Samit Ghosh, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


We would have to stabilise the organisation, reverse merge and then, we will take up the universal bank licence largely because it is more efficient to operate from a capital perspective because the capital adequacy requirement in small finance bank is 15% whereas an effective capital adequacy requirement in universal bank is about 8%, says Samit Ghosh, Founder, Ujjivan Financial Services.

Ujjivan Financial Services is the holding company of Ujjivan Small Finance Bank and we have seen the small finance bank reporting losses and higher NPAs which can be attributed to the second Covid wave. But what led to such losses and when can we expect to return to profitability?
As far as the business is concerned Nitin (Nitin Chugh, MD & CEO of Ujjivan SFB) is the right person to answer this question. From our perspective, obviously the impact was because of the second Covid wave, which took a toll on our portfolio and right now it is in recovery mode. But we do not know when the next wave is going to hit because not enough Indians have been vaccinated and with the festive season coming, there could be another knock down effect on us.

We have been very concerned about the portfolio quality and the management of the portfolio business. We are closely monitoring it and this is something we have been worried about not just now, but from last year itself. We are a very conservative organisation and we always believed that we should provide upfront and take appropriate action because that has been our philosophy in the past and that is what we would like to see again.

RBI has approved the merger of holding companies with small finance banks. When do you see that happening for your company?
We complete five years in the beginning of February and we can apply three months before that. So we would be applying three months before February, around November. Once RBI clears us for reverse merger, the whole process might take between 9 and 12 months. There are hurdles not only in the RBI but also from the Sebi perspective. There are a couple of issues for which they have to give us clearance. We are keenly watching what happens to Equitas because they are ahead of us in this process and we will follow suit. But our process will start in November and once our approval is there by February, it will take another 9 to 12 months.

A lot of people are watching very closely whether or not you have the intention to become a universal bank. Is that something that you are still considering and what work is being done towards that end?
Firstly we have to reverse merge. That is the first step and it will stabilise us. We are going through a very difficult time right now, not only from a portfolio quality point of view but also from a people retention point of view. Lot of the people who actually built Ujjivan have left and that makes life more difficult for us. We would have to stabilise the organisation, reverse merge and then, we will take up the universal bank licence largely because it is more efficient to operate from a capital perspective because the capital adequacy requirement in small finance bank is 15% whereas an effective capital adequacy requirement in universal bank is about 8%. That we will take up after our own reverse merger process is over,



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Equitas SFB, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


PN Vasudevan, MD & CEO, Equitas SFB, talks about the impact of Covid second wave on collection efficiency. However, he believes that the impact is not going to be long term or structural. Edited excerpts:

It has been a relatively better quarter in a very tough environment and this is on account of the second wave of the Covid-19 pandemic but NIMs have improved compared with the last quarter and operating profit has also improved. There is some stress can you take us through the performance that you have seen?
Yes, I mean we all know that most of the first quarter was really under lockdown because of the wave-2 and people were not able to go out, customers were not able to open their shops, so it was definitely a lot of stress period during this period. Unlike last year, the level of health impact was much higher even though the time period of the wave was so much shorter but the health impact was higher so people were definitely not to take any risk of going out during that time. So, all that did have its impact on our business and collections.

On top of that, this year RBI had announced restructuring program but they had not announced a moratorium period. In our case most of our borrowers are small business people, who when they open their shop, make money and they repay the loans, when they cannot open their shops there is very little that they actually can do. Last year, because of moratorium they were not moved into NPA, they just went under moratorium but this year, since there was no moratorium they either had to pay or ask for a restructuring or their DPD just keeps moving up so that was the scenario this year. We did see an increase in NPA, we went up from 3.6 to 4.6% and we did see a slippage of about 375 crores which was lower than the previous quarter, but still one of the highest that we have seen in the past but very significantly what we have to see, is the level of upgrades. We had an upgrade of nearly about 150 crores.

Can you give us the sense of what the slippages and the recoveries are going to be over the next couple of quarters, I know it is going to be hard to predict but quite a few of the financiers that we have spoken to have said that stress continues in the segments that you operate in?
So, historically our annual slippages have been in the range of around 3-4%, that has been historically our trend of slippages and recoveries used to be around 2%-2.5%. This year, this first quarter we had a spike in the slippage, but we also had a good strong recovery upgrade also happening. So, going forward into the second and the subsequent quarters of the current financial year, we believe that we are mostly through with our wave-2 impact on the books. We have rescheduled about 900 crores between first quarter and July and we have also indicated that we might have a potential restructuring of another between 500 to 700 crores for the rest of the year.

I think mostly the stressed customers should have been fully supported and taken care of and provided for. So, we do not really expect much of slippages like what we saw in the first quarter, we do not really expect that to continue in the second and the subsequent quarters while the upgrades should keep the momentum going because the quality of NPA is much better than what it has normally traditionally been and so we do expect better upgrades but the slippages should significantly come down going forward.

Want to talk about your book and your approach to growing the book, a lot of companies have taken a very cautious stance in light of the current scenario. What approach are you going to take?
If you look at our client profile, most of them are small business people and practically all of them are first time borrowers in the formal financial sector. We have been dealing with this segment of people now for more than 11 years. So, we understand the segment very well and we have a very strong cash flow based credit assessment program which is running on the ground and so we can take a very nuanced call in terms of the credit decision for this profile of borrowers. We are very comfortable with our customer segment. These stresses that we are seeing are all definitely an event triggered temporary kind of a disruption. We do not see it as a structural or a long term kind of an issue in the market or at the customer profile segment. We should continue to be looking to pursue growth as and when the market opens up and supports our operations on the ground.

So, we are not really going to take a call in terms of cutting back or pulling back for fresh disbursement or anything like that. These customers have proven their track record with us for over 10 years and so that is a very strong indication of the quality of these borrowers. So we will continue to keep looking for opportunities to disburse whenever the market is conducive. In terms of credit growth, I think last year we had a 15% credit growth, this year should probably be slightly better than that.

Your liability franchise has been one of the best compared to the other small finance banks, you have strong deposit momentum as well as your CASA ratio is best at 40%. What has actually led to this strong performance here?
Liability has been silver lining in terms of our performance for the last few quarters not just the last one. It has come about, because of a lot of initiatives which were taken by the team and put in place over the last may be six quarters or so. Offering 7% rate for certain buckets of savings pool is just one of them, it is not the only. You know we have put in multiple channels to reach out to specific set of customers. Our NRI segment is doing really well, we had more last year into our VRM channel, that is virtual relationship manager channels, we are now providing a relationship manager service to a set of depositors at a level–where there have not been services through our RM channel in the other banks.

We are able to do that on cost effective basis through our VRM channel and our map book on the high net worth individuals also has been growing very strongly. So, we have improved and increased our product offerings and range to depositors. Today, our product holding of more than two product per client is in the range of around 70% of our depositors, so there have been multiple efforts done and to top up all of this is our digital foray which we commenced last year in the month of Jan-Feb.

We have launched our Selfe savings account programme, where people can open an account online in a matter of a few minutes and that has been doing well and then we had a tie up with the fintech company also about few months back, adding further momentum to the whole CASA story.

One of the factors that the street has been keenly watching is the merger of Equitas holdings and Equitas Small Finance Bank. Can you take us through what we can expect and how this is going to take place?
So, we have got an approval from RBI that we are to apply for the merger before the end of our five year period. Our five year ends on 4th of September this year, we had a board meeting last week and the board of both the companies have approved the merger with the swap ratio of 226 shares of the bank for every 100 shares of the holding company held by the shareholders of the holding company. So, the applications have been made to the stock exchanges and RBI and we need to get the RBI approval, we need to get the exchanges approval, we also need to get the SEBI approval and once we get all these approvals, then we would have to apply to NCLT and then convene shareholders meeting and shareholders’ approval will be taken and subsequently NCLT will have to approve, so all of these approvals we believe could take about an year’s time. We can bring this entire merger process to your completion by then and the shareholder of the holding company when we went public in 2016, we had made it clear right then also that at the end of five years, the hold co. will seek to merger of the bank because we never intent that the hold co. will do any business of its own and so continue to exist independently. We had always indicated that as our way forward and I think today what we are doing is really a culmination of that process and hopefully we should be able to deliver on the promise that we have made in our 2016 IPO of the hold co.

Can you take us through what is your overall growth strategy over the next three to five years also is there an intent to convert to a universal finance bank?
You know we are eligible to apply as per RBI guidelines, we are eligible to apply for a universal bank licence at the end of five years. As I mentioned, we will be completing five years by 4th of September this year, and post that the board will take a call and subsequent approval by the board, we should be applying to RBI for converting into universal bank. We really do not know exactly what will be the procedure that will be followed, so we are probably the first finance bank which will be seeking conversion into universal bank, so we will have to figure out how the process will work.

We really do not have an idea in terms of how long it will take etc. but be that as it may, as far as the bank is concerned, whether we are a universal bank or small finance bank, I do not see any particular change in our strategy or positioning at all. Our focus on the different profile of borrowers will continue to remain exactly where it is, we have built a very strong strength in funding and in understanding the credit capabilities and collection mechanisms of the low income group, so, our focus will continue to remain on that and we will continue to build on our strength that we have built over the last 10-12 years. Over a three year-five year period, if you look at it we should be continuing to grow at around 20-25% growth, that is something that we should continue to look at going forward on a sustainable basis. Historically, we have seen as high as 35 percent growth. Even if we get the licence of universal bank, I do not think that is going to change the focus of our business.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

AU Small Finance Bank may convert to a universal bank

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Jaipur-headquartered AU Small Finance Bank may transition to a universal bank, going by its Chairman Raj Vikash Verma’s letter to shareholders.

If this happens, it will be the second transition for the lender. Before it converted into an SFB in 2017, AU was a non-banking finance company — Au Financiers (India) Ltd.

Verma observed that the bank is looking far and beyond the current status of the bank in the SFB space.

“We are propelling the bank’s journey to the next important milestone in the bigger banking space, with an aspiration to serve all sectors and segments of the economy under the larger agenda of national development and growth,” he said.

SFB

SFBs are niche banks. Their scope of activities is restricted to undertaking basic banking activities of acceptance of deposits and lending to unserved and underserved sections including small business units, small and marginal farmers, micro and small industries and unorganised sector entities.

A universal bank’s scope of activities is much wider, spanning retail banking (retail, agriculture and micro, small and medium enterprises), wholesale (corporate) banking and infrastructure/project financing.

As per the Report of the Reserve Bank of India’s “Internal Working Group (IWG) to Review Extant Ownership Guidelines and Corporate Structure for Indian Private Sector Banks”, if an SFB aspires to transit into a universal bank, such transition will not be automatic.

Transition

The transition would be subject to fulfilling minimum paid-up capital/net worth requirement as applicable to universal banks; its satisfactory track record of performance as an SFB and the outcome of the Reserve Bank’s due diligence exercise.

The initial minimum paid-up voting equity capital for starting a universal bank is ₹500 crore, according to RBI’s guidelines for ‘on tap’ licensing of universal banks in the private sector.

The IWG has recommended that the initial paid-up voting equity share capital/net worth required to set up a new universal bank be increased to ₹1,000 crore.

As of March-end 2021, AU SFB had gross advances and deposits aggregating ₹35,356 crore and ₹35,979 crore, respectively.

The Bank’s loan portfolio mainly comprises vehicle loans, secured business loans (SBL) to MSMEs and housing loans.

AU SFB currently has a presence across 15 States and two Union Territories through 552 bank branches, 177 Business Correspondent Banking Outlets, 15 Business Correspondents and 343 ATMs.

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

RBI reveals names of applicants for universal bank, SFB licences

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


The universal bank licensing guidelines state that resident individuals and professionals having 10 years of experience in banking and finance at a senior level are eligible to promote universal banks

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) on Thursday announced names of applicants under its on-tap licensing window for universal banks and small finance banks (SFBs). The list includes a foreign exchange services provider, two cooperative banks and a former banker.

Applicants under guidelines for on-tap licensing of universal banks are UAE Exchange and Financial Services, The Repatriates Cooperative Finance and Development Bank (Repco Bank), Chaitanya India Fin Credit, and Pankaj Vaish and others. Applicants seeking licences for SFBs are VSoft Technologies, Calicut City Service Co-operative Bank, Akhil Kumar Gupta, and Dvara Kshetriya Gramin Financial Services.

Guidelines for on-tap licensing of universal banks and SFBs in the private sector were issued on August 1, 2016 and December 5, 2019, respectively. The constitution and composition of the standing external advisory committee for evaluating the applications received under the guidelines was announced on March 22, 2021.

The universal bank licensing guidelines state that resident individuals and professionals having 10 years of experience in banking and finance at a senior level are eligible to promote universal banks. Large industrial houses are excluded as eligible entities but are permitted to invest in the banks up to 10%. Non-operative financial holding company (NOFHC) has been made non-mandatory in case of promoters being individuals or standalone promoting/converting entities who/which do not have other group entities.

For SFBs, the minimum paid-up voting equity capital / net worth requirement shall be Rs 200 crore. For primary (urban) co-operative banks (UCBs) desirous of voluntarily transiting into SFBs, the initial net worth requirement shall be at Rs 100 crore, which will have to be increased to Rs 200 crore within five years from the date of commencement of business. The net worth of all SFBs currently in operation is in excess of Rs 200 crore.

Get live Stock Prices from BSE, NSE, US Market and latest NAV, portfolio of Mutual Funds, Check out latest IPO News, Best Performing IPOs, calculate your tax by Income Tax Calculator, know market’s Top Gainers, Top Losers & Best Equity Funds. Like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter.

Financial Express is now on Telegram. Click here to join our channel and stay updated with the latest Biz news and updates.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

RBI committee to evaluate on-tap applications for universal and small finance banks licenses, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


The Reserve Bank of India has taken a step ahead ever since the guidelines on on-tap licensing were announced in early 2016.

The RBI has step up a standing external advisor committee (SEAC) under former deputy governor Shymala Gopinath to evaluate new banking licenses under on-tap application for universal and small finance banks.

The application will be scrutinised by a standing committee and NBFCs floated by corporates could be given licenses.
Apart from Gopinath as chairperson of the committee, the RBI has inducted four members Revathy Iyer who’s central board director of RBI, NPCI’s chairman B Mahapatra, Canara Bank’s former chairman T N Manoharan and SBI’s former MD & PFRDA’s former Chairman Hemant Contractor.

Recently the RBI”s internal working grou had floated a paper on the issue of new licenses to corporate groups wherein NBFCs owned by corporate groups should be allowed to set-up banks, where many in the industry saw it as opening the doors for corporates to get into the banking sector.

Follow and connect with us on , Facebook, Linkedin



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY