuring, opportunities for good customers and also to provide them additional cash, which is very important because people have either exhausted their savings or their working capital, and not only the restructuring but providing them the extra cash would help them but this has to be carefully done only for our good customers and that process is sort of a lengthy process. So, I think there is time till September, the bank is undertaking that and most micro finance institutions are undertaking that, it has to be done very carefully and I think that will help us to get out of the crisis.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Resolution to appoint Samit Ghosh as MD and CEO, Ujjivan Financial Services not approved

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


A special resolution to appoint Samit Ghosh as Managing Director and CEO of Ujjivan Financial Services was not approved by the required majority of shareholders.

According to data with BSE, the special resolution to approve the appointment of Ghosh as MD and CEO of the company for a three year period, effective May 1, 2021 was “not approved by the requisite majority”.

Only 70.527 per cent of the votes were polled in favour of the resolution while 29.473 per cent of the votes were polled against the proposal. Ghosh is currently the non-executive Chairman of the company.

“These being special resolutions in nature, required a minimum of 75 per cent of the votes polled in favour of the resolution or a minimum of three times of the votes polled against the resolution,” said a regulatory filing by Ujjivan Financial Services.

A career banker, Ghosh was the erstwhile founder of the Ujjivan Financial Services and has served as its MD and CEO until January 31, 2017. He then took charge as the MD and CEO of Ujjivan Small Finance Bank Limited effective from February 1, 2017 and retired on November 30, 2019 on attaining the age of 70 years.

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Resolution to appoint Samit Ghosh as MD and CEO, Ujjivan Financial Services not approved

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


A special resolution to appoint Samit Ghosh as Managing Director and CEO of Ujjivan Financial Services was not approved by the required majority of shareholders.

According to data with BSE, the special resolution to approve the appointment of Ghosh as MD and CEO of the company for a three-year period, effective May 1, 2021 was “not approved by the requisite majority”.

Only 70.527 per cent of the votes were polled in favour of the resolution, while 29.473 per cent of the votes were polled against the proposal.

Ghosh is currently the non-executive Chairman of the company.

Another special resolution to appoint Abhijit Sen as an independent director was also not approved by the requisite majority.

“These being special resolutions in nature, required a minimum of 75 per cent of the votes polled in favour of the resolution or a minimum of three times of the votes polled against the resolution,” said a regulatory filing by Ujjivan Financial Services.

The board had proposed to appoint Ghosh, the existing Non-Executive Director, who is over 70 years of age, as the MD and CEO of the company for a period of three years.

A career banker, Ghosh was the erstwhile founder of the Ujjivan Financial Services and has served as its MD and CEO until January 31, 2017. He then took charge as the MD and CEO of Ujjivan Small Finance Bank Ltd effective from February 1, 2017 and retired on November 30, 2019 on attaining the age of 70 years.

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY