Federal Bank aims ‘mid-teen’ growth in credit for FY22, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Private sector lender Federal Bank is aiming for an acceleration in credit growth into “mid-teen” figures in 2021-22 on the back of an economic recovery, a top official said on Tuesday. Its Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer Shyam Srinivasan said the increase in virus infections in states like Maharashtra needs to be watched, but exuded confidence that it will not affect the overall economic activity, terming it a “minor blip”.

“We are looking at a credit growth in the mid-teens levels for 2021-22. If you look at the growth in the third quarter of 2020-21, it will come at an annualised level of 10 per cent,” he said.

Srinivasan said a majority of the loan segments will grow at over 20 per cent levels and a few like corporate will also grow around 10 per cent to achieve the credit growth target next fiscal.

While more headroom exists for growth in share of gold loans in the overall book, the portfolio growth will moderate to 20-30 per cent levels from the current 60 per cent levels, he said.

There are early signs of a revival in private capital expenditure which will boost the corporate loan growth, and the same will be more visible by the second half of the current calendar year, he said.

The bank is “fairly close” to the objective of having a 55:45 split in the loan book between retail and wholesale loans, and would like to maintain it the same way going ahead as well.

From an asset quality perspective, Srinivasan said everybody is looking forward to the Supreme Court judgment on the standstill in asset recognition and hinted that a clarity will help in recovery efforts.

A non-classification as an NPA (non-performing asset) does not create the pressure on the borrower through poor credit scores and also restricts the bank from enforcing all the recovery efforts till the asset is a notional NPA, he said.

The bank has made provisions of over Rs 1,200 crore to increase its provision coverage ratio and maintains that it will be meeting its targets on return on assets by end of 2021-22, he said.

The overall collection efficiency is back to the pre-COVID-19 levels of over 90 per cent, Srinivasan said. He added that upcoming state elections in Kerala, Tamil Nadu, West Bengal and Assam have affected the collection intensity as governments ask banks to go slow.

The bank is set to launch its credit card offering by the next month to complete its product suite, Srinivasan said. After starting with its own staff, it will offer the card to existing customers starting in April and will go to new to bank customers by the end of the year, he said acknowledging the competition intensity in the segment.

For its non-bank lending subsidiary Fedfina, the bank will await clarity on rules expected later this year, and then decide whether to take the company public or let its private equity partner True North increase its stake in the company, Srinivasan said. The non-banking financial company has sufficient capital to last through the current year, he added.



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SC asks Franklin to disburse ₹9,000 crore to investors

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The Supreme Court on Tuesday ordered that ₹9,122 crore be disbursed within three weeks to the unitholders of Franklin Templeton’s six mutual fund schemes that are proposed to be wound up.

A Bench of Justices SA Nazeer and Sanjiv Khanna said the disbursal of money would be done in proportion to unitholders’ interest in the assets.

In the proceedings conducted through video conferencing, the Bench asked State Bank of India Mutual Fund to disburse the money as all the counsels gave consent to the court’s order.

The Bench granted liberty to the litigating parties to approach the court in case of any difficulty in the disbursal of money to the unitholders. The court also gave the parties liberty to move applications in case of any difficulty arising out of the process.

The lawyer, representing Franklin Templeton Trusts Services Limited, told the Bench that the company would render cooperation to SBI Mutual Fund.

A Franklin Templeton spokesperson said: “We are pleased that, as requested by us and in the best interests of unitholders, the court has directed the distribution of ₹9,122 crore (distributable surplus as of January 15, 2021) to unitholders. As previously stated, we went ahead with the difficult decision of winding up these schemes because of our firm belief that this was the right decision to preserve value for investors, as evidenced by the generation of cash in these schemes over the last 9 months.”

The Bench, had on January 25, said it would first deal with the issues related to objections to the e-voting process for winding up of the six mutual fund schemes and distribution of money to the unitholders. Prior to this, the apex court had granted three days for filing of objections to the e-voting on winding up of six mutual fund schemes of the company. It was also told by counsel for Franklin Templeton that an order be passed for allowing distribution of money to the unitholders.

E-voting process

Earlier, the apex court had asked the Securities and Exchange Board of India to appoint an observer for overseeing the e-voting process.

The voting on the winding up of Franklin Templeton’s six mutual fund schemes had taken place in the last week of December and was approved by the majority of unitholders.

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ICICI Bank’s Q3 net profit increases 17 pc to Rs 5,498 cr, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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ICICI Bank on Saturday reported a 17.73 per cent jump in its December quarter consolidated net profit at Rs 5,498.15 crore, as against Rs 4,670.10 crore in the year-ago period. On a standalone basis, the country’s second largest private sector lender by assets showed a 19.12 per cent rise in the post-tax profit at Rs 4,939.59 crore for the reporting quarter, up from Rs 4.146.46 crore in the October-December 2019 period.

Its total income increased to Rs 24,416 crore from the year-ago’s Rs 23,638 crore, while the total expenditure was lower at Rs 15,596 crore as against Rs 16,089 crore.

The reported gross non-performing assets ratio was at 4.38 per cent, but would have been 5.42 per cent if not for the Supreme Court order asking banks not to classify non-paying loan accounts as NPAs after the end of the loan repayment moratorium.

Its overall provisions increased to Rs 2,741 crore from the year-ago period’s Rs 2,083 crore, but lower when compared to the preceding quarter’s Rs 2,995 crore, as per its exchange filing.

It made a contingency provision of Rs 3,012.16 crore for borrower accounts not classified as NPAs pursuant to the interim order of the Supreme Court and utilised Rs 1,800 crore of the Rs 8,772.30 crore in provisions for the pandemic made earlier.

As at December 31, 2020, the bank held an aggregate COVID-19 related provision of Rs 9,984.46 crore, including contingency provision amounting to Rs 3,509.46 crore, it said.

It said the provisions held by it are more than what is required by the RBI and the bank’s capital and liquidity position are strong.

Its overall capital adequacy stood at 18.04 per cent as of December 31, 2020.



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Net profit rises 16% to Rs 1,853.5 crore; NII up 17%, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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MUMABI: Kotak Mahindra Bank today reported a net profit of Rs 1,853.5 crore as against Rs 1,595.90 crore, reflecting a growth of 16 per cent on a year-on-year basis.

The lender reported a gross non-performing assets ratio of 2.26 per cent for the reported quarter as against 2.55 per cent in the previous quarter.

Notwithstanding the Supreme Court’s standstill on bad loan recognition, the lender said that the gross NPA ratio would have stood at 3.27 per cent in the December quarter and net NPA ratio would have been at 1.24 per cent.

The lender’s net interest income rose 17 per cent on year to Rs 4,007 crore, while the net interest margin was largely stable on year at 4.51 per cent.

The private sector bank reported a 4.5 per cent sequential growth in advances in the quarter to Rs 2.14 lakh crore, which fared better than most peers who have reported earnings so far. However, on a year-on-year basis the lender’s loan book fell 1.2 per cent reflecting the conservative strategy adopted by the bank since onset COVID-19 pandemic.

Kotak Bank said that its Covid-related provisions stood at Rs 1,279 crore as on December 31, while it has approved restructure of loans under the special recast window provided by the Reserve Bank of India to the tune 0.28 per cent of net advances.

The bank said that proforma net non-performing assets at the end of the December quarter stood at Rs 2,646 crore with provisions worth Rs 2,262 crore held against them.

The lender reported strong operating performance in the quarter as the operating profit jumped 29 per cent year-on-year to Rs 3,083 crore.



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Shyam Srinivasan on why Federal Bank restructured book is half of estimates, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Customers who have gone for loan restructuring between December and March 31 will be roughly about 1-1.2% of our portfolio, says Shyam Srinivasan, MD & CEO, Federal Bank

Earlier, you had projected that Rs 3,500-crore loans will need to be restructured but the request has come for only Rs 1,500 crore. It is great news but how did this drastic fall come about?
The big difference between last quarter and this quarter is the reality. People have started seeing businesses doing better and generally the preference is not to be a restructured customer. December end is one milestone as in the retail and corporate customers had a chance to seek restructuring and we have seen experientially people have not opted to. Either they have paid or the situation is too bad for restructuring. I think this has worked out quite well. Customers who have the ability and belief that they will do well and will recover have sought restructuring and that number thankfully for us between December and March 31 will be roughly about 1-1.2% of our portfolio as opposed to our original belief that it might be higher.

We are largely out of recovery mode and are in growth mode now. Credit growth has increased. How do you think retail demand will play out – home loan, personal loan, auto loans? Also how will corporate side fare in comparison?
Retail has done well on a year on year basis. In terms of growth, it has been quite encouraging, particularly some products. If you really anchor January 2020 as one and then December 2020 as the other, in most businesses. it is running at about 100-120% of the January run rate. I believe the run rate will pick up from here as things improve and the economy shapes up more constructively. Thankfully for us, our gold loan business is doing remarkably well and our erstwhile SME business (captured as both commercial banking and business banking) has registered very strong sequential growth and YoY growth is almost nudging early teens.

Other than core large corporates where we saw de-growth, we believe all the other businesses have started seeing a very positive trajectory and that should continue. The corporate will be a little more muted. Also, there is probably an irrational pricing exercise. We are watchful about that.

Do you think a recovery in the corporate growth could be delayed? Will the budget play a vital role? Is it linked to a new capex cycle?
The pick up in corporate growth is probably going to be a little more delayed. We are all hoping the Budget sets the tone. It could give some fillip in certain areas. There may be a more meaningful demonstrative action around the longer tenure infra and nation building activities which typically create downstream exercises as projects go on-stream. I believe that maybe by the second half of this calendar year, a pick up will come through and that will filter through the system.

On the asset quality front, once the SC judgement is lifted, will it bring pain to light or will we have further normalisation of irregular accounts?
I think it is likely and I do not know if the Supreme Court has heard everybody a judgement may be passed sometime in this quarter, this month or next and that will bring to a close the lack of clarity on how to deal with this whole standstill but from a business point of view, we have all ensured that the treatment is to be given exactly the way if the accounts were to slip or otherwise. We all hope that some clarity emerges in the next few days and that overhang goes away so that people know where they stand and how to progress.

But will the environment pick up and things improve? There is vaccine-led optimism and there is a certain sense of comfort that the Budget may provide stimulus. A bunch of stuff is happening and could lead to a more encouraging recovery if not immediately but certainly by the second half of 2021.

Does a low rate environment pose a risk to the bank’s deposit franchise because people will now look to switch to higher yielding assets?
This is a little in the realm of speculation, We do not know which situation plays out but I have seen for many years that these theories come but the market and the banks and the system are mature enough to find that almost everything coexists. There may be minor tweaks here and there, but I do not believe that we will come to a day where banks deposits would not grow but all other categories will grow exponentially. That maybe a little far fetched.

There may be minor shifts in trajectory but not material. The banking system for a country like ours which is relatively unbanked even today is a very deep opportunity. I do not think deposits will evaporate and all gravitate to one asset category which typically tends to be the riskier category, I do not think that is a reality, at least I cannot foresee this for many, many years.

What is the outlook when it comes to digital marketing? What is Federal Bank doing to tap that opportunity?
For the first time we have dedicated five pages to outline the various things that happen digitally, just to point out we are now truly a meaningful player with digital capabilities. Over 86% of our transactions are digital whether it is account opening or transaction banking. Our digitally originated business is now a very material part. Products like personal loans are originated digitally. There is no hand touch, no human involvement, it is all technology driven and is completely automated.

In terms of transaction banking, our range of offerings compete with absolutely the best and we are seeing volume pickup on that count. That is how we have seen sharp growth in CASA and all this is driven by the digital capabilities and that will remain a focus area. We are the first and only bank probably to do facial recognition for our employees to log into our systems and the first and only bank probably. So all our staff show their faces and log into the system.

The RBI stability report says that NPAs could go as high as 14% system wide. However, the results from private banks seem to suggest otherwise. What is your outlook?
I do not think it is a question of who has got it right or wrong. It is actual scenario planning versus what happens on the ground. If every scenario planned were to happen, then that is one outcome but the reality on the ground sometimes tends to be better and sometimes adverse.

In a stressed situation, people may react very differently. When the forecasts were made, some assumptions were made but thankfully we are doing better than the assumptions and all of us hope that it continues to do better. Within this also, there will be a spectrum. Some will be at the better end of the spectrum and some for historic reasons could be on the other side of the spectrum. So you cannot generalise on this.



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Plea in Delhi High Court against Lakshmi Vilas Bank-DBS merger say shareholders shortchanged, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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A plea in the Delhi High Court has challenged the scheme of amalgamation of Lakshmi Vilas Bank with Development Bank of Singapore (DBS), contending that its shareholders have been “left in the lurch” and the Centre and the Reserve Bank have failed to protect their interests. The petition was listed before a bench of Chief Justice D N Patel and Justice Jyoti Singh on January 13, but was adjourned to February 19 after the bench was told that the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has moved a plea in the Supreme Court to transfer all pleas against the amalgamation scheme to the Bombay High Court.

The petition in the Delhi High Court has been filed by lawyer Sudhir Kathpalia, who was also a shareholder in Lakshmi Vilas Bank (LVB) and lost his 20,000 shares in the company due to the amalgamation scheme.

Kathpalia has sought quashing of the clause in the scheme which states that from the date of merger, “the entire amount of the paid-up share capital and reserves and surplus, including the balances in the share/securities premium account of the transferor bank, shall stand written off”.

The petition has said that under the scheme, DBS was not required to give any shares to the LVB investors in return and they were “left in the lurch”.

The amalgamation scheme was approved by the RBI on November 25, 2020 and the merger took place on November 27, 2020.

The petition has contended that the Centre and RBI have failed to protect the interests of the shareholders.

It has also claimed that DBS was chosen for the merger without inviting bids from other banks and financial institutions.

It has alleged that the “scheme of amalgamation was irregular, arbitrary, irrational, unreasonable, illegal and thus, void”.



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Supreme Court to hear pleas against farm laws, issues related to farmers’ protest on January 11

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The Supreme Court on Wednesday said it would hear on January 11 a batch of pleas challenging the new farm laws as also those raising issues related to the ongoing farmers’ protest at Delhi’s borders.

A bench headed by Chief Justice S A Bobde, which observed that there is no improvement on the ground regarding the farmers’ protests, was told by the Centre that “healthy discussions” are going on between the government and farmers on these issues.

Attorney General K K Venugopal said there is a good chance that the parties may come to a conclusion in the near future and filing of a response by the Centre on the pleas challenging the new farm laws might foreclose the negotiations between the farmers and government.

Solicitor General Tushar Mehta, while informing the bench that talks are going on between the government and farmers in a “healthy atmosphere”, said that these matters should not be listed for hearing on January 8.

“We understand the situation and encourage the consultation. We can adjourn the matters on Monday (January 11) if you submit the same due to the ongoing consultation process,” the bench said.

The top court was hearing a plea challenging the farm laws.

 

 

 

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RBI, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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India’s financial sector should brace for challenging times ahead with an increased risk of deterioration in asset quality and lower demand for loans, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) said in a report on Tuesday.

The central bank has introduced various measures to support the banking sector including a relaxation in recognition and provisions for bad loans to protect lenders and creditors during the coronavirus pandemic.

The roll back of these measures could now hit the books of banks.

“The challenge is to rewind various relaxations in a timely manner, reining in loan impairment and adequate capital infusion for a healthy banking sector,” the central bank said it in its annual report on Trends and Progress of Banking in India.

Non-banking financial companies (NBFCs) or shadow banks may see a hit on their profitability going forward due to asset quality concerns, lower credit demand and the tendency to preserve cash, the report said.

Toxic loans on the books of Indian banks have eased with gross bad loan ratios falling to 7.5% at the end of September 2020 from 9.1% in March, but it said that going forward such loans could rise again following relaxations being lifted.

The six-month loan moratorium on repayments provided by central banks and the supreme court judgment prohibiting recognition of bad loans since September may have also provided some respite to the banks on asset quality.

Concerns still remain on non-performing assets, particularly on credit card loans which does not augur well for the risk-profile of Indian banks.

“Given the uncertainty induced by COVID-19 and its real economic impact, the asset quality of the banking system may deteriorate sharply going forward,” the RBI said.

The report also said Indian banks had written-off loans worth 2.38 trillion rupees ($32.46 billion) in the financial year 2020 that ended on March 31.

The overall outlook for the Indian economy in 2021 continues to remain uncertain, the report said.

“The high debt overhang of households, non-financial corporates and the (national and sub-national) governments remains a serious concern,” the central bank said.

($1 = 73.3270 Indian rupees) (Reporting by Nupur Anand and Aftab Ahmed; Editing by David Evans)



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Moratorium, loan recoveries help Indian banks improve GNPA ratio, but will it sustain?

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While the overall lending rates have declined when we look at the headline rates, the transmission is probably slower when we look at various products or risk segments.

India’s banking sector saw its gross non-performing assets (GNPA) come down in the second quarter of this fiscal year. The GNPA ratio of SCBs improved to 7.7% in the quarter ended September against 9.3% in the year-ago period, CARE Ratings said in a report. Although the asset quality of the banks seems to be better, the improvement has come owing to the moratorium offered by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), recoveries and higher write-offs made by multiple banks. “As per disclosures by banks, the Gross NPAs would have been around 0.5% to 0.6% higher had these (moratorium) accounts been classified as NPAs,” the report said.

Asset quality improves

Among state-owned banks, India’s largest lender State Bank of India (SBI) reported the highest asset quality improvement, with a decline in GNPA ratio to 5.3% in the second quarter of this fiscal year against 7.2% a year ago. SBI accounts for nearly 20% of public sector bank GNPAs. Punjab National Bank (PNB) reported GNPAs at 13.4% against 16.8% a year ago. “Net NPAs also shrank to Rs 2.1 lakh crores in Q2FY21 from Rs 4.5 lakh crores in Q2FY19 reflecting an increase in provision coverage ratio (PCR),” CARE Ratings said. 

Recoveries were better in the fiscal second quarter, helping in improving the asset quality of banks. SBI’s recoveries stood at Rs 4,038 crore, ICICI Bank was at Rs 1,945 crore, followed by Bank of Baroda with Rs 1,642 crore worth of recoveries. “On an overall basis PSBs accounting for 75% share of GNPAs of SCBs have experienced a drop in the GNPA ratio to 9.3% in the quarter ended September against 11.6% in the year-ago period,” the report highlighted. 

Skeletons to be unearthed ahead?

CARE Ratings said that now that the moratorium offered by the banks has been lifted, the after-effect and the impact on the banks’ balance sheets may be witnessed in the latter part of the year and subsequent period. Banks have been ordered to not declare covid-19 related defaults as NPAs until further notice, hence keeping the GNPA ratio lower. However, following this many banks have kept aside extra provisioning for NPAs that may arise in future, making higher provisions in September. 

The report said that in the coming quarters provisions of SCBs are likely to remain elevated on account of the recognition of stressed assets owing to Covid-19 and its disruptions affecting the businesses which could impact the financial performance.

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