Indusind Bank says whistleblower claims baseless; gave 84k loans sans client consent in May, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Mumbai, Terming whistleblower allegations on loan evergreening as “grossly inaccurate and baseless”, Indusind Bank on Saturday admitted to have disbursed 84,000 loans without customer consent in May owing to a “technical glitch”. Lending without the consent was reported by the field staff in two days, and the glitch was also rectified expeditiously, the private sector lender said in a clarification.

On Friday, there was a media report about anonymous whistleblowers writing to the bank management and the RBI about BFIL, the microlending-focused subsidiary of the bank, allegedly resorting to evergreening of loans, wherein existing borrowers unable to pay dues were given new loans to present the books as clean.

“The bank strongly denies the allegations of ‘evergreening’. All the loans originated and managed by BFIL, including during the COVID period which saw the first and second waves ravaging the countryside, are fully compliant with the regulatory guidelines,” an official statement said.

“Due to a technical glitch in May 2021, nearly 84,000 loans were disbursed without the customer consent getting recorded at the time of loan disbursement,” it added.

“Operational issues” due to the pandemic’s second wave like lockdowns, containment zones, and restrictions at the village/panchayat level had necessitated disbursement of some loans in cash, it said.

At the end of September, 26,073 of these 84,000 clients were active with the loan outstanding at Rs 34 crore, which is 0.12 per cent of the September-end portfolio, the bank said, adding that it carries necessary provisions against the loans.

It also said that the Standard Operating Procedure has since been revised to make biometric authorization compulsory, and that in October 2021, nearly 100 per cent of the loan disbursements were in the bank accounts of the customers, as in pre-COVID time.

During the pandemic, customers faced operational difficulties and some have turned to intermittent payers, though a large part of them demonstrated a strong intent to repay on many occasions, the bank statement said.

The bank added that help was rendered to such clients, including through additional liquidity support to the extent of 20 per cent of the outstanding as on February 29, 2020 as applicable under the ECLGS (Emergency credit line guarantee Scheme), restructuring, and additional loan with a longer tenor and lower EWI (equated weekly instalments) for customers, after they cleared of their arrears and with their due consent.

It can be noted that nearly all the lenders have reported reverses on the microloans front since the beginning of the pandemic. The activity is concentrated in rural areas, where field agents of a lender go deep to disburse loans and also collect dues in cash on a weekly basis.

With the easing of the lockdown measures, all lenders are reporting an improvement in collections and also disbursements.

Indusind Bank management had reported an increase in stress in the microfinance loans portfolio, with the gross non-performing assets ratio moving up to 3.01 per cent as of September, up from 1.69 per cent in June.

The fresh slippages in the book had stood at Rs 1,070 crore in the September quarter, while the net after-recoveries and upgrades stood at Rs 460 crore.

As per the media report on Friday, communication from the whistleblowers to the bank’s chief executive Sumant Kathpalia, independent directors and RBI officials had happened between October 17 and October 24. Additionally, there was also an “outsider” who had written to RBI on October 14, it said.

The report had highlighted that a month prior to the October 14 complaint, BFIL’s non-executive chairman M R Rao had stepped down and also flagged RBI’s concerns on the loans given without customer consent in his resignation letter, calling it a deliberate act to shore up repayment rates. PTI AA DRR DRR



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Whistleblowers raise loan evergreening issue at IndusInd arm, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Acting as whistleblowers, several people, including a group of senior employees of the IndusInd Bank arm, Bharat Financial Inclusion (BFIL), have alerted the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) and the board of the private sector lender about lapses in governance and accounting norms to allegedly ‘evergreen’ loans running into thousands of crores since the outbreak of Covid-19.

According to them, if the IndusInd management is unable to quickly correct the practice of “adjusting new loan money with overdues from earlier loans”, the subsidiary BFIL would eat into the financials of the parent. These alleged transactions to dress-up the books have damaged the micro-lending business built over the years and could even trigger political backlash, the group warned in at least two emails to IndusInd’s Bank CEO Sumant Kathpalia, some independent directors and RBI officials between October 17 and 24.

IndusInd took over the micro-finance lender BFIL – formerly SKS Microfinance – in a stock deal in March 2019.

Kathpalia did not respond to queries from ET. An official of a PR agency hired by the bank said, “The bank has received complaint from anonymous person(s). The bank has a well established policy to deal with such matters and the veracity of the allegations/complaints are being assessed. While management review is in progress, the bank has yet not come across any material findings that warrant immediate action on any count (sic).”

Two persons familiar with the developments said that on October 14, there was a separate whistleblower complaint from an ‘outsider’ to RBI, saying that suggestions to set up risk management and audit committees for BFIL were ignored as the unlisted micro-lending subsidiary of IndusInd was not required to meet Clause 49 conditions of the listing agreement. It also talked about “process lapses” in extension of loan contracts, cash disbursement and accounting practices.

BFIL’s Former Non-Exec Chair Raised Red Flags
Micro-lending companies disburse loans through banking channels but collect cash while recovering loans. Cash collection for most micro-finance companies dropped due to the pandemic, particularly during the second wave.

Significantly, a month before the October 14th whistleblower complaint, non-executive chairman of BFIL M R Rao stepped down. In his September 15th resignation letter to board members, Rao, who had been the CEO of BFIL (SKS), said, “…I am aware that RBI has raised issues with respect to BFIL particularly the 80,000 loans given in May 2021, without customer consent. This is a point on which I expressed deep concern in the board and in fact demanded a third-party audit too. To me it appears to be not a process lapse but a deliberate act to shore up repayment rates. I had warned the board too about the serious consequences…”

Rao did not respond to ET’s queries and declined to confirm whether he was among the whistleblowers. S Dilliraj, former president of the company who has worked with Rao for years, also declined to comment. Rao has asked the board to cancel the non-compete agreement he has with the company.

A person who identifies and declares himself as a ‘whistleblower’ before RBI expects a degree of legal protection. Also, the regulator does not disclose the identity of the whistleblower.

While an IndusInd Bank official said that the bank had stepped up provisioning on its portfolio of micro loans, one of the whistleblower emails alleged that two senior officials of BFIL, who were primarily responsible for hiding non-performing loans, have been threatening employees and tracking their call records to restrain them from talking about the matter. Another email said that the government’s ECLGS scheme, which was intended to provide emergency line of credit in the wake of the pandemic, was used to “adjust arrears instead of giving credit to customers.”



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

IndusInd Bank to raise climate financing to 3.5% in 2 years, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


NEW DELHI: Private sector IndusInd Bank on Saturday said it will reduce carbon emissions to 50 per cent in next four years and raise climate financing to 3.5 per cent in two years.

The bank will be increasing the allocation of capital towards climate finance to 3.5 per cent of its loan book over the next two years, which is currently at 2.7 per cent, IndusInd Bank said on the occasion of the World Environment Day.

The bank has also committed to reducing its specific carbon emission by 50 per cent over the next four years, it said in a release.

The bank promoted by the Hinduja group also said it has made it to the Carbon Disclosure Project (CDP) list for the sixth consecutive time, making it the only Indian bank to get featured in this prestigious list.

Among others, IndusInd Bank Managing Director and CEO Sumant Kathpalia said the bank is transforming all its pioneer branches /lobbies into green and plastic free zones and getting them LEED certified.

The bank is also supporting tree plantation drive under which 50,000 trees will be planted in cities with high pollution index.

It has also launched an employee awareness drive, helped install solar solutions of 675 KW capacity which has reduced carbon emission worth 8,278 tonnes and created water harvesting capacity of about 70 million cubic meters and also restored 15 lakes and two drainage systems.

Roopa Satish, Head – Corporate & Investment Banking, CSR & Sustainable Banking, IndusInd Bank said, “The Bank is determined to take a leadership position in mitigating the impact of climate change through committing long term targets and deploying a strategy to invest in clean energy and energy efficient projects.”

She said IndusInd Bank is also one among 21 Indian companies and the only Indian bank to be featured in the Dow Jones Sustainability Index Yearbook 2021.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

IndusInd Bank MD plans to sell some shares held via previous ESOP, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


The MD and CEO of IndusInd Bank, Sumant Kathpalia plans to sell some of his share in the bank through previous Employee Stock Options (ESOP).

In a regulatory filing the bank said that he will sell the shares to repay loans taken to exercise earlier vested ESOPS.”Sumant Kathpalia, Managing Director & CEO of the Bank, plans to sell some shares of IndusInd Bank Limited held by him through exercise of previous Employee Stock Options (ESOPs), principally to exercise upcoming ESOP vesting and to repay loans taken to exercise earlier vested ESOPs,” it said.

Follow and connect with us on , Facebook, Linkedin



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY