HDFC Life expects muted third wave, says reserves should suffice for future claims, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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HDFC Life Insurance‘s reserves will be sufficient for future claims as the intensity of any subsequent COVID wave will be muted, said Vibha Padalkar, managing director and chief executive officer of HDFC Life Insurance, at the quarterly results‘ press conference.

The insurer is bullish on the impact of COVID, as the number of vaccinations have the crossed 1-billion mark. ” In addition, the recent macroeconomic data augurs well for the economy and is indicative of swifter recovery trends. Consumer sentiment remains buoyant and we are optimistic about sustained increase in business in the coming few months,” the company said in a filing.

The life insurer on Friday announced a 15.9% fall in its consolidated net profit to Rs 274.16 crore in Jul-Sep, as against Rs 326.09 crore a year ago.

Padalkar is optimistic about the second half of FY22, citing new bancassurance partnerships and agency channels. On the acquisition of Exide Life Insurance Co, Padalkar expects HDFC Life to receive the approval from the regulator by late third quarter or early fourth quarter.

Total income of the insurer in the second quarter, however, rose to Rs 20,478 crore against Rs 16,426 crore a year ago, while the net premium income increased by 52% to Rs 11,445 crore from Rs 10,056 crore, the insurer said in a regulatory filing.

“Value of new business (VNB) recorded a robust 30% growth to Rs 1,086 crore over last year. Our profit after tax stands at Rs 577 crore for H1, 26% lower than H1 FY21, on the back of higher claims reserving warranted by the second wave of the pandemic,” said Padalkar.

The insurer settled around two lakh claims in the first half of the fiscal. Gross and net claims amounted to Rs 3,640 crore and Rs 2,466 crore, respectively, against an anticipated net claims of Rs 1,690 crore, the management said in a post-earnings call. The excess Rs 776 crore was paid out of reserves, which stood at Rs 204 crore as on 30 September.

The company’s overall experience has been in line with their projections, and an Excess Mortality Reserve (EMR) of Rs 204 crore is being carried into the second half of FY22, the company said in a filing. Its solvency ratio was at 190% compared with 203% a year ago, while its 13th month persistency was at 84.8% against 83.9% around the same period last fiscal.



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Banking is an essential service; allow vaccinations for bankers on priority, asks ICICI Bank, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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ICICI Bank on Thursday said it is “much better” prepared to restrict the impact of the second coronavirus wave on its operations because of last year’s experience but appealed for banks’ employees to be allowed to take vaccinations on a priority basis as they are rendering an essential service. The second largest lender warned that if banking services were to fail, it can have an adverse impact on the economic activity, and hence it is pertinent for ensuring that at least the branch staff is allowed to take vaccinations.

The comments come at a time when localised lockdowns are being announced across many pockets of the country in view of the rising COVID infections, which are breaching the 3 lakh mark daily and also resulting in over 2,000 officially counted deaths.

“We are an essential services… we are all exposed (to customers). We don’t have the luxury. But we are not allowed vaccinations, not allowed to board trains, not allowed to board buses. So, what kind of essential services we are? More push should be there,” its executive director Anup Bagchi told reporters.

He warned that if banking operations get affected, we may have to face an economic crisis as well after the ongoing health crisis, and cited the case of a single automated teller machine shutting down for seven days to illustrate his point.

There is a case for “higher sensitivity” when classifying essential services, Bagchi said, stressing that there are other essential services also and bankers exposed to customers in branches should be allowed to vaccinate because they are exposed to walking-in customers.

Starting May 1, the central government has allowed every adult the chance to get vaccinated. However, concerns are being raised about the efficacy of such a move because of lack of vaccine stocks.

Meanwhile, Bagchi said the bank is much better prepared to take on the second wave of the pandemic because it had a system in place to take care of the disruptions coming because of the lockdowns as compared to last year’s experience, where it had to overhaul things.

Bagchi said an end-to-end digital journey where there is no need for a physical touch at all is essential while extending banking services and after the announcement of the national lockdown last year, it had to work on ensuring the same.

Further to the same, the bank on Thursday launched a ‘merchant stack’ which will help deliver seamless banking services, including a zero-balance current account, instant credit, a digital store management, a loyalty programme and other value added services to the 2 crore merchants nationally.

Bagchi compared the new services akin to a master switch where the customers will not be forced to come to the bank repeatedly for newer services, and added that the bank has put in place a refined data analytics back-end which will take care of loan decisions based on dynamic data points such as the transactions happening at the merchant’s end, inventory before giving the working capital credit of over 6 months.

From a risk perspective, Bagchi said the bank has built a strong portfolio in the business banking side, where its ability to make use of the data it possesses has ensured that the credit costs are less than 1 per cent as against double-digit figures for some lenders.

Declining to give a target of the number of customer relationships they are looking at, Bagchi said the fintechs cannot offer an end-to-end service like banks can.

For ICICI Bank, revenues from the stack can flow from fees, interest on credit offtake, float on balances in the accounts and merchant discount rate, he said.



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Rupee falls 20 paise to 73.58 against US dollar in early trade

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The Indian rupee slumped 20 paise to 73.58 against the US dollar in opening trade on Wednesday, weighed down by the strength of the greenback and weak domestic equities.

At the interbank forex market, the domestic unit opened at 73.56 against the US dollar, then fell further to 73.58, registering a fall of 20 paise over its previous close.

On Tuesday, the rupee had settled at 73.38 against the American currency.

Most of the Asian currencies were weak this Wednesday morning and will weigh on sentiments, traders said.

Meanwhile, the dollar index, which gauges the greenback’s strength against a basket of six currencies, advanced 0.13 per cent to 93.41.

“The US dollar was flat to higher against the basket of currencies this Wednesday morning in Asian trade as investors bet that massive fiscal stimulus and aggressive vaccinations will help the US lead a global pandemic recovery,” Reliance Securities said in a research note.

On the data front, the government is likely to announce borrowing plan for April-September. Additionally, the government is scheduled to release April-February fiscal deficit data. RBI is also likely to release October-December current account data, the note added.

In the domestic equity market, the 30-share BSE benchmark Sensex was trading 422.74 points lower at 49,713.84, and the broader NSE Nifty fell 96.85 points to 14,748.25.

Foreign institutional investors were net buyers in the capital market as they purchased shares worth ₹769.47 crore on Tuesday, according to exchange data.

Brent crude futures, the global oil benchmark, rose 0.48 per cent to $64.45 per barrel.

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