US banking regulators to clarify banks’ crypto role in 2022, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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WASHINGTON: US banking regulators intend to clarify in 2022 what role traditional banks can legally play in the cryptocurrency market, they said on Tuesday.

In a statement, regulators said they plan to make clear what sort of activities banks can engage in involving cryptocurrency, including holding it on their balance sheets, issuing stablecoins and holding crypto assets and facilitating crypto trading on behalf of customers, among other currently murky areas.

The joint statement from the Federal Reserve, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and Office of the Comptroller of the Currency is an update on work done by an interagency “sprint” team convened earlier this year.

While not providing details, the agencies said the rapid growth of cryptocurrency presents “potential opportunities and risks” for traditional banks. They said regulators want to provide “coordinated and timely” clarity to the institutions they monitor.

“The agencies have identified a number of areas where additional public clarity is warranted,” the agencies said. “Throughout 2022, the agencies plan to provide greater clarity on whether certain activities related to crypto-assets conducted by banking organizations are legally permissible, and expectations for safety and soundness, consumer protection, and compliance with existing laws and regulations.”

Agency officials have been working on identifying risks facing banks engaging in crypto activity, as well as whether existing regulations must be updated to account for that activity.



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Festival season brings cheer to bond market

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Although the week was short due to the festive season and yield movements were narrow, all the newsflow last week turns out to be positive for the domestic bond market. The benchmark yield closed at 6.36 per cent on Wednesday, down by almost 3 basis points compared to the week before.

Global events

On the global front, the US Fed announced tapering of its bond buying programme on much anticipated lines at $15 billion per month. The 10-year US treasury yields, which had been having a negative impact on the domestic bond market, cooled down to 1.45 per cent last week compared to 1.56 per cent the week before. Brent crude prices also softened a bit, even nudging the $80/barrel mark last week before closing near the $83/barrel level.

Domestic development

On the domestic front, the Centre announced an excise duty cut of ₹5 per litre on petrol and ₹10 per litre on diesel last week. Bond dealers say this will be a positive for the market which expects the yields to fall further down to near the 6.3 per cent mark. Meanwhile, the Reserve Bank of India continued to absorb the excess liquidity out of the system even as it conducted a 15-day variable rate reverse repo auction where the cut-off rate stood at 3.99 per cent. The central bank accepted offers worth ₹4.34 lakh crore against the notified amount of ₹5 lakh crore.

Subdued CPI expected

This week, the market is looking forward to the announcement of the consumer price index inflation print. Market participants say the CPI figure will most likely stand below the 4 per cent mark owing to the base effect for October, post which it may slightly start moving up gradually.

Vijay Sharma, Senior Executive Vice-President at PNB Gilts opined that so far, all the developments seen during the week are positive for the domestic bond market. “The two factors that were responsible for the upward movement in yields have turned positive over the last few days. The US Treasury yields came down even as the Fed decision on tapering stood pretty much in line with the market expectations. Crude prices coming down and a cut in excise duty are also conducive for the yields. It seems the benchmark yield could move towards the 6.3 per cent level in the short term. The inflation print for October is expected to come down below 4 per cent, mostly due to base effect.”

 

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Wells Fargo report, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The financial sector accounts for 19% of the country’s GDP, up from 13% in 2000.

As banks bet more on digital banking, nearly 100,000 positions in US banks are at stake and could vanish over the next five years, a report by Wells Fargo said.

Large US banks are investing more in digital banking and other technologies, which could vanish roles of branch managers, call center employees and tellers, leading to massive job cuts in the sector.

Disappearance of such jobs could be drawn parallel with the massive contraction in manufacturing work in the 1980s and ’90s, according to the report.

“Our conclusion is still that this will be the biggest reduction in US bank headcount in history,” the analysts wrote, with job cuts accelerating once the economy fully recovers from the COVID-19 pandemic.

These roles are predicted to be replaced by artificial intelligence, cloud computing and robots. These technological advances are set to perform daily banking functions like taking payments, approving loans and detecting fraud, the report said.

“Branches will likely show a decline, especially given greater digital banking adoption during the pandemic. Many branches that were closed during the pandemic will likely remain closed permanently [and] new future mergers will likely reduce branches, too,” the report said.

The financial sector accounts for 19% of the country’s GDP, up from 13% in 2000. Since the 2008 financial crisis, big banks have continued to witness larger growth. However, between 2007 and 2018, rapid automation in the sector led the country’s four largest banks to reduce staff by a combined 3,00,000 positions.



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US-based Arena Investors evinced interest to acquire Srei before RBI took control, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Arena Investors, a US-based company, had proposed to buy 74% in Srei Equipment Finance, a wholly owned subsidiary of Srei Infrastructure Finance for about Rs 2,000 crore before the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) took control of the non-bank lender on Monday, two people familiar with the matter told ET.

The Srei group had forwarded the proposal to RBI for a review a couple of months ago, the executives said. Arena is an institutional asset manager that provides solutions for those seeking capital in special situations

Singapore-based Makara Capital Partners had also proposed to bring in about Rs 2,200 crore.

ET had sent mails to both Arena and Makara last Saturday on the matter but both companies didn’t respond until Tuesday evening.

Srei’s board of directors and the strategic coordination committee for capital raising, chaired by an independent director, had accepted the proposals and sent them to the regulator for approval, Srei Infrastrcuture’s former chairman Hemant Kanoria said Tuesday.

It is not clear at this juncture if RBI finds Arena or Makara fit enough to acquire Srei, a lender to the country’s core sector, or if it prefers a domestic company to take over Srei. RBI has initiated steps to move Srei to the bankruptcy court so that lenders and bond holders can recover their money from Srei. Their cumulative exposure is in the vicinity of Rs 31,000 crore.

As many as 11 investors had evinced interest in Srei, while Arena and Makara submitted non-binding terms sheets to the non-bank lender.

Some of those included Varde Partners, Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation (SMBC) and Apollo Global. They could not be contacted immediately for comments.

The group had approached the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) with a repayment scheme aligned to inflows for all its creditors. The scheme had proposed to pay full dues to all creditors in a structured manner. A majority of the lenders did not accept the scheme.

After the scheme was filed in October 2020, banks led by Uco Bank took control of the company’s cash flow. Since November last year, banks have recovered about Rs 3,000 crore.



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Zolve launches credit cards, bank account services for US immigrants, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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New Delhi, Zolve, a neobank, on Wednesday announced the launch of financial products which provide bank account, credit card and debit card to people upon entering the US without a social security number. Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) insured bank accounts and other services are being provided by Community Federal Savings Bank (CFSB) to immigrants who are customers of Zolve.

Zolve has created the opportunity for US immigrants to start building their financial future in America from the moment they arrive, a statement said.

To begin with, the product suits include mobile app, Mastercard powered credit card, FDIC insured up to USD 250,000, with no minimum balance requirements and no social security number required to apply, it said.

Zolve launched in beta in August 2021 and has since seen over 42,000 registered customers.

“We created Zolve to level the playing field for international students and working professionals looking to come to the United States by providing them with the toolset they need to embark on their American dream…

“Our mission is to create a financial world beyond borders with equal access to high-quality banking products for global citizens from every country,” said Zolve founder CEO Raghunandan G.

Before Zolve, US immigrants were not able to obtain a bank account or credit card without waiting months, sometimes years, to establish credit or obtain a social security number, he said.

Going forward, the company is looking to expand its reach to other countries like Australia, Canada, Germany, and the UK, he added.



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Infosys wins five-year deal with US-based Frost Bank, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Infosys said it has won a five-year deal with US-based Frost Bank to provide strategic business consulting and digital capabilities that will enable the bank, which has over $ 46.7 billion in assets, to offer mortgage loans along with its other consumer loan products.

Infosys will help design the bank’s mortgage loan process landscape from origination to servicing, design the end-customer experience, and select the most effective technology platform to run and manage operations, while driving growth for its mortgage solutions over the next five years, it said in a statement.

The company did not disclose the financial details.

Infosys and Frost Bank will work together to create a human-centric, digital-first approach to customer mortgage loans that delivers superior borrower experience along with cutting-edge efficiency of operations. The implementation strategy will focus on accelerating launch of the new product, while also streamlining the mortgage value chain for Frost Bank by taking advantage of Infosys’ access to global best practices and innovations.

“Offering mortgage loans along with our other consumer loan products is integral to meeting our customers’ evolving needs and bringing the Frost experience to more Texans,” said Phil Green, Chairman and CEO at Frost Bank. “Working with a world-class company like Infosys will allow us to be involved in the entire process from start to finish and bring our industry-leading customer service experience to mortgages.”

Infosys also has deep expertise and long years of experience in collaborating with independent mortgage solution providers and regional banks in the US. Frost Bank can leverage this to compete profitably in a rapidly transforming competitive landscape.

Mohit Joshi, President, Infosys said, “At Infosys, we have built strong capabilities in transforming mortgage businesses by providing our clients with unique solutions that meet their customers’ expectations of speed, transparency, convenience, and personalization. Our collaboration with Frost Bank sets the stage for a new era of mortgage services, and we are excited to bring to this engagement, our collective expertise.”



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For bank regulators across the world, tech giants are now too big to fail, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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More than a decade on from the financial crisis, regulators are spooked once again that some companies at the heart of the financial system are too big to fail. But they’re not banks.

This time it’s the tech giants including Google, Amazon and Microsoft that host a growing mass of bank, insurance and market operations on their vast cloud internet platforms that are keeping watchdogs awake at night.

Central bank sources told Reuters the speed and scale at which financial institutions are moving critical operations such as payment systems and online banking to the cloud constituted a step change in potential risks.

“We are only at the beginning of the paradigm shift, therefore we need to make sure we have a fit-for-purpose solution,” said a financial regulator from a Group of Seven country, who declined to be named.

It is the latest sign of how financial regulators are joining their data and competition counterparts in scrutinising the global clout of Big Tech more closely.

Banks and technology companies say greater use of cloud computing is a win-win as it results in faster and cheaper services that are more resilient to hackers and outages.

But regulatory sources say they fear a glitch at one cloud company could bring down key services across multiple banks and countries, leaving customers unable to make payments or access services, and undermine confidence in the financial system.

The U.S. Treasury, European Union, Bank of England and Bank of France are among those stepping up their scrutiny of cloud technology to mitigate the risks of banks relying on a small group of tech firms and companies being “locked in”, or excessively dependent, on one cloud provider.

“We’re very alert to the fact that things will fail,” said Simon McNamara, chief administrative officer at British bank NatWest. “If 10 organisations aren’t prepared and are connected into one provider that disappears, then we’ll all have a problem.”

The EU proposed in September that “critical” external services for the financial industry such as the cloud should be regulated to strengthen existing recommendations on outsourcing from the bloc’s banking authority that date back to 2017.

The Bank of England’s Financial Policy Committee (FPC) meanwhile wants greater insight into agreements between banks and cloud operators and the Bank of France told lenders last month they must have a written contract that clearly defines controls over outsourced activities.

“The FPC is of the view that additional policy measures to mitigate financial stability risks in this area are needed,” it said in July.

The European Central Bank, which regulates the biggest lenders in the euro zone, said on Wednesday that bank spending on cloud computing rose by more than 50% in 2019 from 2018.

And that’s just the start. Spending on cloud services by banks globally is forecast to more than double to $85 billion in 2025 from $32.1 billion in 2020, according to data from technology research firm IDC shared with Reuters.

An IDC survey of 50 major banks globally identified just six primary providers of cloud services: IBM, Microsoft, Google, Amazon, Alibaba and Oracle.

Amazon Web Services (AWS) – the largest cloud provider according to Synergy Group – posted sales of $28.3 billion in the six months to June, up 35% on the prior year and higher than its annual revenue of $25.7 billion as recently as 2018.

While all industries have ramped up cloud spending, analysts told Reuters that financial services firms had moved faster since the pandemic after an explosion in demand for online banking and emergency lending schemes.

“Banks are still very diligent but they have gained a higher level of comfort with the model and are moving at a fairly rapid pace,” said Jason Malo, director analyst at consultants Gartner.

Regulators worry that cloud failures would cause banking systems to fall over and stop people accessing their money, but say they have little visibility over cloud providers.

Last month, the Bank of England said big tech companies could dictate terms and conditions to financial firms and were not always providing enough information for their clients to monitor risks – and that “secrecy” had to end.

There is also concern that banks may not be spreading their risk enough among cloud providers.

Google told Reuters that less than a fifth of financial firms were using multiple clouds in case one failed, according to a recent survey, although 88% of those that did not spread their risk yet planned to do so within a year.

Central bank sources said part of the solution may be some form of mechanism that offers reassurance on resilience from cloud providers to banks to mitigate the sector’s aggregate exposure to one cloud service – with the banking regulator having the overall vantage point.

“Regardless of the division of control responsibilities between the cloud service provider and the bank, the bank is ultimately responsible for the effectiveness of the control environment,” the U.S. Federal Reserve said in draft guidance issued to lenders last month.

FINRA, which regulates Wall Street brokers, published a report on Monday ahead of potential rule changes to ensure that using the cloud does not harm the market or investors.

Being able to switch cloud providers easily when needed is, however, a task that is more easily said than done and could introduce disruptions to business, the FINRA report said.

Banks and tech firms contest the suggestion that greater adoption of the cloud is making the financial system’s infrastructure inherently riskier.

Adrian Poole, director for financial services in the United Kingdom and Ireland for Google Cloud, said the cloud can be more effective in bolstering a bank’s security capabilities than by building it in-house.

British digital lender Zopa said it had moved 80% of its transactions to the cloud and was working to mitigate risks. Zopa Chief Executive Jaidev Janardana said the company was also deliberately leaning on tech firms’ expertise.

“Cloud providers invest a lot of resources in security at a scale that few individual companies could manage,” he said.

Google’s Poole said the company was open to working more closely with financial regulators.

“We may one day see regulators pulling data on demand from regulated banks with cloud-enabled application programming interfaces (APIs), instead of waiting for banks to periodically push data at them,” he said.

NatWest’s McNamara said the bank was collaborating closely with tech firms and regulators to mitigate risks, and had put alternative services in place in case things went wrong.

“The buck stops with us,” McNamara said. “We don’t put all our eggs in one basket.”

One problem, though, is that not all banks have a full understanding of the risks to resiliency that could come with a wholesale shift to the cloud, said Jost Hoppermann, principal analyst at Forrester, particularly the smaller lenders.

“Some banks do not have the necessary know-how,” he said. “They think doing this will vanish all their problems, and certainly that isn’t true.”



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US banks walk tightrope of encouraging, but not mandating vaccines

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Big Wall Street banks have started enforcing stricter mask and vaccine requirements for staff, sometimes communicating them behind the scenes, in an effort to combat Covid-19 infections in their offices while avoiding a fierce national debate about individual rights, sources at the banks and consultants who work with them told Reuters.

Specifics differ, but many big banks have tightened up policies or pushed back return-to-office dates from just a month ago.

Now, Citigroup Inc and Morgan Stanley have the toughest rules at their New York headquarters, where staff entering must be vaccinated.

JPMorgan Chase & Co and Goldman Sachs Group Inc have not mandated vaccines the same way, but both require unvaccinated workers to wear masks and get tested at least weekly.

Bank of America Corp will only allow vaccinated staff to return to its offices in early September, while encouraging other employees to get inoculated.

Drop in infections

The widespread availability of Covid-19 vaccines in the United States caused infections to drop dramatically from January to June, but driven largely by the Delta variant, the current seven-day moving average of daily new cases is up 35 percent, according to Reuters tracking data.

Wells Fargo & Co pushed back its return-to-office start date to October because of an increased risk from the Delta variant.

Behind the scenes, executive committees have been debating policies and how to express them for weeks. Although sources inside the banks say the majority of Wall Street’s workforce has been vaccinated, there remains a vocal group of employees who do not want to get shots for health or religious reasons, as well as some who feel that any mandate infringes on their personal rights.

“It’s, like, on a wing and a prayer that people are saying they are going to require this,” said a senior executive at one of the large banks who requested anonymity to discuss high-level internal discussions.

Sending mandates through company-wide memos can stir outrage not only from employees who oppose them, but from politicians and right-wing groups that sometimes use big banks as political targets, the executive said. When new requirements have been reported in the press, some of the banks have experienced backlash, leading them to communicate changes more quietly, sources said.

Vaccination policies

Citigroup announced its vaccination mandate through a LinkedIn post. Morgan Stanley has stopped sending Covid-19 policy updates through e-mail and instead has managers communicate directives to staff in small groups or individually.

Morgan Stanley’s policies vary by region.

There is also some risk of employees suing banks, either because they got sick at the office due to a Covid-19 outbreak, or because they oppose mask and vaccination requirements, sources said.

Outside the financial sector, there have been some attempts to sue, but judges have been siding with employers, said Jacqueline Voronov, a labor and employment attorney at HallBooth Smith.

“The courtroom doors are always open,” she said. “Can you bring a claim? Yes. Will it be successful? Most likely, no.”

The banks are walking a fine line as they try to encourage staff to get vaccinated and return to offices, while avoiding backlash from them, as well as legal, political and headline risk, said Adam Galinsky, a Columbia Business School professor who specialises in leadership, decision-making and ethics.

Companies generally need employees to be engaged with their responsibilities, rather than worried about getting sick or caught up in fierce social debates.

As a result, it makes sense that the banks are quietly urging staff to get vaccinated and enforcing tougher mask and testing policies for now, but, eventually, Galinsky expects them to move toward hard line mandates for all staff.

“They are trying to find that right pathway,” he said.

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More Indians trust banks with their personal data than US, UK and Australia: Report

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According to the survey data, 68 per cent Indians surveyed said that they trust their banks with personal data.

Data privacy has been questioned many times and it has been noted that many people have been reluctant to give out their personal details. In such times, it was found that more Indians trust their banks while handing out their personal data. The confidence among Indians with banks having their personal data is more than people in nations like the US, UK and Australia, said MoneyTransfers, taking in account data provided by YouGov. The survey was conducted across counties to establish which countries have the most and least trusted banking services.

According to the survey data, 68 per cent Indians surveyed said that they trust their banks with personal data. Similar response (68 per cent) was received from Germany too where people trusted banks. Both countries were placed on the third rank in comparison to other countries as “they believe banks and financial service providers are competent and ethical in their management of personal data.”

The trust factor was found to be higher than in countries like Australia and the US, UK where 57 per cent, 45 per cent and 59 per cent people, respectively, had faith in their banks when it comes to providing personal data.

It is to note that Poland was the top country where 85 per cent of the people have put their trust in banks and financial service providers with their personal data. This was followed by Indonesia, where 70 per cent of people were confident that banks and financial service providers can diligently handle their personal data. Other countries surveyed included China, France, Denmark, Italy, Spain, Sweden, Mexico, United Arab Emirates, Hong Kong and Singapore.

While conducting the survey, people were simply asked if they trust banks and financial service providers with their personal data. More than 2,250 individuals from each country were given the survey questions and asked about their trust in banking services.

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Pressure on risk currencies subside, US inflation in focus

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Risk currencies hovered above their recent lows against the dollar and the yen on Monday, as fears about slowdown in the global economic recovery appeared to have subsided for now.

The outlook for US inflation and the speed of the Federal Reserve‘s future policy tightening are back in focus ahead of Tuesday’s consumer price data and Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s testimony from Wednesday.

“If we see strong data, the Fed could bring forward their projection for their first rate hike further from their current forecast of 2023. That would also mean they have to finish tapering earlier,” said Shinichiro Kadota, senior FX strategist at Barclays.

The euro traded at $1.1873, edging back from its three-month low of $1.17815 set on Wednesday while against the yen the common currency stood at ¥130.87, off Thursday’s 2-1/2-month low of ¥129.63.

Sterling also ticked up to $1.3900, while the Australian dollar bounced back to $0.7487 from Friday’s seven-month low of $0.7410.

ALSO READ Rupee slides toward year’s low as India’s trade deficit widens

Risk currencies slipped earlier last week as investors curtailed their bets on them, in part as economic data from many countries fell short of the market’s expectations.

Concerns about the Delta variant of the novel coronavirus also added to the cautious mood although few investors thought the economic recovery would be derailed.

Chinese eonomy

Selling in risk currencies subsided by Friday, however, and sentiment was bolstered further after China cut banks’ reserve requirement ratio across the board, to underpin its economic recovery that is starting to lose momentum.

On Monday, the Chinese yuan was flat at 6.4785 per dollar, off Friday’s 2-1/2-month low of 6.5005.

A recovery in risk sentiment hampered the safe-haven yen on Monday. The Japanese currency stood at 110.17 yen per dollar, off Thursday’s one-month high of 109.535.

With the data calendar on Monday relatively bare, many investors are looking to Tuesday’s US consumer price data for June.

Economists polled by Reuters expect core CPI to have risen 0.4 per cent from May and 4 per cent from a year earlier after two straight months of sharp gains in prices.

Any signs that inflation could be more persistent than previously thought could fan expectations the Fed may exit from current stimulus earlier, supporting the dollar against other major currencies.

Conversely, more benign data could lead investors to think the US central bank can afford to maintain an easy policy framework for longer, encouraging more bets on risk assets,including risk-sensitive currencies.

Cryptocurrencies were little moved, with bitcoin at $34,267and ether at $2,137.

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