Shaktikanta Das, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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MUMBAI: The Reserve Bank remains laser-focused to bring back retail inflation to 4 per cent over a period of time in a non-disruptive manner, governor Shaktikanta Das stressed while voting for status quo in interest rates, as per minutes of the October policy meeting released on Friday.

The central bank has been mandated by the government to ensure the Consumer Price Index (CPI) based inflation is at 4 per cent, with a band of 2 per cent on either side.

The retail inflation, which was above 6 per cent during May and June, has started moving down and stood at 4.35 per cent in September.

As per the minutes of the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) meeting held during October 6 to 8, Das said in its August 2021 meeting, the panel was faced with the challenges posed by headline inflation exceeding the upper tolerance threshold for the second successive month.

The actual inflation outcomes for July-August, with inflation registering a substantial moderation to move within the tolerance band, have vindicated the MPC’s outlook and monetary policy stance, he noted.

The more-than-expected softening of inflation in July and August this year was underpinned by the significant lowering in food price momentum, especially in August.

Going forward, the governor said if there are no spells of unseasonal rains, food inflation is likely to register significant moderation in the immediate term, aided by record kharif production, more than adequate food stocks, supply-side measures and favourable base effects.

“Volatile crude oil prices, particularly the resurgence since mid-September, is pushing pump prices to new highs, raising risk of further spillover of high transportation cost into retail prices of goods and services,” he said.

He opined that continued monetary support is necessary as the economic recovery process even now is delicately poised and growth is yet to take firmer roots.

At this critical juncture, “our actions have to be gradual, calibrated, well timed and well-telegraphed to avoid any undue surprises”, he asserted.

While voting to keep the policy rate unchanged and continue with the accommodative stance, Das said, “In parallel, we remain laser-focused to bring back the CPI inflation to 4 per cent over a period of time in a non-disruptive manner.”

All members of the MPC — Shashanka Bhide, Ashima Goyal, Jayanth R Varma, Mridul K Saggar, Michael Debabrata Patra and Shaktikanta Das — unanimously voted to keep the policy repo rate unchanged at 4 per cent. Also, all members, except Varma, voted to continue with the accommodative stance.

Deputy governor Patra said while the trajectory of inflation may undershoot the projections made in August, it is likely to be uneven, sluggish and prone to interruptions.

He also opined that even as domestic macroeconomic configurations are improving, the risks from global developments are rising and warrant a close watch as they could stifle the recovery that is underway in India.

Exports are directly at risk from logistics bottlenecks, shortages of containers and personnel in international shipping, and elevated freight rates. Policy interventions, including coordinated multilateral efforts, are needed urgently to prevent global trade from choking, he opined.

“In my view, the biggest risks to India’s macroeconomic prospects are global and they could materialise suddenly,” he added.

RBI executive director Saggar stressed that “an Arjuna’s eye” needs to be kept on commodity prices and “we need to consider different scenarios according to which we can calibrate our policies.”

He said that in his assessment, the probability that oil prices may touch or cross $85 per barrel before the year ends and could average $80 or more in second half is not insignificant.

“It can have significant impacts that are hard to precisely quantify due to non-linearities and uncertainties but, on a ballpark from the baseline, can be expected to raise inflation by 15-20 bps, lower growth by 13-15 bps, have negligible effects on fiscal subsidies and widen CAD by about 0.25 per cent of GDP,” he added.

Varma, the external member on the panel, said several arguments he made in his August MPC meeting continue to be valid.

“Since August, I have become increasingly concerned about two other risks that have become salient globally in recent weeks,” he said.

The first is that the ongoing transition to green energy worldwide poses a significant risk of creating a series of energy price shocks similar to that in the 1970s. The second recent concern is about the tail risk to global growth posed by emerging financial sector fragility in China, he said.

“Both of these risks — one to inflation and the other to growth — are well beyond the control of the MPC, but they warrant a heightened degree of flexibility and agility.

“A pattern of policy making in slow motion that is guided by an excessive desire to avoid surprises is no longer appropriate,” said Varma, who voted against the accommodative stance.

External member on the MPC Ashima Goyal said global price shocks have turned out to be more persistent, contributing to sticky core inflation and tax cuts on petroleum products are “essential” to break the upward movement that could impart persistence to domestic inflation.

She also said there is large uncertainty built into current prices because of the speculative element that seeks to profit from aggravated shortages.

“Large sudden falls are therefore possible,” she said, and added oil prices have shown high volatility.

She further said the “climate change activism” that is partly responsible for current spikes will also reduce oil demand in the future.

The third external member on the MPC, Shashanka Bhide said investment activity has picked up over the levels seen 2020-21 but is yet to reach the 2019-20 levels.

Accelerated progress in vaccinations and a number of economic policy initiatives to open up opportunities for investment are among the factors constituting positive stimulus to fresh investments.

Three members on the MPC are RBI officials and the government appoints three eminent economists as external members on the panel.



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RBI, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Mumbai, The Reserve Bank of India is reviewing its scheme of penalising banks for non-replenishment of ATMs after getting feedback from lenders, its Deputy Governor T Rabi Sankar said on Friday. In August this year, RBI had announced that it will penalise banks for failure to timely replenish currency notes in ATMs. The scheme, which is aimed at ensuring availability of sufficient cash for the public through ATMs, has come into effect from October 1, 2021.

“We have received various feedback– some positive and some raising concerns. There are issues specific to locations. We are trying to take all the feedback and have a review and see how best it can be implemented,” Sankar told reporters in a post policy call with reporters on Friday.

He said the idea behind the penalty on outages in ATMs is to ensure that cash is available in all ATMs, specially in rural and semi urban areas, all the time.

As per the scheme, cash-out of more than ten hours at any ATM in a month will attract a flat penalty of Rs 10,000 per ATM.

In case of White Label ATMs (WLAs), the penalty would be charged on the bank which is meeting the cash requirement of that particular WLA.

Replying to a query on lower interest rates affecting senior citizens due to fall in fixed deposit rates amid higher inflation, RBI Governor Shaktikanta Das said the cut in repo rate was considered absolutely necessary during the pandemic to support the economy.

“If you are not able to support the overall economy which is collapsing or is moving into a contraction zone, then there would be other major issues for all, including for senior citizens,” he told reporters.

He, however, said one should invest in small savings schemes that are currently offering much higher rates than their actual formula-based rates.

Citing an example, he said the one-year term deposit rate in small savings schemes is at least 170-180 basis points higher than the actual rate which is arrived at by the guidelines.

“In this crisis situation, we should see this (small savings scheme rates) as a fiscal support to senior citizens and middle class and small savers,” Das said. PTI HV

ANU ANU



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Sensex scales 60k after RBI retains accommodative stance, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Mumbai, Oct 8 (PTI) The Sensex soared past the 60,000-level while the Nifty finished at an all-time high on Friday after the Reserve Bank kept the key interest rates unchanged but maintained its accommodative stance to bolster economic recovery. Market heavyweight Reliance Industries led the gains, while IT stocks too saw heavy buying ahead of TCS’ results.

The 30-share BSE Sensex jumped 381.23 points or 0.64 per cent to close at 60,059.06, just shy of its lifetime high.

The NSE Nifty rose 104.85 points or 0.59 per cent to its fresh closing peak of 17,895.20.

Reliance Industries was the top gainer in the Sensex pack, rallying 3.84 per cent, followed by Infosys, Tech Mahindra, HCL Tech, TCS, Tata Steel and L&T.

In contrast, HUL, NTPC, Kotak Bank, Maruti Suzuki, Dr Reddy’s and Titan were among the laggards, shedding up to 1.16 per cent.

Rate-sensitive banking and realty indices ended in the red, but auto closed with gains.

On a weekly basis, the Sensex rallied 1,293.48 points or 2.20 per cent, and the Nifty soared 363.15 points or 2.07 per cent.

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) expectedly kept interest rates unchanged at a record low but signalled the start of tapering pandemic-era stimulus measures on economic recovery taking root.

The six-member Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) kept the key lending rate or the repo rate unchanged at 4 per cent while the reverse repo rate or the borrowing rate was maintained at 3.35 per cent.

It voted 5-1 to retain the accommodative stance, RBI Governor Shaktikanta Das said.

The GSAP programme to purchase government securities from the market has been stopped for now to ensure that there is no further infusion of liquidity, he said, but stressed that the step is not a reversal of its accommodative policy stance and RBI will be ready to resume bond purchases if needed.

“With the RBI continuing with its accommodative policy, indices remained firmly bullish through the day led by the IT index as the street awaits TCS earnings and guidance,” said S Ranganathan, Head of Research at LKP Securities.

Reliance led from the front with the broader markets seeing action across pockets, he added.

Vinod Nair, Head of Research at Geojit Financial Services, said, “Domestic indices traded higher with optimism underpinned by dovish RBI policy and mixed global cues due to US jobs data awaited later in the day. RBI kept rates unchanged and maintained the status quo on accommodative stance.”

“FY22 GDP growth was maintained at 9.5 per cent while trimming inflation worries by lowering CPI forecast from 5.7 per cent to 5.3 per cent, provided the push to the market. On the sectoral front, the IT sector was in focus ahead of the result releases of sectoral majors while realty and FMCG succumbed to profit booking,” he added.

Sectorally, BSE energy, IT, teck, industrials, oil and gas, auto and basic materials indices spurted up to 2.69 per cent, while realty, power, FMCG and utilities closed lower.

Broader BSE midcap and smallcap indices climbed up to 0.83 per cent.

Asian stocks mustered gains, led by Chinese markets which returned from a week-long holiday. Bourses in Shanghai, Hong Kong and Tokyo ended with gains, while Seoul was in the red.

Stock exchanges in Europe were largely trading on a negative note in the afternoon session.

Meanwhile, international oil benchmark Brent crude rose 0.83 per cent to USD 82.63 per barrel.

The rupee tumbled 20 paise to close at 74.99 against the US dollar on Friday, as rising crude oil prices weighed on investor sentiment.

Foreign institutional investors were net sellers in the capital market on Thursday as they offloaded shares worth Rs 1,764.25 crore, as per exchange data. PTI ANS ABM ABM



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RBI governor, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Amid rising concerns over mispricing of credit risk by banks due to abundant liquidity, the Reserve Bank of India today said it was for the banks to do their own risk assessment and price their loans accordingly.

‘Banks should do own risk assessment and based on it should price their loans, action lines in the domain on banks,” said RBI governor Shaktikanta Das.

“I don’t think SBI has flagged this issue as a complaint, SBI has flagged it as a concern, which is for the banks to take note of, whatever be the liquidity situation,” he said.

Mispricing of loans

A few weeks ago, SBI, the country’s largest lender, has said that mispricing of risks is a cause of concern given the fact that there is ample liquidity in the system.

Since deposits are flowing into the system and credit offtake is yet to take place, bankers may be tempted to make investments in alternative avenues like T-Bills, SBI chairman Dinesh Kr Khara said.

“The depth of this alternative investment market is shallow. There is a chance of mispricing of risks. But I feel there will be no compromise on underwriting standards as the banking system has learned the hard way due to huge NPAs,” he said.

Striking a balance

The SBI chairman said there is a need to strike a balance and unless there is improvement in growth, it will be big challenge.

Regarding offtake of credit, the banker said some industrial sectors are showing improvement but it is not universal across sectors.

“I hope the Production Linked Incentive scheme will help a lot in offtake of liquidity, particularly in the MSME sector. Now some private sector investments are likely to take place besides PSUs. The road sector is looking promising,” he stated.

Khara said given the present macroeconomic conditions it is unlikely that the central bank will alter interest rates in the coming Monetary Policy Committee meeting.



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RBI extends three-year SLTRO facility to SFBs

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The Reserve Bank of India has extended the three-year special long-term repo operations facility for Small Finance Banks by two months till December-end 2021.

This facility, which is available at the repo rate of 4 per cent, aggregating ₹10,000 crore was announced by the central bank in May 2021 to help SFBs provide last mile credit to individuals and small businesses.

Liquidity drawn from this facility has to be deployed by SFBs for fresh lending of up to ₹10 lakh per borrower.

“Recognising the persisting uneven impact of the pandemic on small business units, micro and small industries, and other unorganised sector entities, it has been decided to extend this facility till December 31, 2021.

“Further, this will now be available on tap to ensure extended support to these entities,” RBI Governor Shaktikanta Das said.

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Select NBFCs to now have internal ombudsman on lines of banks: Das

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With the objective of upping customer experience, the Reserve Bank on Friday announced an internal ombudsman scheme (IOS) to redress grievances at select non-banking finance companies (NBFCs).

The IOS will be on the lines of a similar system adopted at banks and will redress grievances related to deficiencies in service, Governor Shaktikanta Das said, announcing the new measure in the statement on regulatory policies along with the bi-monthly review of the monetary policy. “The increased significance, strength and reach of NBFCs across the country have necessitated having in place better customer experience including grievance redress practices,” he said.

Slew of measures

Das said over the last few years, the RBI has taken a slew of measures to improve consumer protection at NBFCs which include asking such lenders to appoint nodal officers to address grievances in 2013 and launch of the ombudsman scheme for NBFCs in 2018. “With a view to further strengthen the internal grievance redress mechanism of NBFCs, it has been decided to introduce the Internal Ombudsman Scheme (IOS) for certain categories of NBFCs which have higher customer interface,” he said.

There will be an internal ombudsman at the top of the NBFCs’ internal grievance redress mechanism to examine customer complaints which are in the nature of deficiency in service and are partly or wholly rejected by the NBFCs, he said, adding detailed instructions on the same will be issued separately.

Also read: FIDC seeks refinance mechanism for NBFCs

Meanwhile, Das also announced a six month extension in the facility which allows banks to on-lend through NBFCs and get the priority sector lending tag, till March 2022. He reminded that bank lending to registered NBFCs (other than micro-lenders) for on-lending to agriculture (investment credit), micro and small enterprises and housing (with an increased limit) was permitted to be classified as priority sector lending up to certain limits in August 2019.

Increased traction has been observed in delivering credit to the underserved/unserved segments of the economy through the scheme, which was last extended till September 30 in April, Das said.

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MSMEs, retail loans to take bank NPAs to Rs 10 lakh crore by March 2022, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Banks’ bad loans might cross Rs 10 lakh crore by the end of this fiscal, mainly on account of slippages in retail and MSME sectors, a study said.

“NPAs are expected to rise to 8.5-9 per cent by March 2022, driven by slippages in retail, Micro, Small and Medium Enterprise (MSME) accounts, besides some restructured assets,” the study by industry body Assocham and ratings firm Crisil said.

Reserve Bank of India (RBI) Governor Shaktikanta Das this month had said the current levels of non-performing assets (NPA) looks manageable.

At the end of June, the gross NPA level of the banking system was 7.5 per cent and the capital adequacy level was around 16 per cent, which gives an adequate cushion, Das said at an event.

MSME, retail hit

The current asset quality stress cycle will be different than that witnessed a few years back. NPAs then came primarily from bigger, chunkier accounts.

According to the study, this time, smaller accounts, especially the MSME and retail segments, are expected to be more vulnerable than large corporates, as the latter have consolidated and deleveraged their balance sheets considerably in the past few years.

Even though the restructuring scheme announced for MSMEs and small borrowers should prevent the NPAs from rising too much, there is an opportunity for stressed asset investors with expertise and interest in these asset classes, it added.

”The effectiveness of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC) will be tested by the potential spike in NPAs as the standstill on initiation of fresh insolvency cases for year ended in March 2021 and as most of the pandemic-induced policies or measures are unlikely to be continued”the study said.

IBC to rescue

The expected increase in GNPAs of both banks and non-banks this fiscal, because of the pandemic, will provide an opportunity for players in the stressed assets market through resolution via various routes, with IBC likely to be the most preferred.

However, the GNPAs of banks have declined from the peak seen in March 2018 and were lower as of March 2021 as against March 2020. Supportive measures, including the six-month debt moratorium, Emergency Credit Line Guarantee Scheme (ECLGS) loans and restructuring measures were among the main reasons.

According to the study, the risk management practices of Indian banks, especially public sector banks, have scope for improvement.

In the past, laws were not in favour of lenders and allowed erring promoters to exploit the tedious recovery procedure. This is borne out by the high number of wilful defaulters of banks, it noted.

”However, RBI has tightened norms for such defaulters and made stressed asset resolution norms more stringent. That, coupled with increased resolution of large-ticket NPAs under the IBC framework, have contributed to better recovery of NPAs,” the study said.

Click here for more IBC news updates



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Insolvency and bankruptcy matters must be decided in 330 days, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court on Monday said that 330 days deadline for resolution plan has to be strictly adhered to and NCLT and NCLAT must decide insolvency and bankruptcy matters keeping in mind the sanctity of the deadline provided by legislature.

A SC bench headed, by Justice D Y Chandrachud, said that earlier bankruptcy code failed mainly because of long delays in litigation in judicial forums and promised that the present IBC will not be allowed to meet the same fate

“Once the Committee of Creditors submits a resolution plan for a stressed assets under Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, it cannot be modified or withdrawn by resolution applicant,” the SC said.

Meanwhile, addressing a question on the high haircuts taken by banks in resolution to some bankruptcy cases, RBI governor Shaktikanta Das last week had said that the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code(IBC) process needs some improvement which will include some legislative changes as well.

“Yes, I agree that there is scope for the improvement in the functioning of the IBC and framework. There is perhaps need to certain legislative amendments also,” he said.

The RBI has certain suggestions which it has flagged to the government, he said, citing an example of the time taken before a case is admitted in a National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) and comes up for resolution through court-directed measures and suggested that the same can be dealt with through legal amendments.

He said the overall recoveries from the IBC process used to be at 45 per cent at the aggregate level four years ago and have come down to 40 per cent in the pandemic year, and also acknowledged that in some cases, lenders have had to take deep haircuts of up to 90 per cent.

“There is scope for some improvement and the time taken in the entire process I entirely agree needs to be reduced by simplifying certain procedures and wherever necessary by carrying out legislative change,” Das said.

(With inputs from agencies)



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MUMBAI: The Reserve Bank of India’s Governor Shaktikanta Das today said that the central bank would like to see credible answers on what would be the contribution of private cryptocurrencies to the Indian economy.

Das, who was speaking at the Indian Express-Financial Times event, reiterated that the central bank has “serious” and “major” concerns about cryptocurrencies and their impact on the financial stability in the country.

The Indian government is currently in the process of formulating a cryptocurrency bill that may seek to outlaw all private cryptocurrency, while laying down the path for the introduction of central bank digital currency in India.

India has emerged as one of the biggest hubs for cryptocurrency adoption in the world with some pegging the total value of cryptocurrency owned by Indians at over $6.5 billion as of May 2021. The ownership of crypto assets in India has ballooned 400 per cent over the past 17 months.

According to a survey by Finder, almost 30 per cent of the respondents in India said that they owned private cryptocurrencies in their investment portfolio making it the third-highest among Asian countries.

The surge in demand for cryptocurrencies has led to an explosion in cryptocurrency exchanges in the country backed by investments from marquee global private equity and crypto investors such as Tiger Global, Binance and others.

Recent media reports have suggested that the government may look at designating cryptocurrency as a commodity, which will allow them to function as an asset class like equity, bonds and gold. However, the government has yet to finalise the bill, which is awaiting the approval of the Cabinet and the Parliament.

In the past, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman has suggested that the government is open to taking a calibrated approach towards cryptocurrencies after facing backlash from the crypto industry, which has since gone on a massive public relations drive to spread awareness on the asset.



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Payments Banks want RBI to hike max day end deposit balance to ₹5 lakh

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Payments Banks (PBs) want the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) to up the maximum end of the day balance a customer can maintain with them from Rs 2 lakh to Rs 5 lakh in sync with the increase in the deposit insurance cover.

PB executives feel an enhancement in the aforementioned limit will be opportune as the Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporation (DICGC) has increased the deposit insurance cover five-fold to Rs 5 lakh.

DICGC insures bank deposits such as savings, fixed, current, and recurring.

Previously, under the Guidelines for Licensing of PBs, issued on November 27, 2014, these banks could hold a maximum day end balance of ₹ 1 lakh per customer. This was in line with the then deposit insurance cover of Rs 1 lakh.

Although the deposit insurance cover was raised to Rs 5 lakh, with effect from February 4, 2020, the maximum balance a customer can hold in a PB at the end of the day has not been increased commensurately.

RBI had doubled the maximum balance a customer can hold at end of the day in a PB to ₹2 lakh on April 8, 2021.

Micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs), small traders and merchants can benefit if the maximum end of the day balance per customer is enhanced to Rs 5 lakh as cash flow management will become better, said a top official of a PB.

Further, this can also increase PBs pool of low-cost current account, savings account (CASA) deposits.

“This is the right time to revise the maximum day end deposit limit upwards in view of the changing economic scenario. It will also be in keeping with the increase in the deposit insurance limit,” said the chief of a PB.

RBI Governor Shaktikanta Das, in a statement on April 7, 2021, said that based on a review of performance of payments banks and with a view to encourage their efforts for financial inclusion and to expand their ability to cater to the needs of their customers, including MSMEs, small traders and merchants, it has been decided to enhance the limit of maximum balance at end of the day from ₹1 lakh to ₹2 lakh per individual customer.

Currently, if a customer’s deposit with a PB at the end of the day exceeds Rs 2 lakh, an auto sweep arrangement allows the PB to open a fixed deposit on behalf of the customer with a partner Bank (usually a small finance bank or a private sector bank).

For example, Fino Payments Bank and Paytm Payments Bank have partnerships with Suryoday Small Finance Bank and IndusInd Bank, respectively.

PBs are niche banks that leverage technology for financial inclusion and are aimed at small businesses and low-income households.

According to RBI guidelines, the primary objective of setting up of PBs is to further financial inclusion by providing (i) small savings accounts and (ii) payments / remittance services to migrant labour workforce, low income households, small businesses, other unorganised sector entities and other users, by enabling high volume-low value transactions in deposits and payments / remittance services in a secured technology-driven environment.

Being a nascent business model that requires heavy overhead costs especially at the beginning, most of these banks are yet to turn profitable, per the Report on Trend and Progress of Banking in India 2019-20.

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