Equitas Small Finance Bank to raise Rs 1,000cr, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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New Delhi, Oct 18 (PTI) Equitas Small Finance Bank (SFB) on Monday said it will raise up to Rs 1,000 crore through a QIP in order to fulfil the regulatory norms regarding minimum public shareholding. “The board of directors in the meeting today has approved meeting the minimum public shareholding (MPS) requirements stipulated by Sebi by raising a sum not exceeding Rs 1,000 crore (including premium) through Qualified Institutions Placement (QIP),” Equitas SFB said in a regulatory filing.

As per the Sebi norms under Issue of Capital and Disclosure Requirements (ICDR), the SFB is also required to obtain shareholders‘ approval for meeting the MPS requirement. As per data on BSE, the promoter and promoter group have 81.75 per cent stake in Equitas SFB as on June 30, 2021. While the remaining 18.25 per cent is public shareholding.

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J&K Bank gets shareholders’ nod to raise up to Rs 2,000 cr via equity, debt, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Jammu and Kashmir Bank on Friday said it has received shareholders‘ nod to raise up to Rs 2,000 crore through equity and debt to fund its business. The shareholders at the annual general meeting on Friday approved the plan to raise equity and debt capital of up to Rs 1,000 crore each.

They approved raising of equity capital of up to Rs 1,000 crore in one or more tranches by way of rights issue/preferential allotment/private placement or qualified institutional placement (QIP) or any other approved mode, the bank said in a regulatory filing.

Also, shareholders approved raising up to Rs 1,000 crore by issuing Basel III compliant tier-II bonds in the nature of non-convertible debentures on a private placement basis.

Shareholders also cleared the appointment of Nitishwar Kumar and Mohmad Ishaq Wani as directors. PTI DP ABM ABM

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Dhanlaxmi Bank’s auditors under spotlight as shareholders reject their appointment, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Statutory auditors of Dhanlaxmi Bank, PB Vijayaraghavan & Co, have come under the spotlight after the shareholders of the Kerala-based lender rejected their appointment at its 94th Annual General Meeting held on Wednesday (September 29), the scrutinizer report filed to the stock exchanges on Thursday showed.

Over 65 per cent of the votes were cast against the resolution to appoint PB Vijayaraghavan & Co as the bank’s statutory auditors. For an ordinary resolution to be passed, more than 50 per cent votes need to cast for the resolution.

PB Vijayaraghavan & Co were seeking reappointment for the third year (FY2021-22), and proposed to be paid a total fees of Rs 48 lakh by Dhanlaxmi bank. The Reserve Bank had already accorded approval for their appointment. The Chennai-based auditors, were the branch/ statutory central auditors of the bank during the period 2003-04 to 2008-09, FY 2019-20 and for FY 2020-21, Dhanlaxmi Bank’s annual report for 2020-21 showed.

P B Vijayaraghavan’s rejection as statutory auditors came at a time when Dhanlaxmi Bank’s financial health has been under question and the lender is also facing issues of corporate governance. The auditors, P B Vijayaraghavan, gave a clean chit to the bank in the last two years, issuing an “unqualified opinion”, the bank’s annual reports for FY20 and FY21 showed.

“It seems that the shareholders aren’t happy with the bank’s performance in the recent times and have shown their anger by rejecting the appointment of the statutory auditors,” Shriram Subramanian, MD at proxy advisory firm, InGovern told ETCFO.

Another expert echoed the same point. “It is possible that statutory auditors of the bank were not adequately questioning the management and therefore their independence was seen under doubt by the shareholders, which possibly led to their ouster,” said Mohit Saraf, founder & managing partner, Saraf & Partners.

Shares of Dhanlaxmi Bank closed 0.94 per cent higher on the BSE.



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RBI imposes Rs 2 crore penalty on RBL Bank for offending regulatory orders, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The Reserve Bank of India has imposed a penalty of Rs 2 crore on RBL Bank for offending regulatory directions, and being non-compliant with the provisions of the Banking Regulation Act, 1949.

The penalty has been imposed because of contravention of directions on interest rate and deposits, and failure of compliance with the provisions of the Act, pertaining to the extent of opening five savings accounts in the name of co-operative banks, and composition of the bank’s board.

“This action is based on deficiencies in regulatory compliance and is not intended to pronounce upon the validity of any transaction or agreement entered into by the bank with its customers,” the central bank said in a press release.

The decision came after the central bank conducted a Statutory Inspection for Supervisory Evaluation in 2019, and a Risk Assessment Report and Inspection Report based on the ISE.

The RBI has issued a notice to the bank, asking for reasons why the penalty should not be imposed.

The fine comes right after nearly 100% of RBL Bank’s shareholders approved the reappointment of Vishwavir Ahuja as the MD and CEO for the fourth term, starting June 1.

Though the board had approved his fourth 3-year term, the RBI in June had only cleared his reappointment only for one year.



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Central Bank of India to seek shareholders’ nod to set off accumulated loss of Rs 18,724 cr, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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State-owned Central Bank of India will seek shareholders‘ approval in its ensuing annual general meeting (AGM) next month to set off accumulated loss of over Rs 18,724 crore from the share premium account of the bank. The next AGM is scheduled for August 10, 2021 through audio/video means.

The bank said it will seek shareholders’ consent to set off the accumulated losses of Rs 18,724.22 crore as on March 31, 2021 by utilising the balance standing to the credit of share premium account of the bank as on date to set off and take the same into account during the current financial year 2021-22.

“The bank is of the view that this it the most practical and economically efficient option available to the bank in the present scenario so as to present a true and fair view of the financial position of the bank,” it said in a regulatory filing.

Central Bank of India said the setting off of accumulated loss would benefit the shareholders of the bank as their holding will yield better value. It will also enable the bank to explore opportunities to the benefit of the shareholders of the bank.

It will also put the bank in a better position to achieve its turnaround plans in time-bound manner, the lender said.

Share premium balance is a reserve that can only be used for the defined purposes.

A share premium account reflects the difference between the face value of shares and the subscription price of the shares.



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

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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.



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Paytm extends deadline for shareholders to submit documents for share sale to June 30

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Digital payments and financial services firm Paytm has extended the deadline for shareholders, employees and former employees to submit their documents by June 30, if they wish to sell their shares in the planned initial public offering of the company.

One97 Communications, which operates services under the Paytm brand name, is planning an initial public offering of its equity shares which is contemplated to include a fresh issue of equity shares by the company and an offer-for-sale of equity shares by the existing shareholders of the company.

Also read: Paytm loss narrows to ₹1,704 cr in FY21

In a notice to its shareholders Paytm said, “in the interest of providing additional time to our shareholders, due to the on-going situation, to process all the documentation shared and dispatch them to us, we are extending the last date to submit documents for participation in the Offer from June 22, 2021 to June 30, 2021.” The equity holders had expressed concern about inability to meet the timeline of June 22, for submission of requisite documents, as per the notice.

Ownership pattern

Paytm shareholders include Alibaba’s Ant Group (29.71 per cent), Softbank Vision Fund (19.63 per cent), Saif Partners (18.56 per cent), Vijay Shekhar Sharma (14.67 per cent). AGH Holding, T Rowe Price and Discovery Capital, Berkshire Hathaway hold less than 10 per cent stake in the company.

Paytm has plans to raise up to ₹12,000 crore by issuing fresh equity for which it will seek shareholder’s nod in an Extraordinary General Meeting (EGM) on July 12.

The company will also seek approval to declassify Paytm founder and managing director Vijay Shekhar as a promoter at the EGM.

Paytm will seek shareholders’ approval to authorise Sharma, Paytm president and group chief financial officer Madhur Deora, chief financial officer Vikas Garg and company secretary Amit Khera to be authorised to execute and deliver any and all other documents, papers or instruments, issue and provide certificates and carry out all activities required for the proposed offer.

According to a Bernstein report published on May 27, Paytm revenue may double by the financial year 2023 to over ₹7,000 crore with the non-payments segment contributing around 33 per cent to the overall kitty.

“With increased financial discipline and targeted strategic investments, Paytm is on track to break even in 12-18 months,” the report said.

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PNB convenes EGM to elect a 2nd shareholder director to its Board

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Punjab National Bank (PNB), the country’s second largest public sector bank, has convened an extraordinary general meeting (EGM) on March 17 to elect ‘one shareholder director’. This will be a virtual meeting of shareholders.

This move is significant as the bank is now looking to rope in its second shareholder director on the strength of a recent Finance Ministry decision empowering Public Sector Banks ( PSB) boards to act on the decisions that remained held up at various board-level committees due to lack of quorum arising from vacancies or recusal by existing directors.

A shareholder director is one who is elected from among shareholders other than central government. A public sector bank has two main categories of shareholders— central government and ‘other shareholders’ (public shareholders). In India, all the public sector banks are listed entities although none of them are registered as companies under the Companies Act. There are separate legislations that govern the Board composition of such PSBs.

 

The elected shareholder director is finally appointed by the Nomination and Remuneration Committee (NRC) of the bank Board concerned. PNB currently does not have the requisite NRC strength and is therefore looking to get another shareholder director through Board approval route after election of such a director by the shareholders of the bank at an EGM.

PNB has moved to get another shareholder director after its recent nearly ₹3,788 crore qualified institutional placement (QIP), which saw the centre’s shareholding in the bank drop from 85.59 per cent to 76.87 per cent. With the Centre’s shareholding coming down, PNB became technically eligible to have two shareholder directors.

Having an additional shareholder director on a Board is useful for Banks like PNB as all shareholder directors are counted as independent directors for the purpose of compliance with SEBI regulations for listed entities.

In Boards of public sector banks, there are executive directors appointed by central government, there is government nominee director (official of central government), there is a RBI nominee director, two employee directors ( representing workmen and officers) and other directors (shareholder directors).

This will be the second shareholder director for PNB besides Asha Bhandarker, who was elected on September 12,2018 for a period of three years.

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Shareholders to file plaints against directors of Madgaum coop bank, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Shareholders of the Madgaum urban cooperative bank on Sunday took a resolution to file criminal complaints against the board of directors of the bank and take legal action if FIRs are not registered.

Shareholders of Madgaum urban bank had the meeting after the AGM of Dec 26 that was adjourned to Jan 10 was cancelled by the BoD.

They also resolved to demand a list of defaulters and all details as promised in the AGM on December 26 within ten days.

If the list is not provided within the stipulated time, then the shareholders have resolved to gherao all directors at their place of residence or work to force them to resolve the crisis.

The shareholders stated that they must be provided with a list of movable properties, immovable and collateral securities and liquid cash with the bank as on date.

The staff of the bank must be reduced, especially contract staff, and the bank must cut down on its rent they stated.

The shareholders also resolved that the bank should resolve the locker issue by adopting an easy legal procedure as those who have lockers are facing a problem accessing them and stated that the bank must support them to find a solution to it as it doesn’t come under the purview of the RBI.

The shareholders appealed to directors to support them and inform them of the discrepancies of other directors instead of hiding it from them.



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