Shriram Group announces succession plan, creates management board of senior executives, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Financial services behemoth Shriram Group on Tuesday announced the creation of a board of management to drive the long-term vision of the conglomerate. The management board which included four senior group executives will oversee promoter interest and will be mentored by founder R Thyagarajan.

The Board of Management includes DV Ravi, MD, Shriram Capital, R. Duruvasan, Whole-time Director, Shriram Capital, Umesh Revankar, Non-Executive Director, Shriram Capital and Jasmit Singh Gujral, Non-executive Director, Shriram Capital. All the four senior members will be designated as trustees of the Shriram Ownership Trust.

“In my various interactions, I have reiterated that one individual cannot manage a large group like ours, it requires a set of individuals with varied skills who can collaborate to drive the group’s vision and strategy,” said R Thyagarajan, founder, Shriram group. “In line with my conviction, a leadership team that will oversee the SOT’s interest, as the promoter of the Shriram Group, has been constituted.”

As per the succession plan, the promoters stake in the Shriram Group, will be owned by its current and future leaders. The Shriram Ownership Trust, a private discretionary body was set up in 2006 to provide opportunity for the current and future leadership of the group to be beneficiaries of the Trust.

These beneficiaries will be responsible for the management of the Shriram Group. The board of the trust will constantly evaluates the performance of its leadership team and keep inducting additional members into the Trust to ensure the perpetuity of ownership and leadership.

“The Board of Management will be responsible for defining the long-term strategy of the individual entities and the group and overseeing its execution,” Thyagarajan said.

“The board members will manage essential areas that impact the group across entities and are not necessarily aligned to one particular entity. They will collaborate amongst themselves in a manner that will derive the optimum benefit to the group.”

Shriram Ownership Trust and Shriwell Trusts together own 42.9% of the unlisted Shriram Capital which is the holding company for all the businesses. The group has assets under management of more than Rs 2 lakh crore.

Sanlam Group has a 26% stake in the holding company, the Piramal Group has 20% and TPG Capital owns 9.4%.

ET had recently reported that the group is laying down plans to restructure its various financial services businesses that includes merging its two listed companies, Shriram Transport Finance and Shriram City Union Finance. Once the merger between the two listed companies takes place, Shriram Capital is likely to get reverse merged into the new combined listed entity. The insurance business will be spun out as a separate entity.

“There is a focus on doing some restructuring in the group, the exercise is going on and it could take a concrete shape in the next few months,” Thyagarajan said.



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Should you go for Shriram Transport FDs that offer up to 7.5% interest?

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Shriram Transport Finance Company (STFC) revised the interest rates on its fixed deposits last month. The company now offers 6.5 per cent and 6.75 per cent per annum, respectively on its one-year and two-year deposits. Three-year deposits can fetch you 7.5 per cent interest per annum. Senior citizens get an additional 0.3 per cent over these rates. Besides, the company offers an additional 0.25 per cent on all renewals.

At the current juncture, the STFC FD rates seem better than those offered by most banks and other similar-rated NBFCs. Though the company has never defaulted on its deposits, its current financials indicate some near-to-medium term stress in operations. Hence, investors with a high-risk appetite who seek additional returns, can invest in this FD. Do note, that unlike FDs offered by banks, those by NBFCs are not covered by the DICGC’s ₹5 lakh cover.

Investors can choose from monthly, quarterly, half yearly or annual interest payout options or the cumulative option where interest gets compounded and is paid at the time of maturity.

The minimum deposit amount is ₹5,000 and in multiples of ₹1,000 thereafter.

Investors who opt for the online route can choose from additional tenure deposits such as 15-month and 30-month deposits. The company offers 6.75 per cent and 7.5 per cent, respectively on such tenures, same as that offered on its two and three year deposits, respectively.

How they fare

As interest rates have bottomed out, rates are likely to inch up in the next two or three years. Hence, at the current juncture, it will be wise to lock into deposits with a tenure of one or two years only.

Currently banks (including most small finance banks) offer rates of up to 6.35 per cent per annum for one-year deposits and up to 6.5 per cent for two-year deposits. Suryoday Small Finance Bank however, offers 6.5 per cent on its one-to-two year deposits (both inclusive). While the rates offered by STFC are at par with those of Suryoday on the one-year FD, the former offers superior rates on deposits of other tenures. The rates on STFC’s deposits are also superior to those offered by similar-rated NBFCs.

The company’s FDs are rated FAAA(Stable) by CRISIL and MAA+ (Stable) by ICRA. Other AAA-rated NBFCs offer interest rates in the range of 5.25 to 5.7 per cent on their one-year deposits and up to 6.2 per cent on their two-year deposits.

About STFC

The company has a 42-year old track record of providing finance for commercial vehicles, predominantly in the high-yielding pre-owned HCV segment.

As of June 2021, its assets under management (AUM) totalled ₹ 1.19 lakh crore (up 6.75 per cent y-o-y ). About 90 per cent of the AUM was towards pre-owned vehicle loans and the rest was towards new vehicle loans (6 per cent), business loans (1.6 per cent), working capital loans (1.9 per cent) and other loans (0.1 per cent).

STFC has a strong branch network of 1,821 branch offices and 809 rural centres covering all states.

Given its heavy reliance on fleet and transport operators (HCV and construction equipment comprise about 48 per cent of its AUM and medium and light commercial vehicles constitute another 25.3 per cent), the company saw deterioration in asset quality in the recent quarter on account of lockdowns. In the June 2021 quarter, its gross Stage-3 assets worsened to 8.18 per cent from 7.06 per cent in the March 2021 quarter.

Even gross Stage-2 assets, which may slip to Stage-3 in the coming quarters, spiked to 14.53 per cent of the AUM compared to 11.9 per cent in the March quarter.

However, the company has a decent provision coverage ratio of 44 per cent and about 10 per cent for Stage 3 and Stage- 2 assets, respectively. Its is due to the spike in provisioning (up 35 per cent y-o-y) that the company saw a 47 per cent (y-o-y) drop in its net profit to ₹170 crore in the June 2021 quarter.

Besides, its proven past track record, strong capital and liquidity position offer additional comfort.

The company’s Capital to Risk Weighted Assets Ratio (CRAR) stood at 23.27 per cent in the June 2021 quarter and it has a positive asset liability mismatch in all buckets—ranging from one month to 5 years.

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Shriram Transport Finance Q1 net drops 47 per cent to ₹170 cr on higher provisions

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Shriram Transport Finance Company (STFC) on Friday reported a 47 per cent decline in consolidated net profit at ₹170 crore for the June quarter due to accelerated provisions against expected credit loss.

The company had registered a net profit of ₹320 crore in the same quarter a year ago. Compared sequentially, the net was down by 77.5 per cent from ₹755 crore in the March 2021 quarter.

Total income during Q1 FY22, however, was higher at ₹4,651.50 crore from ₹4,144.17 crore in Q1FY21, the company said in a regulatory filing.

Interest income rose to ₹4,479.28 crore from ₹4,102.58 crore.

STFC said certain segments of the company’s business operations were affected due to the prolonged lockdown imposed by state governments to curb COVID-19 infections.

The company has considered additional expected credit loss (ECL) on loans of ₹261 crore during the June quarter.

“As at June 30, 2021, additional ECL provision on loan assets as management overlay on account of Covid-19 stood at ₹2,852.50 crore,” it said.

The assets under management (AUM) stood at ₹1.19 lakh crore by end of June 2021, as against ₹1.12 lakh crore earlier.

The Q1 numbers include the results of STFC, the holding company, and associate firm Shriram Automall India Ltd.

STFC said its board of directors also approved periodical resource mobilisation by issuance of debt securities.

The company plans to issue such instruments on a private placement basis in tranches from August 1 to October 31, 2021, it added.

The flagship company of the Shriram Group, STFC mainly provides finance for commercial vehicle industry. Shriram Transport Finance stock closed 1.38 per cent up at ₹1,391.45 apiece on BSE.

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