Bank of Maharashtra tops PSU lenders chart in terms of loan, saving deposit growth in Q2, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


State-owned Bank of Maharashtra(BoM) has emerged as the top performer among public sector lenders in terms of loan and savings deposit growth during the second quarter of the current financial year, as per quarterly results data.

The Pune-headquartered lender recorded an 11.46 per cent increase in gross advances at Rs 1,15,236 crore in the July-September period of 2021-22, according to the published data of BoM.

It was followed by Punjab & Sind Bank which posted 9.53 per cent growth in advances with aggregate loans at Rs 67,574 crore at the end of September 2021, as per data from the bank’s quarterly results.

In terms of RAM (retail, agriculture and MSME) segment, the bank registered a highest growth rate of 14.24 per cent at Rs 70,515 crore.

When it came to deposit mobilisation, BoM with a 14.47 per cent growth was a notch behind Punjab and Sind Bank, while the country’s largest lender SBI recorded an 9.69 per cent rise.

However, in absolute terms, SBI’s deposit base was 20 times higher at Rs 36.90 lakh crore as against Rs 1.81 lakh crore of BoM.

Current account, savings account (CASA) for BoM saw a 22 per cent rise, the highest among the public sector lenders, during the quarter.

As a result, CASA was 54 per cent or Rs 97,889 crore of the total liability of the bank.

Total business of BoM increased 13.27 per cent to Rs 2.97 lakh crore at the end of September 2021.

For the second quarter, BoM’s standalone net profit more than doubled to Rs 264 crore as against Rs 130 crore in the same period a year ago.

During the quarter, the bank had written off bad loans worth Rs 1,100 crore including Rs 550 crore exposur to two SREI finance companies after making full provisions. RBI has taken SREI Infrastructure Finance and Equipment leasing company to bankruptcy court for resolution.

The bank’s asset quality improved significantly as the gross bad loans or gross non-performing assets (NPAs) dipped to 5.56 per cent of gross advances by the end of September 2021 as against 8.81 per cent by the end of the second quarter of the previous fiscal.

Net NPAs nearly halved to 1.73 per cent from 3.30 per cent at the end of second quarter of the last financial year, while provision coverage ratio improved to 92.38 per cent as against 87.15 per cent.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Srei lenders face Rs 5,000 cr provisioning for Srei loans, eroding DHFL recovery, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Lenders which were preparing to add the big DHFL recovery of over Rs 35,000 crore to their profits, may have to temper their celebrations. They will have to make provisioning for loans of Srei group firms, on which RBI has put an administrator.

Bankers will have to make an immediate provision of over Rs 5,000 crore, according to the rules.

According to the Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI’s) norms, Srei exposure will be treated as substandard asset, which is the first stage of non-performing asset (NPA). Banks will now have to set aside around 15 per cent provision for secured loans while it would be higher for unsecured credit.

Srei loans were stressed for many quarters, but lenders could not classify them as NPAs due to restrictions by the tribunals. However, they have made provisions for the Srei loans under general and Covid provisions.

Based on the results of a forensic audit, banks may have to even make 100 per cent provisions if the accounts are treated as fraud.

Promoters move court

Meanwhile, Srei Group promoters have moved the Bombay High Court challenging Reserve Bank of India’s decision to supersede the board of two group companies, in preparation for sending them to bankruptcy courts.

Srei group promoters are seeking stay on any insolvency proceedings at group companies Srei Infrastructure Finance Ltd and Srei Equipment Finance Ltd, whose board the regulator sacked and appointed an administrator.

The promoters are also seeking stay on the appointment of the administrator. On October 4, the banking regulator superseded the board of directors of Kolkata-based Srei Infrastructure Finance and Srei Equipment Finance and said that it will initiate insolvency proceedings with the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT). The RBI move makes Srei the second non-bank lender to be referred to the bankruptcy courts after DHFL.

The RBI cited governance concerns and defaults by the company and appointed Rajneesh Sharma, former chief general manager, Bank of Baroda as an administrator of the company.

In June 2021, Srei companies reported to the exchanges that the RBI inspection had flagged loans worth Rs 8,576 crore as related party loans. These accounted for nearly 30% of the group’s consolidated debt.

The loans

Srei Infrastructure, and its subsidiary Srei Equipment Finance, together owe lenders and debenture holders a total of Rs 30,000 crore. Kolkata-based UCO Bank is the lead lender, with more than Rs 2,000 crore of exposure. State Bank of India (SBI)’s exposure to the group is also more than Rs 2,000 crore.

The bank loans have turned non-performing assets after the end of the September quarter.

The company had earlier announced that Arena Investors, Makara Capital and others had evinced interest to invest in the company to the tune of Rs 2,200 crore. The company had formed a strategic coordination committee to coordinate, negotiate and conclude discussions with the investors.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Will Srei firms head for bankruptcy after RBI supersedes boards?, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


The Reserve Bank of India‘s move to supersede the boards of Srei group firms may see the companies head for the National Company Law Tribunal for corporate insolvency resolution under the IBC.

Most banks favour DHFL-type resolution for the group. However, the move may be opposed by Srei promoters, who have submitted a proposal to pay the full amount to banks under a scheme filed under Section 230 of the Companies Act 2013 in October 2020.

What Srei says

“We are shocked by the RBI’s move as banks have been regularly appropriating funds from the escrow account they have controlled since November 2020. Moreover, we have not received any communications from banks on any defaults,” Srei group said.

“The question of IBC does not arise because we have already submitted a debt realignment plan which has been accepted by some creditors. The plan involves paying every creditor their entire dues in a structured manner over time. in the past 10 months, the banks have collected Rs 3,000 crore through the TRA account. Hence, we are already repaying our loans. So the question of default does not arise. As banks had control over the company’s cash flow, we could not pay any other creditors. Nevertheless, the matter is sub-judice since it is with the tribunals and counts,” Srei had said. according to a report.

Srei Group was in talks for a debt realignment and lenders were waiting for the outcome of an ongoing forensic audit to take a call on debt realignment.

Related party lending?

In FY2020, RBI audit had flagged Rs 8,576 crore of probable related-party lending by Srei group.

“We had submitted a proposal to pay the full amount to banks under a scheme filed under Section 230 of the Companies Act 2013 in October 2020. However, they have neither accepted the scheme nor proposed a payment schedule acceptable to them. Banks have been controlling the company’s cash flow since November 2020. Almost Rs 3000 crore has been collected by them, out of which they have been disbursing to themselves, Srei said.

The loans

Srei Infrastructure, and its subsidiary Srei Equipment Finance, together owe lenders and debenture holders a total of Rs 30,000 crore. Kolkata-based UCO Bank is the lead lender, with more than Rs 2,000 crore of exposure. State Bank of India (SBI)’s exposure to the group is also more than Rs 2,000 crore.

The bank loans have turned non-performing assets after the end of the September quarter.

The company had earlier announced that Arena Investors, Makara Capital and others had evinced interest to invest in the company to the tune of Rs 2,200 crore. The company had formed a strategic coordination committee to coordinate, negotiate and conclude discussions with the investors.

The suitors

Till date, it received expressions of interest from 11 investors and has signed non-disclosure agreements with nine of them. Two Investors — Makara and Arena — had submitted non-binding term sheets indicating their intent for investment.

Srei Infrastructure, which is a listed entity, reported a net loss of Rs 971 crore in the June quarter as against Rs 23 crore net profit in the year ago period as provisions on loans rose nearly seven times to Rs 439 crore over the same period as repayment collections were hit due to the impact of the Covid 19 pandemic.

“The appointment of the administrator by the RBI paves the way for the corporate resolution process of the two Srei entities. Once the NCLT approves the same, the board of directors of these entities will stand suspended. A moratorium will be imposed on any proceedings against these entities, enforcement of any security or transfer of assets.

The CIRP will enable foreign creditors, including ECB lenders and bond holders to restructure their debts alongside domestic creditors. If a resolution plan is successfully approved under the CIRP, it will allow the companies to start on a clean slate, which is missing under the RBI stressed assets framework. This decision of RBI follows on the heels of a successful resolution process of DHFL,” Aashit Shah, Partner, J Sagar Associates, said.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Reserve Bank supersedes boards of Srei Infrastructure, Srei Equipment Finance, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


The Reserve Bank of India said on Monday it has superseded the board of directors of non-banking financial companies Srei Infrastructure Finance Ltd and Srei Equipment Finance Limited due to governance concerns and defaults, adding that it will initiate bankruptcy proceedings against them.

Rajneesh Sharma, the former Chief General Manager of the Bank of Baroda, has been appointed the administrator.

Last week, a consortium of lenders led by UCO Bank sought central bank directions on pursuing recovery of dues from the Srei Group after loans worth about Rs 30,000 crore to the Kolkata-based financier officially qualified to be moved to the list of non-performing assets (NPA) this quarter.

Srei Infrastructure, and its subsidiary Srei Equipment Finance, together owe lenders and debenture holders a total of Rs 30,000 crore. Kolkata-based UCO Bank is the lead lender, with more than Rs 2,000 crore of exposure. State Bank of India (SBI)’s exposure to the group is also more than Rs 2,000 crore.

The bank loans have turned non-performing assets after the end of the September quarter, two senior bank executives told ET.

The company had earlier announced that Arena Investors, Makara Capital and others had evinced interest to invest in the company to the tune of Rs 2,200 crore. The company had formed a strategic coordination committee to coordinate, negotiate and conclude discussions with the investors.

Till date, it received expressions of interest from 11 investors and has signed non-disclosure agreements with nine of them. Two Investors — Makara and Arena — had submitted non-binding term sheets indicating their intent for investment.

Srei Infrastructure, which is a listed entity, reported a net loss of Rs 971 crore in the June quarter as against Rs 23 crore net profit in the year ago period as provisions on loans rose nearly seven times to Rs 439 crore over the same period as repayment collections were hit due to the impact of the Covid 19 pandemic.

with inputs from Atmadip Ray



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Reserve Bank supersedes boards of Srei Infrastructure, Srei Equipment Finance, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


The Reserve Bank of India said on Monday it has superseded the board of directors of non-banking financial companies Srei Infrastructure Finance Ltd and Srei Equipment Finance Limited due to governance concerns and defaults, adding that it will initiate bankruptcy proceedings against them.

Rajneesh Sharma, the former Chief General Manager of the Bank of Baroda, has been appointed the administrator.

Last week, a consortium of lenders led by UCO Bank sought central bank directions on pursuing recovery of dues from the Srei Group after loans worth about Rs 30,000 crore to the Kolkata-based financier officially qualified to be moved to the list of non-performing assets (NPA) this quarter.

Srei Infrastructure, and its subsidiary Srei Equipment Finance, together owe lenders and debenture holders a total of Rs 30,000 crore. Kolkata-based UCO Bank is the lead lender, with more than Rs 2,000 crore of exposure. State Bank of India (SBI)’s exposure to the group is also more than Rs 2,000 crore.

The bank loans have turned non-performing assets after the end of the September quarter, two senior bank executives told ET.

The company had earlier announced that Arena Investors, Makara Capital and others had evinced interest to invest in the company to the tune of Rs 2,200 crore. The company had formed a strategic coordination committee to coordinate, negotiate and conclude discussions with the investors.

Till date, it received expressions of interest from 11 investors and has signed non-disclosure agreements with nine of them. Two Investors — Makara and Arena — had submitted non-binding term sheets indicating their intent for investment.

Srei Infrastructure, which is a listed entity, reported a net loss of Rs 971 crore in the June quarter as against Rs 23 crore net profit in the year ago period as provisions on loans rose nearly seven times to Rs 439 crore over the same period as repayment collections were hit due to the impact of the Covid 19 pandemic.

with inputs from Atmadip Ray



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY