IOB signs corporate agency pact with SBI General Insurance, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Public sector Indian Overseas Bank has signed a corporate agency agreement with SBI General Insurance to retail its insurance products to bank customers, a top official said on Friday. Indian Overseas Bank has signed a bancassurance agreement for distribution of non-life offerings with SBI General Insurance to offer a range of general insurance solutions and innovative products to the customers of the bank.

“we are delighted to partner with one of the leading players in general insurance businesses-SBI General Insurance. We will efficiently nurture it to be a long running mutually beneficial relationship”, the bank’s Managing Director Partha Pratim Sengupta said.

The tie-up would help expand the bouquet of insurance product to customers, Gupta, who is also the CEO, said.

The partnership would improve penetration in urban, tier II and III markets and also create awareness about personal lines of insurance to customers, Sengupta said.

Indian Overseas Bank has over 3,200 branches across the country and also has a presence overseas.



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The elephant is ready to dance, says SBI’s Dinesh Kumar Khara, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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For the first time the intrinsic value of the State Bank of India is being acknowledged by the market, says Dinesh Kumar Khara, Chairman, SBI, in an interview with Nikunj Dalmia of ET NOW.

Things are looking up for SBI. It is the only large bank which has raised capital and where the moratorium numbers are surprisingly better than what even private banks have reported. What helped you?
We have not raised any equity. But we raised tier two bonds and tier one bonds as well. But for both the issues, we could create a benchmark and even raise some MTN also where the pricing was much lower than that raised by any Indian corporate in the recent past. That way, we have demonstrated to the world at large that global economies also have got confidence in India. That is one very important part.

The second part is that for the right kind of risk, people have enough appetite for investing and that is what has happened. Coming to the other question relating to quality, for the last couple of years, maintaining the balance sheet strength has been our major focus and that is the reason when it comes to our corporate book — the legacy book — we have provided almost 89%. In terms of the resolution percentage which happens through various channels and the one-time settlements which would be through the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT), leaving aside a couple of outliers where we had actually realised almost about 90-95%, on an average our recovery percentage is in the range of 20 to 25%. If you go by that, we have made provision for about 89% of our corporate book.

So, we have factored in the potential shocks as far as the asset book is concerned. That is one of the major reasons why we are in a position to showcase much better quality. Apart from that, the underwriting practices have improved quite significantly. We have brought in place another intermediary layer known as the Credit Review Department. From the point of view of the corporate book, it has gone a long way in terms of improving our asset quality. We took this initiative about three years back. That has started paying off very well. The other aspect is about the collection effort on the ground and that has also been supplemented very well.

What is your view on the economy? Things are looking up now?
Yes, I fully agree with you. The kind of things that have happened right from the day of the pandemic and the way RBI came in and ensured that there should be enough liquidity all around — was a major game changer. That gave a whole lot of confidence in the financial sector entities and the next step was to ensure that NBFCs should not get into some kind of a liquidity crunch.

I would also say that the initiatives taken by the government to ensure that enough cash is left in the hands of those who really need it was another major step. All said and done, in the first quarter, we had seen a situation where there was hardly any economic activity but nevertheless, we had seen that some of the core sectors like iron and steel had started responding well.

From the second quarter onwards, we started seeing the unlock happening and even in the first quarter when there was a lockdown in the majority of the towns in the country, the rural economy was thriving, That was a major plus. From the second quarter onwards, wherever unlocking was happening, there was a definite revival of economic activity.

The third quarter saw confidence coming back. The news about the vaccine in the very beginning of this calendar year and the start of the vaccination process on January 16 went a long way in terms of rebuilding confidence.

Today, some of the sectors like auto, iron and steel, auto ancillaries, all the OEMs, some of the cotton exporters are all thriving. On top of it, the recent Budget announcements have been made to give a push to the infrastructure sector. It will certainly give a further boost to sectors like steel, cement. These are the core industries and when they get into the growth path, naturally the whole economy moves on to the growth path. It is expected that the GDP growth in year FY21-22 would be around 11%.

Normally we have seen that the credit growth in the system is slightly better than the growth in GDP. So, normally we will take a multiplier factor of 1.1. So with that kind of a situation for 11% GDP growth, I expect the credit growth to be somewhere around 12% to 13%.

Right from the beginning, at State Bank of India, we have seen our retail asset books continuing to grow at a very healthy pace. Not only that, the quality has been very good as well. These are some of the factors which gives me a very happy feeling about the economy and as well as the banks.

The challenge for SBI is that you have to take care of all the social obligations as ultimately State Bank of India is the country’s bank. On the other hand, what is good for social obligations is not good for shareholders. How would you manage?
I do not think so, I would not subscribe to this thought that what is good for the social obligation is not good for the shareholders. I believe in coexistence of all the sub segments of society. Even there, we have come across situations where when we lent money for supporting the social obligations, it has gone a long way in terms of supporting the economy.

For instance, when we started our Jan Dhan Account, it was a zero balance account. Any bank, if they had a near-term perspective, would have seen it more as a liability and as an expense. But we went ahead and opened all those accounts, and today the average balance in each of these account is not less than Rs 2000. That means that we have been in a position to channelise the savings of the largest sub segment of the economy and you would probably agree that it will go a long way in terms of formalising this economy.

With the economy set fot 11% GDP growth, I expect the credit growth to be somewhere around 12% to 13%.Dinesh Kumar Khara

Once the formalisation happens, it is for the good of the banking system. We have to look at it in these terms and similarly when we are supporting people for setting up their ventures through various activities which could be even Mudra loans etc, it is generating employment on ground. As far as the quality of these advances are concerned, it is a journey we have to guide them through. We have created financial literacy centres all across the country. The idea is to really educate people about the benefit of borrowing and repaying on time. It is an investment for building up this economy and the more we invest, the more we will reap the fruits going forward.

How did you convince your employees to stay motivated during the pandemic? The ATMs never dried up, the bank accounts were always working. People’s money was safe. We are looking at an army of about 200,000 people.
In this fight against Covid, all of us were together. We have always communicated with them, we have conveyed to them that we are equally concerned and also we ensured that they follow the protocol right from day one. So depending upon the local administration guidelines in terms of how many people can come and attend the offices, we always ensure that we are fully compliant with the local administration and ensure that our people should follow all the protocols required for maintaining safe distance.

Secondly, our leadership constantly communicates with the workforce and very proactive steps are taken to ensure that the anybody who has suffered from Covid, is extended the treatment in time. We have health workers in our system who have proved their worth quite a lot during this period. They have ensured that not a single person goes unattended.

At the corporate centre, we are very closely monitoring what is the kind of a situation all across the country and wherever required, we have guided them on ground. Partly, it was the precautions taken by people, partly management and our employees being cognisant of the fact that we have to render uninterrupted services and ensure that the wheel of the economy keeps moving. It was a national cause and we demonstrated that we are very much part of this fight against Covid and we will see to it that the economy does not suffer.

Did you get a smile on your face when you saw State Bank of India stock going up 15% after the numbers were out?
Of course! It was a big morale booster and it so happened on that day I was meeting the leadership of all the circles and I could see the enthusiasm in their mind and perhaps they all acknowledged the fact that for the first time the intrinsic value of the State Bank of India was being acknowledged by the market.

I am using a tag line saying elephants can also dance. Is the State Bank of India ready to dance now?
I would say that we have gathered the required muscles for any elephant to dance. For dancing, the muscle has to be very strong so that is something which we are focussing on for quite some time and now I think we are in a position to dance.

So let us define what is in front of you. Muscle is CASA which you already have. There is a clear path to economy. Let us put the two together. Are you on the brink of a new credit cycle?
Yes, we have thought about how we should move forward. The retail engine is doing pretty well and so we will continue to consolidate on that. When it comes to the corporates, I would say that the SME and the large corporates would be the two. Capacity utilisation as of now is upward 55% in the economy. When I slice my book on corporate advances, 70% would be about term loans and 30% would be on account of the working capital. Normally, capacity utilisation and the working capital go in sync. As the capacity utilisation improves, the working capital availment starts improving.

As of now, the working capital availment is not very high and that will be addressed. Secondly when the capacity utilisation moves towards say 70-75%, people will start looking for creating new capacity and that is when we will start seeing a lot of new investment proposals. It is not that we do not have investment proposals. We have got a very excellent pipeline when it comes to the infrastructure and road sector, but this pipeline will actually grow and that will show up in our credit growth numbers also.

Also, what we have seen is that when it comes to small ticket loans, co-lending is perhaps the way forward and that is how we would like to support our smaller SMEs. I would say that we have invested well in terms of creating our capability in terms of addressing the need of the economy and we are actually very eagerly waiting for the moments when we can start lending in a very big way.

Are you consciously trying to be number one in all the subsidiaries also with the exception of life insurance?
I would put it like this. We would like to have our natural market share. For all the financial sector activities, what matters most is the distribution. We in State Bank of India have the largest distribution network of more than 22,000 branches, various sub-segments of the financial sector for instance, insurance — both life and non-life — generally have a preponderance of the agency channel. Our companies also have those channels. They have got the additional advantage of the bancassurance.

Similarly, when it comes to the asset management company, we have all the channels. We are into bank, IFA, we are into national distribution and we are also in corporate distributions. We are ensuring that all our companies are equally vibrant. In addition to that, they should have very active bancassurance channels, working like a second engine for all of them. It is my natural ambition that we should be all number one.

The home loan market is a very competitive one. You are growing a market where competition is large and technology is at play. Why are you so keen to grow that business?
In a portfolio, there are various sub components. I feel home loan is one such activity which actually encourages the core sector quite a lot. Unless and ,until home loan grows, the core sector growth can get stagnated. Being the largest player and having the largest reach, we are trying to see how we can improve the efficiency in operations.

Efficiency in operations will help us in cutting our costs. Our credit cost is already quite low as far as home loans are concerned. If at all, operating costs also come down and with the kind of CASA which we have, we would be rather the market leader in terms of pricing also. That is what my ambition is and I would actually like to price home loans at a right price point. A very large population of the country still has an aspiration to own home and the younger generation is also aspiring for home at a much early stage than earlier generations.

With transparency in pricing, we were in a position to encourage such people to come forward and acquire homes and help them to accomplish their dreams.

Do you think home loan rates and fixed deposit rates in India have bottomed out ?
When it comes to liabilities, the rates are also a function of the inflation and more so in a economy like ours where a very large population does not have the benefit of any kind of a social security. For them, the interest earned on the fixed deposit of the bank or for that matter the postal deposit is he main source of earning on an ongoing basis. We have to keep in mind the interest of a very large segment of depositors in mind but at the same time it is a very fine balance which we have to maintain. Ours is a growing economy. We have to ensure that the interest rate for the lending also should not go up significantly. That is something which keeps all of us busy in ensuring that the fine balance is always maintained.

We should be in a position to maintain the interest rates on deposits and may be home loan for some more time to come at this rate, but as far as deposit rates are concerned, it seems to have bottomed out.

One fault line and which is a legacy problem for SBI is the cost to income ratio. It is a challenge which you have inherited. How would you address that challenge?
I fully acknowledge that this is a major challenge and I would like to also mention that there are certain rigidities in the cost structure of the bank. I would rather like to focus more on the income stream. We have got about 23000 odd branches and we have started investing quite a lot in terms of the business correspondents (BC) and customer service point kiosks (CSP) also. Today we have got about 79,000 odd CSP kiosks. Wherever possible, we were trying to keep cost in check.

Secondly, we would like to significantly improve the income stream from each of these branches. I have actually given a call to my top leadership team to identify opportunities through which they will generate more and more income. It can be locker income, it can be cross sell income, it can be any fee-based income. For each of the branch, there will be a focus for generating income.

What about YES Bank?
When we went into YES Bank, the market reacted quite negatively for our stock but when we look back, it was a major step in ensuring the financial stability in this economy. If we start evaluating that decision, the way the bank is coming back on track, I would say it was the right decision at the right time.

But it will remain an investment and whenever the time comes, you would like to monetise it?
It will remain an investment but the time to monetise is not now.

Two-three years?
Time will tell how the market will be at that point of time. But nevertheless, I always believe that price is a refraction of the intrinsic value. Once the bank is on the right track, the market will reward it.

How do you want the world to remember your legacy? What is your vision?
Legacy is a derivative of what a particular leader does. From that point of view, I would say that I have got a very sharp focus on ensuring that the efficiency of operations are excellent and that should get reflected in the numbers in due course.

How has life changed for you in the last four-five months? Anything that keeps you wake up at night?
Discipline is very integral to the functioning of any CEO and that continues to be my area of focus also. But I have earmarked some time for myself and I normally try to stick to that. But if it involves travelling etc. then I have to compromise. So, there is a slight change in my disciplined behaviour or the schedule but apart from that, many of the priorities for the bank that keeps on engaging my mind and every new day is a new day for me.

What is the lighter side of Dinesh Khara which nobody knows?
I will have to think more about it, I do not know if at all I have any lighter side.



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Rising G-Sec yields: SBI report warns of MTM losses for banks

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Any further upward movement in Government Security (G-Sec) yields, even by 10 basis points (bps) from the current levels, could usher in mark-to-market (MTM) losses for banks, cautioned State Bank of India’s economic research report ‘Ecowrap’.

SBI’s economic research team believes one of the reasons for the recent surge in yields might be short-selling by market players.

The report said the Reserve Bank of India will have to resort to unconventional tools, including speaking to market players/off-market interventions, open-market operation (OMO) in illiquid securities and penalising short-sellers, to control the surge in bond market yields.

“The average increase in G-Sec yields across three, five and 10 years is around 31 bps since the Budget.

“AAA Corporate bond and SDL (State development loan) spreads have jumped by 25-41 bps during this period,” said Soumya Kanti Ghosh, Group Chief Economic Advisor, SBI.

While this significant increase in bond spreads is a manifestation of the nervousness of market players, Ghosh believes the central bank will have to resort to unconventional tools to control the surge in bond market yields.

Since January-end 2020, the yield on the most traded 10-year G-Sec (the 5.77 per cent GS 2030) has gone up by about 28 bps, with its price declining by about ₹1.90. MTM losses require banks to make provision towards investment depreciation.

Ghosh opined this is important as any further upward movement in G-Sec yields, even by 10 bps from the current levels, could usher in MTM losses for banks that could be a minor blip in an otherwise exceptional year in FY21 for bond markets, with the RBI assiduously supporting debt management of the government at lowest possible cost in 16 years.

In fact, the RBI strategy of devolving on the primary dealers (PDs) may have its limitations as standalone PDs account for 15-16 per cent of secondary market share and this may not be enough to move the market, Ghosh said. This share has remained broadly consistent over long periods despite excessive market volatility.

Short-selling

While going short or long are typical market activities that aid in price discovery, in times, it can result in price distortions, too, as it might be happening now, the report said.

Ecowrap noted that the banks and the primary dealers resort to short-selling when their view is bearish — that is, the prices of the bond will fall and the yield will rise.

“They make money if the bond prices drop and yields rise, and over a point of time, this could become a self-fulfilling prophecy as such short-sellers keep on rolling over their borrowed security from the repo market till the time they believe that yields will continue to rise,” it said.

Ghosh felt that the only way to break such self-fulfilling expectations is for the RBI to conduct large-scale OMOs to provide necessary steam to the bond market to rally and with increase in price, many short sold position will trigger stop losses and market players will scramble to cover open positions. This will hasten a rapid fall in yields over a short period of time.

RBI steps

The report suggested that the RBI could announce steps including announcing a weekly outright OMO calendar of ₹10,000 crore till March-end, reducing the time period for covering short sale from 90 days to 30 days, and prescribing a margin requirement for borrowing securities in the repo market while covering the short-sale position to cool the yields.

It also recommended allowing more players such as mutual funds and insurance companies in the repo market and penalising short-sellers.

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Union Bank of India, Syndicate Bank post highest UPI failure rates; Paytm sees lowest decline rate

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Andhra Bank and Indian Bank recorded the second and third highest TD rate of 10.40 per cent and 9.83 per cent respectively in January.

Public sector lender Union Bank of India continued to witness the highest failure rate for UPI transactions among India’s top 30 UPI remitter banks due to technical reasons in January. From 10.75 per cent technical decline (TD) in December, the failure rate jumped to 12.89 per cent in January for Union Bank of India, data from the National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI) showed. 85.95 million UPI transactions were processed by Union Bank of India during the month out of which nearly 80 per cent were approved while 7.36 per cent were declined due to reasons including invalid pin entered by customer, incorrect beneficiary account, exceeding per transaction limit or permitted count of transactions per day or amount limit for the day, etc. Andhra Bank and Indian Bank recorded the second and third highest TD rate of 10.40 per cent and 9.83 per cent respectively in January.

Among the top 30 UPI beneficiary banks (bank of the account holder who is receiving money) as well, Indian Bank recorded the second-highest TD rate of 5.50 per cent while Syndicate Bank topped the tally with 8.65 per cent. Karnataka Bank posted the third-highest TD rate of 3.18 per cent among UPI beneficiary banks in January. State Bank of India, which posted the highest TD rate of 9.08 per cent in December, improved it to 1.52 per cent in January.

Also read: Flipkart leads Q4FY21 international net sales for Walmart

Paytm Payments Bank recorded the lowest TD rate of 0.05 per cent on 145.61 million transactions in January among remitter banks. In terms of transaction volume, the top remitter banks were SBI (664.75 million), HDFC Bank (206.65 million), Axis Bank (173.38 million), and ICICI Bank (152.06 million). Among beneficiary banks, CITI Bank saw zero transactions failing due to technical reasons on 5.94 million transactions. Paytm Payments Bank (368.90 million), SBI (354.61 million), Yes Bank (273.95 million), ICICI Bank (237.59 million), and Axis Bank (207.61 million) saw the highest volume among beneficiary banks.

Walmart-owned digital payments company PhonePe was the highest UPI app in January processing processed 968.72 million UPI transactions involving nearly Rs 1.92 lakh crore. PhonePe volume was more than 100 million transactions higher than Google’s 853.53 million transactions worth Rs 1.77 lakh crore. Paytm Payments Bank, however, remained the distant third player with a volume of 332.69 million worth Rs 37,845.76 crore.

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SBI lures tweeple with ‘hai-nahi hai’ campaign to grow retail loans

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State Bank of India (SBI) has posed three crucial questions to its current and prospective customers relating to “Bride and Budget for marriage”, “Business idea and Investment”, and “Trip and Car” as part of a ‘hai-nahi hai’ (have-don’t have) campaign.

In a racy Twitter campaign, India’s largest bank has specifically asked tweeple questions in Hinglish (mix of Hindi and English) such as: “Shaadi ke liye bride hai but budget nahi” (you have a bride but no budget for marriage), “Business ke liye idea hai but investment nahi” (you have a business idea but no money to invest), and “Doston ke sath trip pe jaana hai par car nahi hai” (you want to go on a trip with friends but don’t have a car).

And SBI gives a ‘not to worry’ assurance to tweeple as it has answers to the aforementioned questions in the form of products — personal loan for a marriage, gold loan for business and a car loan for the road trip with friends.

The bank wants to expand loans in these three segments as the non-performing asset (NPA) level is below 1 per cent.

In the third quarter of FY2021, SBI’s Xpress Credit (personal loans) portfolio reported a 36 per cent year-on-year growth and stood at ₹1,77,366 crore as at December-end 2020. NPA in this portfolio was at 0.36 per cent.

Auto loans, including car and two-wheelers, nudged up about 3 per cent YoY and stood at ₹75,937 crore as of December-end 2020. NPA in this portfolio was at 0.73 per cent.

Personal gold loans portfolio soared about 559 per cent YoY to ₹17,492 crore. NPA in this portfolio was only 0.04 per cent.

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Morgan Stanley ups target price on SBI, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Morgan Stanley raised its price target on State Bank of India to Rs 600 from Rs 525 citing improvement in retail business and a turnaround in the corporate cycle. The new price target implies a 45 per cent upside in the stock price. On Thursday, SBI shares gained 0.8 per cent to close at Rs 415.20.

“SBI has built a strong retail franchise and also sustained its deposit market share. Even on digitisation, the progress has surprised, unlike peer SoE (State Owned Enterprises) banks,” said Morgan Stanley in a note to clients. “As the corporate cycle turns, we expect earnings estimate upgrades and significant re-rating.”

The brokerage said SBI reminds it of China Merchants Bank (CMB), which has shown consistent improvement in its retail franchise compared to the country’s other public sector banks.

“Though there are significant differences between CMB and SBI, we believe SBI could show a similar re-rating trend vs. Indian SoE banks,” said Morgan Stanley.

SBI shares have gained almost 120 per cent since November 1 as against 47 per cent gains in the Bank Nifty index in the period. The stock has been an underperformer in recent years with private retail lenders hogging the limelight.

Analysts said the recovery in the growth cycle augurs well for industrial banks like SBI.

“The current cycle reminds us of the early 2000s, a period in which SoE banks outperformed significantly in the initial years — SBI looks best placed to play this theme,” said Morgan Stanley. “SBI profitability does very well as the economic cycle turns — this coupled with strong improvement in the retail franchise should drive significant upside in this cycle.”



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SBI targeting Rs 10-lakh crore home loan book over five years

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The bank is gearing up to adopt the co-lending model for home loans, which will help boost its footprint in the unorganised sector.

The State Bank of India (SBI) has crossed the Rs 5-lakh crore mark in the home loan business and expects to double the size of its portfolio over the next five years, chairman Dinesh Khara said on Wednesday. The bank is gearing up to adopt the co-lending model for home loans, which will help boost its footprint in the unorganised sector.

Khara said while the book had grown to the current level from less than Rs 1 lakh crore in 2011, the pace of growth from here on would be much faster. One of the reasons being the definite change in the country’s demographic, with the younger generation looking to acquire homes at a much younger age, as compared to what it was 10 years ago.

“We have observed that 42% of our home loan customers are from the age bracket of below 40 years. I feel that going forward, we will see a much greater shift in this direction and the increase in earnings of the younger generation, their aspirations and the concept of nuclear family are going to be the contributing reasons for people to apply for homes at an early age,” Khara said, adding, “If I may hazard a guess, I would say that maybe in five years (the portfolio will double), not 10 years.”

SBI is extending builder loans and also approving their projects in anticipation that offtake will improve. When it comes to builder-approved loans, its turnaround time is about five days. Khara said the bank has a market share of about 35% among all scheduled commercial banks and going forward, home loans will be a major focus area for the lender within the retail segment. SBI is also looking to implement artificial intelligence (AI), cloud, blockchain and machine learning, which can play a pivotal role in propelling not only the home loan business, but also other businesses.

He sought to allay concerns about the quality of retail loans at a time when job and income losses have plagued a fairly large segment of the population. The home loan portfolio’s gross non-performing asset (NPA) ratio is at 0.67-0.68%. Of 39 lakh-odd borrowers who were eligible to be considered under the Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI) restructuring plan, only about 10,000 customers have actually availed the restructuring option, which aggregates to about Rs 2,500 crore. “So if we look at a book size of Rs 5 lakh crore, out of that only Rs 2,500 crore has been put through restructuring. These two parameters give a very clear reflection about the quality of the book which we have,” Khara said. He pointed out that 72% of SBI’s customers are in the salaried bracket and are in a position to honour their commitments pretty well.

Of the Rs 5-lakh crore portfolio, home loans account for Rs 4.86 lakh crore and builder finance is about Rs 11,000 crore. About 2 lakh customers have been extended loan facilities in the affordable segment.

The bank has been seeing a trend of balance transfers of home loans, even as pool purchases have nearly halted. “Metro locations are normally very sensitive to interest rates and we have been successful in having about 23% of Rs 5 lakh crore on account of takeover. For more than a year now, we have not been making pool purchases. Whatever pools we had purchased, that is also coming down. So it’s about Rs 4,000 crore,” Khara said.

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SBI expects to double its home loan portfolio in the next five years to ₹10 lakh crore

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State Bank of India (SBI) expects to double its home loan portfolio in the next five years to ₹10 lakh crore on the back of higher economic growth growth and demographic dividend.

India’s largest bank took about 10 years to grow its home loan portfolio from ₹89,000 crore in FY2011 to cross the ₹5 lakh crore mark now, according to Chairman Dinesh Kumar Khara.

He emphasised that delinquency in the home loan portfolio in terms of gross non-performing assets (GNPAs) is only 0.68 per cent of the portfolio. Khara said with the implementation of the retail loan management system, SBI will be in a position to crunch the average home loan turnaround time to 5 days from 12 days.

Also read: Covid-19 to boost digital financial services growth; SBI, large private banks to benefit: Moody’s

CS Setty, Managing Director, said 60 per cent of the existing customers had a credit score of 750 & above. Khara observed that the average home loan ticket size has gone up from ₹25 lakh two years ago to ₹31 lakh now, Khara added.

Of the ₹5 lakh crore home loan portfolio, almost 23 per cent is by way of balance-transfer, especially in metros, from other lenders, he said. Of the total home loan portfolio, ₹4.86 lakh crore is to the individual borrowers and the balance is towards builder financing.

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SBI achieves Rs. 5 trillion mark in the home loan segment, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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State Bank of India has touched a business of Rs 5 trillion in the home loan space.

Country’s largest lender said this growth was achieved in the last 10 years.

Dinesh Kumar Khara, Chairman at State Bank of India said, “We are the cheapest home loan provider and we have the best quality loan profile with very less NPAs. We hope to continue the same growth.”

Khara added, “We will achieve next Rs 5 trillion in 5 years.. and not 10 years.”

Speaking on a media call, he added, “We are also supporting the builder community and and approving their projects.”

SBI‘s flagship digital banking proposition YONO recorded 8% disbursals under the home loans.

On being asked about the home loan rate going forward, he said, “Only time will tell when will revise the Rate of interest.”

He also added that amongst all lenders SBI has the largest book of affordable housing finance under the Pradhan Mantri Aawas Yojana (PMAY).



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HDFC Bank beats SBI in Covid scheme loans, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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HDFC Bank has outdone State Bank of India (SBI) in disbursements under the Emergency Credit Line Guarantee Scheme (ECLGS) introduced by the government as a part of the Covid relief package. The scheme involved a government guarantee for additional loans, up to Rs 3 lakh crore, extended to businesses facing stress due to the Covid pandemic.

Of the total loans of Rs 1.4 lakh crore extended by banks up to January 25, 2021, HDFC Bank has disbursed Rs 23,504. This is nearly 17% of the loans sanctioned. SBI, with disbursals of Rs 18,700, has a market share of 13.3%. According to banking analysts, this demonstrates HDFC Bank’s capabilities in lending to small businesses.

The ECLGS came in two phases. The first ECLGS-1 was for only small businesses and, in the second ECLGS-2 round, it was extended to large industries that were part of the 26 stressed sectors. HDFC Bank’s performance has enabled private sector banks outdo public sector banks (PSBs) in funding for the micro, small and medium enterprises (MSME) sector.

In response to a query in Lok Sabha, minister of state for finance Anurag Thakur said that the total amount of loans sanctioned and disbursed by the banking sector was just a shade under Rs 2 lakh crore and Rs 1.4 lakh crore, respectively. Of this, the sanctions and disbursements by public sector banks were Rs 83,162 crore and Rs 61,226 crore. In the case of private banks, the sanction and disbursement numbers were Rs 1.15 lakh crore and Rs 80,227 crore.

In the public sector, after State Bank of India (SBI) the second-highest disbursements are by Punjab National Bank (PNB). In the private sector, ICICI Bank with Rs 12,982 crore is the second-largest lender, followed by Axis Bank with Rs 8,099 crore.

PSBs have traditionally been the dominant lenders to the MSME sector. But the typical trend for last few years is that private banks and non-banking finance companies (NBFCs) have strongly competed with PSBs in gaining a larger share of the MSME sector.

However, that trend changed after the nationwide lockdown. As of June 20, NBFCs had a share of 9.7% of MSME lending — down from 13% in March, followed by private banks with 38.7% share in loans and PSBs with 51.6% marketshare, according TransUnion Cibil. The state-run lenders still account for over 60% of the banking business in the country.

SBI, in an investor call on February 4, had said that the bank had sanctioned Rs 26,000 crore (cumulative) under the ECLGS. Of this, Rs 23,000 crore has been disbursed cumulatively. The bank also said that only Rs 488 crore was disbursed under ECLGS-2 and the rest was in ECLGS-1.

In the call, the bank’s chairman Dinesh Khara said that although the window for restructuring for medium and small business enterprises is available up to March 31, the additions would not be substantial. He said that the ECLGS disbursements were lower in the latest quarter because the bank had picked up SME growth in segments other than the ECLGS scheme.



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