How green is the green finance promise of global banks?, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Most global banks have signed Gfanz (the Glasgow Financial Alliance for Net Zero) at COP26 UN Climate Change Conference pledging to report annually on the carbon emissions linked to the projects they lend to.

Major signatories to the initiative, which aims to provide trillions of dollars in green finance, include Citi, Morgan Stanley and Bank of America. However, earlier efforts to promote green financing have not met with a serious response.

Principles of responsible banking

In 2019, the UN General Assembly exuberantly launched its principles of responsible banking (PRBs) where signatory banks agreed to work with their clients to encourage sustainable practices and to align their business strategy to the UN sustainable development goals and the Paris climate agreement.

Also, many of the biggest banks have not signed the PRBs, even though the principles have been the gold standard until now for committing to decarbonising lending.

Of the top ten banks (by market capitalisation), only Citi, Commercial Bank of China (ICBC), Bank of China and Agricultural Bank of China are signatories to PRBs. JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, China Construction Bank, Wells Fargo, Morgan Stanley and China Merchants Bank are not on the list.

This is despite it being a limited commitment. Signatories have four years to comply with the principles, and signatories are not penalised or even named and shamed for failing to live up to the principles.

How banks fare

Among the major signatories to PRBs, Citi was the third-biggest fossil fuel lender in 2016-19 after the Paris Agreement and reached second place in 2020.

MUFG and ICBC, who are also signatories to the PRBs, both grew their fossil-fuel lending over the period. MUFG is also a Gfanz member, though neither ICBC nor any of the other Chinese banks are part of the new initiative.

Meanwhile, Wells Fargo and JP Morgan, which were not signatories to PRBs, reduced their total fossil fuels lending each year from 2018 to 2020, by 57% and 23% respectively.

Signatories to the PRBs are also supposed to carry out environmental-impact assessments and to measure the greenhouse gas emissions of projects. They are also supposed to ensure that loans go to projects that are carbon neutral. However, very little of this is happening on the ground at present.

While there is a need for a scheme that makes PRBs compulsory and binding, Gfanz does not tick the boxes. Under it, annual reporting requirements on carbon emissions are not mandatory either.

Experts say instead of forbidding lending to non-green projects now, loan books need to be treated as a portfolio of projects in different hues of green, with a defined trajectory towards greener – but it needs to be mandatory for signatories.



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1 Mid and 1- Small Cap Cement Stocks To Buy From HDFC Securities Based On Technical Analysis

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1. Prism Johnson- Buy for potential upside of 17%

The brokerage firm has given a buy on Prism Johnson for gains of 17.30 percent considering the target price set at Rs. 160. The buy has been given for a period of 3 months, while its last closing price has been at Rs. 136.40 per share. Stop loss suggested for the trade is Rs. 121.

Prism Johnson Limited (Formerly Prism Cement Limited) is one of India’s leading integrated Building Materials Company, with a wide range of products including cement, ready-mixed concrete, tiles and bath products.

Technical observations:

1. Prism Johnson is in an intermediate uptrend as it has been making higher tops and higher bottoms for

the last several months.

 After a period of consolidation, the stock broke out of its range on Monday owing to higher than average volumes.

2. Positive signals are being given out for the stock as the counter trades above the 20 day and 50 day SMA. Also weekly indicators like the 14-week RSI are in rising mode. This suggests of an upmove trend to sustain.

2. Dalmia Bharat: - Buy for potential upside of 22%

2. Dalmia Bharat: – Buy for potential upside of 22%

The company is bullish on the counter for up to 22 percent gains and has set a target price of Rs. 2600 to be realized in 3 months time frame. The stop loss recommended is Rs. 1950.

Dalmia Bharat is into cement business since the year 1939 and has a capacity of 3 3Mnt. The company is a pioneer in super speciality cement that is used by oil wells, railway sleepers and Air Strips.

Technical observations:

The stock has been seeing immediate uptrend and has been hitting higher tops and higher bottoms since last few months.

After hitting the intermediate lows of Rs. 1842 levels, the stock has been gaining ground and reversed its recent downtrend.

” Technical indicators are giving positive signals as the stock is trading above the 20 day and 50 day

SMA. Daily momentum indicators like the 14-day RSI have bounced back from oversold levels and are

in rising mode now. This augurs well for the uptrend to continue”, says HDFC securities report.

Disclaimer:

Disclaimer:

The above stocks are picked from the brokerage report of HDFC Securities. Investing in equities poses a risk of financial losses. Investors must therefore exercise due caution. Greynium Information Technologies, the author, and the brokerage house are not liable for any losses caused as a result of decisions based on the article



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Edelweiss ARC increasing investment to acquire stressed retail loans

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Edelweiss Financial Services’ stake in the ARC is currently 60%, while CDPQ Private Equity Asia, part of Canada’s pension fund CDPQ, holds 20%.

Edelweiss Asset Reconstruction Company (EARC), currently India’s largest private asset reconstruction firm, is increasing its investment to acquire more stressed retail loans from banks and non-bank lenders. Sales of stressed loans from the retail segment are picking up with lenders looking to resolve the problem of growing non-performing assets (NPAs) on their retail loan books.

According to Edelweiss ARC MD & CEO RK Bansal, the company currently has around five lakh accounts under its retail portfolio and has already become the largest player in the retail ARC space. “Retail NPA sales are picking up and many banks and NBFCs are looking to resolve the retail NPAs,” Bansal told FE.

“Banks’ wholesale loan books have already seen huge NPAs and they are now in resolution mode for these stressed assets. New NPAs in wholesale are less. We are seeing a higher level of NPAs now in retail, whether it is housing loans, loans against property, MSME loans or unsecured loans like personal loans and credit cards,” he said.

For the quarter ended September, EARC’s assets under management (AUM) stood at Rs 42,800 crore against Rs 42,400 crore in the same period a year ago. At the end of the second quarter this fiscal, capital employed for wholesale assets was at Rs 5,000 crore compared to Rs 5,200 crore for the corresponding period last fiscal. Notably, capital employed for retail assets rose to Rs 500 crore from Rs 100 crore a year ago.

“We feel that retail will grow much faster, at least for the next two-three years till the wholesale cycle comes back. Because as of now, banks have not lent much in wholesale on the corporate side for the last two-three years. The lending has been less because banks have been struggling with NPAs. So once the lending picks up, capex cycle will pick up. The cycle will take about two-three years more for fresh NPAs on the corporate side,” Bansal said.

Edelweiss ARC started its retail bad loans management operations around three years ago. “Currently, the AUM for our retail portfolio is around Rs 2,000 crore. Slowly, AUM for retail will grow. Retail AUM does not grow that fast because retail loans are very small and repayment is much faster than wholesale. So AUM keeps on coming down faster in retail,” he said.

Asked whether the National Asset Reconstruction Company (NARCL), the so-called bad bank, will reduce the growth opportunity for existing ARCs, Bansal said, “The answer is no. Because anyway these cases (transfer of toxic assets by banks) were not such where ARCs were interested. Because these cases are under the 15:85 structure, while in the case of private sector ARCs typically banks are not selling nowadays under 15:85. They are selling it to government ARCs, because they also know that nobody will pay them cash for these assets.”

NARCL is expected to witness the transfer of the first batch of toxic assets worth about Rs 90,000 crore by January 2022.

For the second quarter this fiscal, Edelweiss ARC’s gross revenue grew 7.4% year-on-year to Rs 231 crore, while profit after tax soared by 52.25% y-o-y to Rs 70 crore. The company witnessed robust recoveries of around Rs 740 crore from the wholesale portfolio and around Rs 160 crore from the retail portfolio.

Edelweiss Financial Services’ stake in the ARC is currently 60%, while CDPQ Private Equity Asia, part of Canada’s pension fund CDPQ, holds 20%.

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GIFT Authority may be vested with overseeing crypto trading

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The government may entrust the responsibility of overseeing cryptocurrency trading to Gandhinagar-based Gujarat International Finance Tec-City (GIFT).

The government is thinking of appointing GIFT-based International Financial Services Centres Authority (IFSCA) as the regulator for crypto trading, sources told BusinessLine. This is after two of the country’s main banking and financial market policy-making authorities — the Reserve Bank of India and SEBI — appear not very keen on regulating the crypto market.

Regulatory vacuum

Crypto trading runs into billions of dollars on the newly-launched crypto exchanges in India, including CoinDCX, WazirX, Zebpay, CoinSwitch Kuber and UnoCoin. But all of these are operating in complete regulatory vacuum. The RBI has said it is not in favour of crypto trading but in March the Supreme Court scuttled the banking regulator’s move to prevent banks from supporting crypto transactions.

The apex court reasoned that the RBI cannot disproportionately restrict trading in cryptos in the absence of a legislation declaring them illegal. This year the government held back its Bill to ban cryptos and instead changed its stance to regulating them.

“The government’s view is that the crypto market should be tested with a regulatory sandbox. Unlike SEBI and the RBI, IFSCA chief Injeti Srinivas is not averse to crypto markets and has not expressed any reservations against regulating them. Nothing is finalised but the government is in no mood to kick the can any further on crypto trading. The Budget could see some announcement on the roadmap ahead for crypto trading,” said a source close to the Centre’s thinking.

New crypto platforms can register with IFSCA and follow the norms set by the regulator at GIFT. These exchanges may also be required to shift operations to GIFT City.

The practical hurdle for the RBI and SEBI in regulating crypto currencies is that their origin is mysterious and they have no jurisdiction on global platforms where the price discovery is concentrated. In contrast, GIFT was created to cater to global market assets.

India’s retail investors can trade in GIFT using the remittance scheme up to ₹ 3.30 crore per person per year. According to experts, this cap would also help the Centre prevent high-value speculation by individuals in crypto trading in the initial phase.

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Credit Access Grameen reports 8% drop YoY in Q2 net profit

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Credit Access Grameen Ltd (CAGL) has reported a 8 per cent year-on-year (YoY) drop in its second quarter standalone net profit at ₹72 crore against ₹78.2 crore in the year ago quarter.

Provisions hit bottomline

The Bengaluru-headquartered microfinance institution’s bottomline was weighed down by a 39.5 per cent YoY increase in loan loss provisions at ₹91.1 crore against ₹65.3 crore in the year-ago period.

Pre-provisioning operating profit, however, was up 10.6 per cent YoY to ₹188.2 crore from ₹170.1 crore a year ago.

Also see: How to make public debt sustainable

Loan disbursements jumped to ₹3,412 crore against ₹907 crore in the preceding quarter and ₹1,420 crore in the corresponding quarter of the previous fiscal.

Gross loan portflio (GLP) increased 21.5 per cent YoY to ₹11,184 crore as at September-end 2021.

NPAs decline

Gross non-performing assets (GNPAs) declined to 7.18 per cent of gross advances by September-end 2021 against 8.12 per cent in the previous quarter. However, they were higher than Q2FY21’s 5.18 per cent.

Restructured loans

CAGL restructured loans aggregating ₹99.1 crore in the reporting quarter against ₹6.9 crore in the preceding quarter. Overall, the MFI has restructured loans aggregating ₹183.1 crore (incluing restructuring in FY21).

Total provisioning on restructured loans, which account for 1.5 per cent of GLP as on September-end 2021, is 28.8 per cent.

Net interest margin improved a shade to 11.3 per cent from 11.2 per cent a year ago.

CAGL’s consolidated net profit, including the results of three subsidiaries — Madura Micro Finance, Madura Micro Education and CreditAccess India Foundation — declined 25 per cent YoY to ₹59.7 crore against ₹79.6 crore.

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Reserve Bank of India – Press Releases

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The Reserve Bank of India (RBl) has imposed, by an order dated November 08, 2021, a monetary penalty of ₹5.00 lakh (Rupees Five Lakh only) on The Nakodar Hindu Urban Co-operative Bank Ltd., Nakodar, Punjab (the bank) for non-compliance with certain directions issued by RBI contained in the Master Circular DCBR.BPD. (PCB) MC No.12/09.14.000/2015-16 dated July 01, 2015 on ‘Income Recognition, Asset Classification, Provisioning and Other Related Matters – UCBs’. This penalty has been imposed in exercise of powers vested in RBI under the provisions of Section 47 A (1) (c) read with Section 46 (4) (i) and Section 56 of the Banking Regulation Act, 1949, taking into account the failure of the bank to adhere to the aforesaid directions issued by RBI.

This action is based on deficiencies in regulatory compliance and is not intended to pronounce upon the validity of any transaction or agreement entered into by the bank with its customers.

Background

The inspection report of the bank based on its financial position as on March 31, 2019, revealed, inter alia, non-adherence with/violation of the aforesaid directions, viz., non-identification of NPAs, wrong classification of assets and inadequate provisions made due to wrong classification of assets. Based on the same, a Notice was issued to the bank advising it to show cause as to why penalty should not be imposed for violation of the said directions.

After considering the bank’s reply and oral submissions made during the personal hearing, RBI came to the conclusion that the aforesaid charges of non-adherence with /violation of RBI directions were substantiated and warranted imposition of monetary penalty.

(Yogesh Dayal)     
Chief General Manager

Press Release: 2021-2022/1169

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Reserve Bank of India – Notifications

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April 14, 2015




Dear All




Welcome to the refurbished site of the Reserve Bank of India.





The two most important features of the site are: One, in addition to the default site, the refurbished site also has all the information bifurcated functionwise; two, a much improved search – well, at least we think so but you be the judge.




With this makeover, we also take a small step into social media. We will now use Twitter (albeit one way) to send out alerts on the announcements we make and YouTube to place in public domain our press conferences, interviews of our top management, events, such as, town halls and of course, some films aimed at consumer literacy.




The site can be accessed through most browsers and devices; it also meets accessibility standards.



Please save the url of the refurbished site in your favourites as we will give up the existing site shortly and register or re-register yourselves for receiving RSS feeds for uninterrupted alerts from the Reserve Bank.



Do feel free to give us your feedback by clicking on the feedback button on the right hand corner of the refurbished site.



Thank you for your continued support.




Department of Communication

Reserve Bank of India


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Explainer: What are NFTs, and why the sudden frenzy about them?

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NFT stands for Non-Fungible Token. Ok, let’s explain. Non-fungible means unique and something that cannot be substituted with another. For example, while a ₹2,000 note can be substituted by another note of the same denomination, or a ten-gram gold coin with another gold coin of equal weight, that is one is fungible (inter-changeable, non-unique to the other).

MS Dhoni’s bat, which he used in the 2011 World Cup final to help India win the title, is unique, and has no substitute.

Similarly, think of an original handwritten letter by Mahatma Gandhi or a particular painting by MF Hussain. These are unique and non-fungible – there is no substitute to the original.

The currency note, gold coin, cricket bat, letter and painting examples used above are all real physical things. If you extrapolate that to the digital world with the help of blockchain, you would have an NFT. It is like a digital world collectible, a digital asset, which is available to be bought and sold online, with digital proof of ownership through blockchain. But then, what is blockchain?

What is blockchain?

Unless you have been living under a rock or are a sworn technophobe, you would have at least heard of ‘blockchain’ being mentioned in the news and daily conversations. Blockchain is a decentralised ledger, where data is stored in the form of blocks, and comes together as chains (thus blockchain). As the name suggests, it is ‘decentralised’ – it is distributed.

Since there are multiple copies of the shared database, no single user can tamper or change any data, thus ensuring trust and large-scale acceptance. The innovation with blockchain is that it guarantees the trustworthiness and security of a record of data without the need for a trusted third party. Think of blockchain as a ledger whose records of transactions cannot be altered, deleted or destroyed. Each new block is added to a chain, but the old ones cannot be altered or manipulated.

While the blockchain technology has been around for nearly three decades – it was first proposed in 1991 – it become mainstream over the last decade, mainly due to the popularity of cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin, which use the blockchain technology. This is the technology which underpins everything from cryptocurrencies, decentrailised finance (DeFi) applications, NFT’s and Smart Contracts.

How do NFTs work?

Most NFTs are part of Ethereum blockchain. Ehtereum is a cryptocurrency like Bitcoin, Shiba Inu or a Dogecoin. Other cryptocurrencies, too, can and indeed, are offering NFTs, but the most popular one right now is the Ethereum blockchain and transactions happen using ETH coins. NFT, is thus, any digital asset such as a piece of music, image, photograph, painting, GIF, meme an audio or video file or game that can exist in a digital format.

Just like in the real, physical world where we assert ownership and usage rights, as we move to an increasingly digital world, there, too, if you own something digital, you can assert your ownership and how the asset could be used. That creates value. For instance, Twitter CEO jack Dorsey sold the NFT to his first tweet for about $2.9 million, the proceeds of which Dorsey had said would be given to a charity. Are you asking yourself what the buyer got for the purchase of Dorsey’s NFT? The tweet itself continues to be live on Twitter, but the winning bidder would own the NFT, which is signed and verified by the creator, similar to a virtual autograph. By now you would be wondering why one cannot can’t just save the tweet and what is so unique about it.

Think of what you get when you buy, say, a painting by your favourite artist. You feel happy and proud about owning something. NFTs are similar to it. What is the value of your painting? Whatever the market is ready to pay. That is the case even in NFTs. This is also a new alternative investment asset class, which is hugely speculative. For instance, this article could be sold as an NFT if there is a buyer who wants to purchase it.

NFTs in India

Recently, Amitabh Bachchan sold a number of NFTs, including his recital of his father’s famous poem Madhushala, apart from various other NFT offerings from his movie career, for $1 million. Similarly, actress Sunny Leone sold her NFTs in a private sale. Others, too, including Salman Khan, singer Mika Singh, poet Priya Malik and numerous others, have offered NFTs or are in the process of doing so.

In India NFTs can be brought on various trading places such as crypto exchange WazirX, NFTically, Wall.app, Zebpay and a number of other platforms. These platforms act as digital middlemen. Sellers can set a price for their NFTs or opt for an auction. While we are still in the early days of NFTs, the type, range and price available is likely to go up.

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RBI lifts restrictions imposed on Diners Club International

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The Reserve Bank of India has lifted business restrictions on Diners Club International, which would enable it to once again on-board new customers on to its card network.

“In view of the satisfactory compliance demonstrated by Diners Club International Ltd with the RBI circular dated April 6, 2018, on Storage of Payment System Data, the restrictions imposed, vide order dated April 23, 2021, on on-boarding of fresh domestic customers has been lifted with immediate effect,” the RBI said on Tuesday.

RBI had on April 23, 2021, imposed restrictions on Diners Club International from on-boarding new domestic customers onto its card network from May 1, 2021. This was due to non-compliance with norms on storage of payment system data.

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CRED targets ₹100-crore ESOP buyback this year

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Fintech unicorn CRED has announced that the cumulative ESOP buyback under its ‘accelerated wealth programme’ will be upto ₹100 crore this year.

All the CRED team members who have vested options as of October 31, 2021, will be eligible to participate in the buyback event and sell a portion of their vested shares. CRED’s accelerated wealth programme was launched in August as an additional revenue stream for its team members.

At 87%, fintech adoption in India higher than global average: FM

“Our growth over the past three years has been possible because of the collective conviction and contribution of the team. Rewarding the commitment of our team members involves providing them ample opportunities to create wealth — helping them realise financial goals and invest in their future,” the company said in its latest newsletter.

Fintech SaaS start-up Clear raises $75 m in Series C funding from Kora, Stripe, others

Last month, CRED raised $251 million Series E funding from Tiger Global and Falcon Edge. There were two new investors, Marshall Wace and Steadfast, besides DST Global, Insight Partners, Coatue, Sofina, RTP, and Dragoneer. The funding round had valued the company at $4.01 billion.

Started in 2018, CRED rewards users points for making credit card payments. It has since added new offerings such as personal loans and rent payments as it attempts to become a full-stack financial service provider. The company also recently launched its peer-to-peer lending product, which allows CRED users to lend other users money at 9 per cent interest rate.

CRED noted in the newsletter that 40.07 per cent of CRED users/members had improved their credit scores in October by incorporating the suggested actions on the app, and members won ₹22 crore worth cashbacks.

Further, in September, CRED reported that electronic accessories (phone wallets, phone stands), audio products (earphones, neckbands and TWS earbuds) and smart home devices (smart home cameras and smart remotes) were the most ordered items on CRED Store. Nearly 1 in 5 transacting members are said to have picked electronic accessories or appliances, and coffee has seen the highest repeat purchase among members. Some of the popular brands on CRED Store include The Man Company, Bombay Shaving Company, Portronics, Smitch, Oakter, Yoga Bar, Wingreens and Raw Pressery, among others.

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