Yes bank rolls out wellness themed credit cards, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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YES,in collaboration with Aditya Birla Wellness Private Limited has launched ‘YES BANK Wellness’ and ‘YES BANK Wellness Plus’ credit cards with the aim of holistic health, self-care and wellness growth of the consumers.

Cardholders will be able to enjoy the complimentary health benefits by simply registering on the Aditya Birla Multiply App. The app will allow consumers to avail complimentary benefits such as annual health check-up, round the clock doctor or counsellor helpline, in-studio or home-based workout sessions, personalized diet plans, among others.

Rajanish Prabhu, Business Head – Credit Cards and Merchant Acquisition, YES BANK, says, “As we adapt to the new normal, prioritizing the health and well-being as individuals and that of our loved ones has become ever more important. This card has been designed keeping the holistic wellness needs of consumers in mind and it is a compelling value proposition.”

Key benefits of the YES BANK Wellness and Wellness Plus Card;

1. Wellness Credit Card

  • Priced at Rs 1,999 a year, the Wellness card will offer 20 Reward Points on Pharmacy spends (every Rs 200),
  • 4 Reward Points on other spends (every Rs 200), along with complimentary annual preventive health check-up (25 parameters).
  • 6 complimentary fitness session per month: options like Gym, Yoga and Zumba. The card will also offer unlimited doctor consultations on call, and free online consultations across medical specialities.

2 . Wellness Plus Credit Card

  • Priced at Rs 2,999 a year, the Contactless payment Wellness Plus card will offer 30 Reward Points on Pharmacy spends (every Rs 200), 6 Reward Points on other spends (every Rs 200).
  • Complimentary annual preventive health check-up (31 parameters), and 12 complimentary fitness session per month: options like Gym, Yoga and Zumba.
  • It will offer unlimited Doctor consultations on call, Diet Plans according to the cardholder’s goals, and free online consultations across medical specialities.
  • Cardholders will also get domestic airport lounge access (2 visits per quarter).

The bank says as consumers face new realities of home-schooling of children, working from home, and lack of physical contact with loved ones and colleagues, this innovative step will encourage and promote self-care, mental and physical well-being. The cards also offer benefits like annual complimentary preventive health check-up, on-call consultation with Doctors, Specialists, Counsellors and Nutritionists, etc.



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Private lenders report healthy loan growth in Q3

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The margin trajectory will remain moderately under pressure, given the continued monetary easing, low lending rates and relatively higher liquidity on bank balance sheets.

Private lenders have reported a sequential improvement in the net advances during the December quarter, according to provisional data released by the banks. While the largest private lender HDFC Bank has shown a 3% growth in the loan book, IndusInd Bank and IDFC First Bank reported over 3% quarter-on-quarter (q-o-q) growth in the advances. Similarly, Yes Bank has shown a 1.3% increase in the net advances during the quarter compared to the September quarter.

An analyst from Emkay Global Financial Services said that banks have reported q-o-q credit growth mainly due to festive pick-up as economic unlocking began. Many lenders reported improvement in the retail loan book during the quarter. IDFC First reported a 11.3% q-o-q increase in its retail loan book during the quarter. Similarly, showing a sign of improvement after its reconstruction, Yes Bank’s gross retail disbursements more than doubled in the December quarter at Rs 7,563 crore (q-o-q).

In a note to its clients, Kotak Institutional Equities has however, said that loan growth recovery of banks will be slower than expectations. “While credit demand is recovering from post-lockdown lows along with approval rates and share of NTC (new-to-credit) originations, we expect loan growth recovery to be slower than expectations of market participants, “ Kotak Institutional Equities said.

Private lenders have also reported strong deposit growth during the December quarter. While HDFC Bank has shown a 19% y-o-y growth in deposits during the December quarter, IndusInd Bank has registered 10.56% y-o-y growth in deposits. Similarly, Federal bank has registered a 12% y-o-y growth in the deposit numbers. Sequentially, While HDFC Bank has registered a 3% deposit growth, IDFC First Bank reported 11% increase in its deposits during the December quarter. Similarly, Yes Bank and IndusInd Bank reported a 7.7% and 5% deposit growth in the December quarter, as compared to September quarter.

Lalitabh Srivastava, assistant vice-president (AVP), research, Sharekhan, said that the low-cost deposit share of private banks is increasing as per provisional data. “So, maybe they are gaining market share, either from public sector banks or cooperative banks. Gaining deposit share was the next goal to achieve for private banks, because they were already doing better on the advances side, ” he added.

Shailendra Kumar, chief investment officer, Narnolia Financial Advisors said that although provisional numbers released by the private lenders were on expected lines, but it will be important to know what happens in the moratorium accounts and the final figures of restructuring.

Kotak Institutional Equities also said that headline asset quality is expected to worsen if the Supreme Court lifts its order that banned banks from marking defaulted loans as non-performing assets (NPAs). The slippages could be meaningfully high in our view, it said. The apex court had earlier directed banks not to recognise fresh NPAs, till further orders in the interest on interest case. A public interest litigation (PIL) was earlier filed in the Supreme Court to waive off interest on interest for borrowers during the moratorium period between March to August 2020.

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Lakshmi Vilas Bank, YES Bank lead NPA pile-up among private banks in Karnataka

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In Karnataka non-performing assets (NPA) of all banks combined stood at ₹57,070.02 crore from a total of 28 lakh accounts.

“Agriculture topped the list of sectors with high NPAs at ₹17,772.87 crore (from 12.20 lakh accounts) and is followed by non-priority sector at ₹17,096.27 crore (7.73 lakh accounts), other priority sector is ₹11,470.07 crore (4.20 lakh accounts), MSME ₹8,887.42 crore (3.35 lakh), housing ₹1,332.88 crore (25,042) and education ₹510.51 crore (24,892),” a senior officer at Karnataka SLBC said.

As on September 30, 2020, NPAs in private banks category – Lakshmi Vilas Bank (the bank since November 2020 has been merged with DBS Bank India Ltd (DBIL), the subsidiary of DBS Bank, Singapore) stood out with NPAs to the tune of ₹2,979.10 crore from 15,190 accounts, while YES Bank’s NPA stood at ₹4,675.23 crore from 946 accounts.

Among the lead banks category – Canara Bank’s total NPA stood at ₹12,531.66 crore (with 3.41 lakh accounts), State Bank of India ₹11,663.58 crore (7.37 lakh accounts). Under nationalised banks – Punjab National Bank with ₹4,121.52 crore (12,735 accounts) and Bank of India is ₹1,069.85 crore (19,477 accounts).

“SLBC has requested the Karnataka government to provide guidance and assistance for the recovery of bad loans,” the officer said.

On the recovery front, banks in the state have recovered a total of ₹460.87 crore so far under Sarfaesi, DRT and Lok Adalats Acts. Of the recoveries under Sarfaesi was ₹114.25 crore, DRT ₹335.19 crore and Lok Adalat ₹11.43 crore.

Education loan

Banks in the State up to September quarter have disbursed education loans to the tune of ₹650 crore covering 30,102 students, as against the annual financial target of ₹7,725 crore under both priority and non-priority segments.

According to the officer “The performance of banks in lending under education loans as the percentage of achievement v/s target is 8.41 percent. This poor loan disbursal is mainly due to the education sector getting affected due Covid-19 pandemic.”

“At the SLBC meet in December 2020, member banks were told to sanction more under education loans to the eligible students to achieve the target,” he added.

Due to record rains and flooding in the State, banks were asked to restructure loans in natural calamity affected districts. Due to unprecedented rains and flooding in August – 23 districts and 130 taluks were affected. In September – 16 districts and 43 taluks got affected and in October – 5 districts and 7 taluks got affected.

After the revenue department submitted crop-wise loss data for September quarter, about 230 accounts amounting to ₹5.15 crore were re-structured.

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Private banks in Karnataka lead in NPAs

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The non-performing assets (NPAs) of all banks, in Karnataka,from 28 lakh accounts was ₹57,070.02 crore as on September 30, 2020.

“Among the sectors with high NPAs was agriculture at ₹17,772.87 crore (from 12.20 lakh accounts), other priority sector advances was ₹11,470.07 crore (4.20 lakh accounts) and non-priority sector advances was ₹17,096.27 crore (7.73 lakh accounts),” a senior official at Karnataka State Level Bankers’ Committee (SLBC) said.

Among the private banks, NPAs in Lakshmi Vilas Bank was ₹2,979.10 crore from 15,190 accounts, while those from Yes Bank was₹4,675.23 crore from 946 accounts.

Among the lead banks category, Canara Bank’s total NPAs stood at ₹12,531.66 crore (with 3.41 lakh accounts), State Bank of India at ₹11,663.58 crore (7.37 lakh accounts). Punjab National Bank with ₹4,121.52 crore (12,735 accounts) and Bank of India ₹1,069.85 crore (19,477 accounts).

“SLBC has requested the Karnataka government to provide guidance and assistance for the recovery of bad loans,” the official said.

On the recovery front, banks in the State have recovered ₹460.87 crore so far under Sarfaesi, DRT and Lok Adalats Acts. The recoveries under Sarfaesi were ₹114.25 crore, Debts Recovery Tribunals (DRT) at ₹335.19 crore and Lok Adalat at ₹11.43 crore.

Poor loan disbursal

On September quarter, the banks have disbursed education loans of ₹650 crore, covering 30,102 students, as against the annual financial target of ₹7,725 crore under both priority and non-priority segments.

According to the official, “The performance of banks in lending under education loans, as the percentage of achievement v/s target, was 8.41 per cent. This poor loan disbursal was mainly due to the education sector getting affected due to the Covid-19 pandemic.”

“During the SLBC meet in December 2020, member banks were told to sanction more education loans to eligible students to achieve the target,” he added.

Due to record rains and flooding in the State, banks were asked to restructure loans in natural calamity-affected districts. After the revenue department submitted crop-wise loss data for September quarter, about 230 accounts amounting to ₹5.15 crore were re-structured.

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Yes Bank registers 1.3% quarterly growth in loans and advances

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Liquidity coverage ratio, a key financial indicator, stood at 115.5% compared with 107.3% in the previous quarter.

Yes Bank registered 1.3% quarter-on-quarter (q-o-q) growth in loans and advances to Rs 1.69 lakh crore during the December quarter, according to provisional data released by the bank on Monday. Similarly, deposits grew 7.7% to Rs 1.46 lakh crore in the quarter, compared to Rs 1.36 lakh crore in the September quarter.

The gross retail disbursements during the December quarter stood at Rs 7,563 crore, up 109% compared with Rs 3,764 crore in the September quarter. Rajan Pental, global head-retail banking at Yes Bank, had earlier told FE that the lender had set a target to disburse retail and small business loans worth Rs 10,000 crore in the December quarter of the current financial year. The bank also aims to double its retail assets and liabilities by 2023.

The certificate of deposits (CDs) grew 1.9% to Rs 7,395 crore from Rs 7,259 crore in the preceding quarter. The current account and savings account (CASA) deposits grew 12.6% to Rs 37,973 crore, compared to Rs 33,713 crore in the September quarter. Similarly, the proportion of total CASA deposits to total deposits grew 120 basis points (bps) to 27.4% in the December quarter, compared to 26.2% in the previous one.

Credit to deposit ratio in the quarter under review stood at 115.6% compared with 122.9% in the previous quarter. Liquidity coverage ratio, a key financial indicator, stood at 115.5% compared with 107.3% in the previous quarter.

The bank said it had registered 38.8% in the deposits during the nine-month period from April to December. However, loans and advances declined 1.4% during the same nine-month period. Earlier, Yes Bank was rescued by a clutch of financial institutions in March as per the reconstruction plan prepared by the Reserve Bank of India.

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Yes Bank appoints Anurag Adlakha as Chief Human Resources Officer

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Private sector lender Yes Bank has appointed Niranjan Banodkar as the Group Chief Financial Officer of the bank.

Banodkar is currently responsible for the Strategy and Planning function as well as driving the Sustainability agenda at Yes Bank.

He will replace Anurag Adlakha, who has been appointed Chief Human Resources Officer. Adlakha is replacing Deodutta Kurane, who would be retiring from the service of the bank.

“Both these appointments will be effective January 1 2021,” the lender said in a statement. The decisions were taken at a meeting of the board of directors of Yes Bank on Wednesday.

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How to spot a shaky bank

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In the case of Lakshmi Vilas Bank (LVB), RBI has capped deposit withdrawals at ₹ 25000 for a 30-day period, while a merger is in the works. If you’re keen to avoid such episodes with your bank deposits in future, how do you spot the trouble signs in a bank?

Financial checks

Growth and profits in the banking business are fuelled mainly by leverage. For every ₹ 100 of assets in a bank’s balance sheet, it may have just ₹ 4 of its own capital, with deposits and borrowings making up the rest. This is what makes banks particularly fragile entities that can be tripped up by defaults, delays in loan repayments or funding constraints.

Four financial ratios can alert you early to brewing trouble. The first is the capital adequacy or capital to risk weighted assets (CRAR) ratio, which measures the amount of its own and supplementary capital held by a bank for every rupee of loans advanced by it.

A sub-set of this is the Tier I CRAR, which represents the bank’s permanent capital consisting of equity, reserves and other capital against which losses can be set off. Indian banks are required to maintain a minimum CRAR of 10.875 per cent and Tier I CRAR of 8.875 per cent. LVB had a CRAR of just 0.17 per cent as of June 2020, with a negative Tier I CRAR. SBI, in contrast, had a CRAR of 14.87 per cent and Tier 1 CRAR of 12.10 per cent as of September 30, 2020.

Then, there’s the quantum of doubtful loans in the bank’s books, as measured by its NPA (Non-performing asset) ratio. The gross NPA ratio measures the proportion of loans given out that are overdue for over 90 days.

The net NPA ratio measures bad loans after the bank has made provisions. Broadly, gross and net NPA ratios that are below 5 per cent signal reasonable health, but trends in this ratio are more important to watch. A more than 0.5 percentage point quarterly jump in the NPA ratio suggests problems escalating.

Leverage ratio captures the extent of a bank’s Tier I capital to its total loans. The RBI allows banks to run with a ratio of 3.5-4 per cent, but a ratio above 5 is a comfortable number. HDFC Bank boasted a leverage ratio of 10.71 per cent in September 2020 quarter.

To gauge if a bank has enough cash to meet its near-term dues, the Liquidity Coverage Ratio, or LCR, is your guide. Measured as the high-quality liquid assets held by the bank against its dues over the next 30 days, the higher this ratio is above 100 per cent the better placed it is on liquidity. LVB was comfortable on this score with an LCR of 294 per cent in June 2020.

These ratios are readily available for every scheduled commercial bank on a quarterly basis, in the document ‘Basel III-Pillar 3’ disclosures on the bank’s website.

RBI actions

If RBI believes that a bank is walking a tightrope on indicators such as NPAs, CRAR or return on assets, it can immediately subject it to Prompt Corrective Action (PCA). During PCA, RBI can impose a variety of business restrictions on a bank, induct new management, replace Board members or even merge it with another. Most PCA measures impact a bank’s financials and growth plans, until afresh capital infusion helps them pull out of PCA.

Indian Overseas Bank, Central Bank of India, UCO Bank and United Bank of India are under the RBI’s PCA framework. LVB was put under RBI’s PCA framework in September 2019. Depositors need to worry more about private sector banks being under PCA than public sector banks, as the latter can be quickly bailed out by the Government infusing new capital, while private banks will need to find bona fide investors.

Management churn

If a bank you’re invested with sees a string of top management exits before their term is done, it could be an indication of governance issues. The RBI actions to replace or remove the bank’s CEO or Board members or to supersede the Board are a red rag and provide early warning of suspected governance issues. Skirmishes between key shareholder factions or churn on top appointees are trouble signs, too.

LVB saw shareholders voting out the re-appointment of its MD and CEO along with a clutch of directors in its recent AGM. Yes Bank saw RBI refuse another term to its founder and a string of independent director exits before the moratorium.

Stock prices

When a bank share suffers a precipitous drop or trades at a fraction of reported book value, your antennae should be up for likely problems. A bank share trading at a fraction of its book value could mean that the stock market is under-valuing a good business. But more often, it could mean that it is sceptical about the reported value of the bank’s book. Stock markets, after all, were ahead of rating agencies in spotting problems at stressed NBFCs; they may not be far off the mark with banks.

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