H1FY22 report: Poor corporate loan growth, thin margins hit big banks’ NIIs

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The PNB management attributed the drop in NII to the one-off impact of a judicial embargo on bad-loan recognition during the September quarter of FY21.

As loan growth in the corporate segment slowed and low interest rates put a lid on margins, most large banks saw their net interest incomes (NII) growing slower during the first half of FY22. Some public sector banks (PSBs) even saw their NIIs fall on a year-on-year (y-o-y) basis during Q2FY22.

Deposit rate cuts have been less frequent so far this year and with lending rates continuing to trend down, NIIs have come under pressure, bankers said.

Punjab National Bank (PNB), Yes Bank, Indian Bank and Canara Bank were among the lenders who saw their NIIs fall during the September quarter. PNB’s NII was down 25% y-o-y, with the net interest margin (NIM) falling 30 basis points (bps) sequentially and 80 bps y-o-y.

The PNB management attributed the drop in NII to the one-off impact of a judicial embargo on bad-loan recognition during the September quarter of FY21.
Also, the Delhi-based bank said it had to price loans in the corporate and micro, small and medium enterprises (MSME) segments downwards.

SS Mallikarjuna Rao, MD & CEO, PNB, told investors that the lender has reduced the pricing in the MSME segment aggressively from August onwards. “So two months of an impact was roughly around Rs 150 crore in action. Then there was an aggressive repricing in the short-term corporate book where people take WCDL (working capital demand loans). So that book is more than `50,000 crore, where repricing aggressively has taken place,” Rao said.

Private banks put up a relatively better show on the core income front without bucking the overall downward trend. Axis Bank’s NII grew 7.8% y-o-y in Q2FY22, as against 20% in Q2FY21 and 11% in Q1FY22.

HDFC Bank, which saw its NII growth improve to 12% y-o-y in Q2FY22 from 9% in the previous quarter, still undershot its year-ago growth rate of nearly 17%. The largest private lender’s management said the change in its loan mix in favour of a larger wholesale book was responsible for the muted NII growth.

Srinivasan Vaidyanathan, chief financial officer and group head – finance, HDFC Bank, said that certain segments where the bank grew over the last 18 months were low-risk segments. “That means with a lower price that comes with it,” he said, adding that the contribution of retail loans is now on the rise. “…even in this quarter while we have had the retail growth coming up, …[it] will take a couple of quarters for the average to catch up with the overall base,” he said.

Kotak Mahindra Bank registered an NII growth of 3.2%, slower than 5.8% a quarter ago and 16.8% a year ago, as the lender saw loan growth picking up only around the end of the July-September quarter. “While at the period-end, you see the loan growth happening, a large part of it is seen around the end of the quarter. So it doesn’t really bring me NIIs for this period,” said Jaimin Bhatt, president & group CFO, Kotak Mahindra Bank.

Moreover, a lot of the incremental credit growth during the last year has happened in home loans and other secured loan segments, where yields are lower. “If you look at the higher-yielding loans, like unsecured personal loans or credit cards or some of the agri loans, they’ve actually de-grown. So some of the mix change has also impacted the NII,” Bhatt said.

As the busy season progresses in the second half of FY22, banks expect their core earnings to improve. Both PNB and Kotak Mahindra Bank said that their NII performance will be better in the next quarter as earnings from festive-season business start to flow in. The central bank’s liquidity withdrawal exercise could also help banks price credit better.

“I’m expecting improvement in the next quarter because … as the liquidity is slowly being removed by the RBI and I’m expecting them to bring it down from Rs nine lakh crore to Rs 2.5 lakh crore by December second week,” PNB’s Rao said. “So our pricing will be moving in a better manner in Q3 and Q4,” he added.

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‘Continuing with monetary stimulus likely to be riskier for economy’

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Amandeep Singh Chopra, group president, UTI AMC

By Malini Bhupta

It’s time to pull back on the stimulus unleashed by the Reserve Bank of India at the start of the pandemic. In an interview with Malini Bhupta, UTI Asset Management Company’s Group President and Head of Fixed Income, Amandeep Singh Chopra, said that most of the benefits of monetary stimulus have played out and continuing with it could be riskier for the economy. Edited excerpts:

The central bank has done a lot to support the economy by keeping rates low and pumping in enough liquidity in the system. Do you believe that it is time to reverse the policy stance as spillover effects could lead to problems?
Growth is now well-entrenched and even the impact of the second wave on the economy is milder. A large part of the benefits which one saw from monetary stimulus played out during the worst phase of the pandemic in 2020 and first half of 2021. Continuing with it at the present stage could be riskier for the economy. One could argue that there could be another wave, but given the vaccination drive so far, the impact may be much milder on the economy. We have seen negative real interest rates when growth was affected, so interest rates were kept low. But we cannot run sustained negative real interest rates, particularly when growth is looking up. India will show one of the highest year-on-year growths into FY23. With so much liquidity and low rates along with a surge in demand, [it] can spill over into significant inflation concern. And this concern is taking centre-stage for the markets … There is a strong argument that the present policy has to reverse…

Do you expect RBI to change stance in December?
It seems there may be additional elements of normalisation in December. The central bank began reversing its easing cycle in the same sequence in reverse, as it gave the stimulus. They are already implementing strategies to reduce the liquidity in the banking system and gradually move the overnight rate up. There’s a possibility that RBI could start narrowing the policy corridor from the current 65 basis points in the next stage. I don’t expect a change of accommodative stance yet and maybe they may want to see two-three quarters of sustained growth.

Inflation is expected to be persistent. Do you feel that loose global monetary policy will result in risks and spillover effects?
We have seen unprecedented expansion of central bank balance sheets. It is not sustainable and risks do build up. The Fed has expanded its balance sheet more than what was done after the global financial crisis. Domestic liquidity is even higher than the post-demonetisation period. These are significant data points, and withdrawing excess liquidity is not easy without affecting asset prices and creating volatility. This risk is accentuated if you see a concerted global liquidity withdrawal by most central banks as they follow similar strategies; the cumulative impact will be large.

A lot has happened in the debt segment from the point of view of investors. How has it impacted investor sentiment?
We had good growth for 10 years when it came to debt funds. Every market goes through its own cycles. In 2018-19, there was an unprecedented credit down cycle, which impacted a certain segment of funds and led to change of investor preferences. Additionally, a fair amount of regulatory changes have taken place. Looking ahead, the industry is in a better position and if adequate diversification is followed by investors, the net impact of one product category not doing well is somewhat offset by others. I believe investors need to look at debt funds from a longer perspective and should be patient through such cycles; the returns from a 5-10 year holding period can be quite attractive.

Do you see corporates coming to debt markets?
Due to the pandemic-led economic slowdown, corporates focused on deleveraging and refinancing at lower rates. There has been a very conservative capital expansion behaviour by the corporate sector. Banks are flush with liquidity and they have been able to meet the reduced funding requirement of corporates at competitive rates. So the supply of bonds has been limited and easy liquidity saw compression in spreads. Going ahead, this could change when the corporate sector begins expansion and gets into a capex cycle. That could increase the supply of bonds, which we expect as economic growth sustains its momentum.

Do you expect the government to meet its fiscal deficit target or could it do better than the projection?
There was a concern on a possible slippage, but the government’s revenue mobilisation has been ahead of estimates, which gives the government leeway to definitely meet the 6.8% (BE) fiscal deficit number and maybe lower it. If the non-tax revenues meet the estimated target then the number could be even better. This could be positive news for bond markets on the fiscal side.

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Credit offtake pickes up over the last two fortnights

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Credit offtake picked up steam in the last two fortnights ending October 22 with Reserve Bank of India (RBI) data showing a growth of ₹94,773.53 crore. This comes in the backdrop of the ongoing festive season.

In the latest fortnight ended October 22, 2021, banks saw credit offtake of ₹34,345.49 crore. In the preceding fortnight ended October 8, 2021, credit offtake was ₹60,428.04 crore, as per RBI’s data on sectoral deployment of credit.

Economic activities rise

Dinesh Kumar Khara, Chairman, State Bank of India, said, “Credit demand appears to be on the rise with increasing economic activities across India.”

“Corporates too have started planning for future investments which will create demand for credit going forward,” he said, adding that SBI will see an overall credit growth of 9–10 per cent in FY22.

Also see: RBI to identify vulnerabilities in business models of supervised entities’

Khara underscored that the bank could disburse home loans aggregating ₹17,000 crore last month despite SBI’s home loan rate not being the lowest in the industry.

Deposit growth varies

When it comes to deposit growth, there was a divergent trend in the banking system in the two reporting fortnights.

While deposits in the latest reporting fortnight declined by ₹38,554.31 crore, the preceding fortnight saw a robust accretion of ₹1,54,515.33 crore.

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Infibeam’s CCAvenue brings TokenPay for RBI-compliant ‘saved card transactions’

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Infibeam Avenues Ltd’s digital payments platform, CCAvenue has launched an interoperable solution ‘TokenPay’ for businesses/merchants to comply with Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI) data security norms.

As the “saved cards transactions” are taking a hit, due to RBI directive prohibiting merchants, businesses, payment aggregators, and acquiring banks from storing customers’ credit/ debit /prepaid card information, IAL’s CCAvenue has developed a multi-network tokenisation solution to work across all major card networks.

CCAvenue’s ‘TokenPay’ solution works across all major card networks, including MasterCard, RuPay, and Visa.

Also it would help merchants enable their end-customer to continue experiencing the saved card transactions with enhanced security and allow merchants to remain RBI guideline compliant with its online data storage norms.

Tokens

Network tokenisation is the process of substituting the 16-digit static card number with a string of randomly generated numbers called ‘token’, which is virtually impossible to decrypt.

Also, since the framework ensures that a customer’s card information rests only with the customer, the card network, and the issuing bank, it minimises the risk of card data leaks and fraudulent activities significantly.

“In the absence of tokenisation, customers will have to enter their card information manually every time they transact online. This can increase the probability of manual error leading to transaction failures and a bad customer experience. Using CCAvenue’s TokenPay, businesses can generate, process and manage tokens with customers’ consent and continue offering a secure and frictionless online transaction experience,” said Vishwas Patel, Executive Director, Infibeam Avenues and Founder of CCAvenue.

As per the new RBI recommended framework, only card networks and card issuers are permitted to store customer card information. “Thus, the new system authorises businesses/merchants to use only ‘tokens’ to continue offering the saved card experience during online payments. All stakeholders are required to be fully compliant with the tokenisation framework by December 31, 2021,” a company statement said.

Merchants using other payment gateways can also tokenize cards through CCAvenue and continue using their preferred gateways to process token-based transactions, the statement added.

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SBI posts 67% rise in Q2 net to ₹7,627 crore

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Significant improvement in asset quality and lower loan-loss provisions helped State Bank of India  post highest-ever quarterly standalone net profit in the second quarter at ₹ 7,627 crore.

Resolution of the DHFL account, which allowed the  bank to write-back provisions amounting to ₹4,000 crore, also supported SBI’s bottomline.

The net profit in the second  quarter  ended September 30, 2021 was 67 per cent up year-on-year (yoy) vis-a-vis year-ago quarter’s ₹4,574 crore.

Slippages down

Slippages were about 52 per cent lower yoy at ₹4,176 crore in Q2FY22 against ₹15,666 crore in the first quarter (Q1FY22) ended June 30, 2021.

Dinesh Kumar Khara, Chairman, emphasised that the bank could pull back the first quarter’s retail segment slippages.

“This is the reason for the much lower slippages and also the accounts are performing well.

“Also, our ground level forces have also improved collections. Our collection efficiency stands at about 95 per cent,” he said.

The net interest income  was up about 11 per cent yoy to ₹31,184 crore (₹28,181.50 crore in the year-ago quarter).

Other income, including profit/loss on sale of assets, profit/loss on revaluation of investments (net), earnings from foreign exchange and derivative transactions, recoveries from accounts previously written off, dividend income, etc., declined about 4 per cent yoy to ₹8,208 crore (₹8,528 crore).

Loan-loss provisions declined 52 per cent yoy to ₹2,699 crore against ₹5,619 crore.

GNPA position improves

GNPA position improved to 4.90 per cent of gross advances as at September-end 2021 against 5.32 per cent in the preceding quarter.

Net NPAs position too improved to 1.52 per cent of net advances against 1.77 per cent in the preceding quarter.

As at September-end 2021,domestic advances increased about 5 per cent yoy to ₹ 21,56,055 crore. Foreign offices advances were up about 16 per cent yoy to ₹3,74,722 crore.

Within domestic advances, retail personal advances saw a 15 per cent yoy growth; agriculture (about 2 per cent) and SME (about 1 per cent). However, corporate advances de-grew about 4 per cent.

Khara attributed the muted scenario in corporate advances to working-capital limit utilisation continuing to be low.

“However, credit demand appears to be on the rise with increasing economic activities across India. Corporates too have started planning for future investments, which will create demand for credit going forward,” he said, adding that SBI will see an overall credit growth of 9-10 per cent in FY22.

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‘Buy’ This Company Stock For +22% Return In 1 Year, Recommended By Motilal Oswal

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Target price

According to Motilal Oswal, with the Current Market Price (CMP) at Rs. 14,302, the target price (TP) of this stock is Rs. Rs. 17,450, hence giving +22% return in 1 year. The firm said, “As the industry faces commodity inflation, PGHH has doubled down on its focus on driving productivity and innovation to drive a balanced growth in sales and profit.” According to the brokerage firm, the company’s “EBITDA margin, at 28.5%, was well ahead of our expectation of 23.9%, leading to an EBITDA/PAT beat v/s our expectations. Its medium-term top-line and earnings growth prospects remain the best of the breed. We maintain our Buy rating on the stock.”

Company performance

Company performance

P&G Hygiene and Healthcare’s sales growth of ~5% has been lower than the brokerage firm’s expectation, albeit on a base of 18.5% growth. In Q1FY22, the company’s sales increased by 4.8% YoY to Rs. 10.6b (est. Rs. 11.6b). On a 2-year CAGR basis, sales/EBITDA/PAT have increased by 11.4%/28.6%/26.3%. Motilal Oswal said, “Highlights from the management commentary, Both the Feminine Care and Health Care businesses grew ahead of their categories in 2QFY22.”

About the company

About the company

P&G Hygiene and Healthcare (PGHH) is one of the most popular companies in the country, with multiple leading brands in the hygiene, healthcare, and fabric care sectors. Pampers, Ariel, Tide, Whisper, Gillette, Oral B, Head & Shoulders, and Pantene are some of their most popular brands. Lately, the Healthcare segment has seen a growth of ~24% in FY21, partly aided by the pandemic, leading to strong sales growth for all Healthcare products.

Disclaimer

Disclaimer

The above stock is picked from the brokerage report of Motilal Oswal. 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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Sensex ends Samvat 2077 38% higher, best in 12 years, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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MUMBAI: Investors on Dalal Street were richer by about Rs 99 lakh crore during Samvat year 2077 that ended on Tuesday, riding on strong across-the-board buying that also led to a 38% jump in the sensex to its current close at 59,772 points. The rise was the best in the last 12 years while the gain in investors’ wealth—in terms of BSE’s market capitalisation—was the best ever, official data showed.

The year ended with BSE’s market cap at Rs 266 lakh crore ($3.6tn), which elevated India to the sixth largest market spot in the world in terms of market value. Samvat 2077—the calendar followed by mainly the trading community on Dalal Street—will go down as one of the best years in terms of returns and the regularity with which the leading indices hit new all-time highs, even though the economy struggled due to the ongoing Covid-induced pandemic, market players said.

Metals, banking & financial services, and software exporters led the rally while pharma and FMCG stocks witnessed muted gains in prices. The gains came on the back of nearly Rs 1.25 lakh crore worth of net buying of stocks by foreign institutional investors, while domestic institutions, which include mutual funds, insurance companies, banks and others financial companies, were net sellers at about Rs 34,700 crore, CDSL and BSE data showed.

The year will also be marked as the year when new age consumer-facing tech-enabled companies, for years being privately held by a handful of private equity-venture funds, started getting listed. The trend, often called private going public by merchant bankers and analysts, was led by food delivery company Zomato and soon followed by CarTrade. A host of such companies, that include FSN E-commerce (Nykaa), PB Fintech (Policybazaar) and One 97 Communications (PayTM), are now in various stages of going public during Samvat 2078.

Sensex ends Samvat 2077 38% higher, best in 12 years

According to Yesha Shah, head of equity research, Samco Securities, Samvat 2077 could be termed as the year of unicorns and technology companies. Technology adoption, which was formerly limited to certain sectors, has now become mainstream, Shah wrote in a note to clients.

“With the advent of e-commerce, (the) move to online prompted major alterations in sectors such as travel, hotels, restaurants, entertainment, and education. With increased internet access, smartphone penetration, and 5G modernization in India, the user base of Indian tech-driven fintech, edtech, healthtech and e-commerce start-ups is rapidly growing. This trend is backed up by India’s growing list of Unicorns, which has resulted in the nation having the world’s third largest start-up ecosystem. As a consequence, it was not unexpected that 2021 provided an appropriate opportunity for numerous such start-ups to make their public market debuts,” Shah wrote.

The year’s rally on D Street also catapulted some Indians to the club of the richest people in the world and Asia. The list includes Mukesh Ambani of Reliance Industries, Gautam Adani of Adani Group and Radhakishan Damani of D-Mart.



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This Private Sector Bank Alters Interest On Savings Account: Now Get Up To 6%

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Investment

oi-Vipul Das

|

Bandhan Bank offers a variety of savings accounts, including Elite Savings Account, Premium Savings Account, Advantage Savings Account, Respect Programme – For Senior Citizens, Standard Savings Account, Special Savings Account, Sanchay Savings Account, Corporate Salary Accounts, BSBDA Savings Account, and BSBDA-Small Savings Account for customers looking to open a savings account. With benefits such as 24-hour customer assistance, limitless cash transactions at branches, and an online application procedure, the bank also offers an interest rate of up to 6% on savings accounts. This interest rate has been recently revised by the bank and is in effect from November 1, 2021.

This Private Sector Bank Alters Interest On Savings Account: Now Get Up To 6%

Bandhan Bank Savings Account Interest Rates

On November 1, 2021, Bandhan Bank updated its interest rates on domestic and non-resident rupee deposit accounts. Following the most recent modification, savings account holders can now receive the maximum interest rate of 6% on balances of above Rs 10 lakh to Rs 2 crore in domestic and non-resident rupee savings bank accounts. Here are the latest interest rates on savings accounts of Bandhan Bank.

Domestic and Non-Resident Rupee Savings Bank Account Interest Rate (per annum)
Daily Balance up to Rs 1 lakh 3.00%
Daily Balance above Rs 1 lakh to Rs 10 lakh 5.00%
Daily Balance above Rs 10 lakh to Rs 2 crore 6.00%
Daily Balance above Rs 2 crore to Rs 10 crore 5.00%
Source: Bank Website. W.e.f. November 1, 2021

According to Bandhan Bank’s Q2 FY2021-22 figures as of October 2021, the bank’s loan portfolio climbed 6.6 percent Y-o-Y in Q2 FY 21-22, deposits climbed by 23.9 percent Y-o-Y in Q2 FY 21-22, and retail deposit to total deposits was 84 percent. During the quarter, the bank attracted 0.8 million new customers, bringing its overall customer base to 24.3 million. The bank restructured an EEB portfolio worth Rs 34.9 billion and a non-EEB portfolio worth Rs 2.68 billion during Q2FY21-22, totaling Rs 37.58 billion. During the quarter, the bank announced an increased provision of Rs 15 billion on NPA accounts, leading to a PCR of 74 percent, up from 62 percent in Q1FY22. Bandhan Bank has also provided additional standard assets provision of Rs 21 billion and provision on restructured assets provision of Rs 10.3 billion, totaling Rs 46.3 billion. The bank’s gross nonperforming assets (NPA) remained 10.8% and its net nonperforming assets (NPA) were 3%.

Story first published: Thursday, November 4, 2021, 15:44 [IST]



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Reserve Bank of India – Tenders

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1. Reserve Bank of India, Bhubaneswar Regional Office, invites E-Tender under two-bid system (Technical & Financial Bid) for “Service contract for Maintenance, Housekeeping and Catering arrangements at (Reserve Bank of India) Visiting Officers’ Flat (VOF), Transit Holiday Home (THH) and Medical Flats situated at Bhubaneswar”. The tender will be applicable for initial period of one-year w.e.f. January 01, 2022 to December 31, 2022 or for the period as decided by Reserve Bank of India, Bhubaneswar (hereinafter called “the Bank”). However, the contract can be extended for further period of two years (one year at a time), at the sole discretion of the Bank, subject to satisfactory performance and adherence to contractual obligations by the service provider/agency. 1.(a) Interested tenderers may like to go through the entire tender document before taking part in the tendering process. The tenderers may obtain for themselves on their own responsibility and at their own expenses all the information which may be necessary for the purpose of making tender and for entering into a contract and acquaint themselves with all local conditions, means of access to the work, nature of the work and all matters pertaining thereto. 2. All pre-qualification documents shall be uploaded with Techno-commercial bid (Part-I) on MSTC portal. Those who do not upload all the Pre-qualification documents would not be considered for this tender process. Further, the vendor should submit the original of the documents to the Bank when demanded to qualify for further tendering process. 2.(a) Registration Certificate – Shram Suvidha portal The tenderers are required to upload the copies of EPF/ESIC registration Certificates issued on Shram Suvidha Portal. 2.(b) Proof of submission of EPF/ESIC The tenderers are required to upload at least 1 month of ECR and Combined Challan for EPF and Challan for ESIC to the Bank along with their tender. 3. Interested tenderers have to upload applicable documents satisfying all the points as stated above along with techno-commercial (Part-I) bid of tender. The same Eligibility documents should be uploaded with Techno Commercial Bid (Part-I) on the MSTC portal. 4. Tender form will be available for downloading w.e.f. November 04, 2021. A pre-bid meeting will be held in the Human Resource Management Department, RBI Bhubaneswar. Tender form can be downloaded for viewing from RBI website www.rbi.org.in or www.mstcecommerce.com/eprochome/rbi. The applicable pre-qualification papers should be uploaded with Techno Commercial Bid (Part-I) on the MSTC portal. 5. Interested Vendors/firms can participate in e–Tender after getting registration with www.mstcecommerce.com/eprocurement/rbi). Online Part I – Techno-Commercial Bid and Part II – Price Bid shall be opened through www.mstcecommerce.com/eprocurement/rbi and applicable transaction charges have to be paid by the firm. 6. Tender in prescribed format shall be uploaded on MSTC website. Part-I of tender will contain the Bank’s standard technical and commercial conditions for the proposed work and tenderers’ covering letter.

The EMD of Rs.80,000/- (Rupees Eighty Thousand only) should be submitted by every bidder through NEFT transfer to A/C No-186004001, Reserve Bank of India, IFSC Code-RBIS0BBPA01, Branch Name – Bhubaneswar.

7. The schedule of the tender is as follows: Activity Tentative date i. e-Tender no. RBI/Bhubaneswar/HRMD/18/21-22/ET/249 ii. Mode of Tender e-Procurement System
(Online Part I – Techno-Commercial Bid and Part II – Price Bid through www.mstcecommerce.com/eprochome/rbi) iii. Estimated Cost Rs.40,00,000/- (Inclusive of GST) iv. Date of NIT (along with complete tender) available to parties to download-Tender activation on portal-Tender ‘Live’ for all November 04, 2021 at 06:00 PM onwards v. Date and time for start of Off-line Pre-bid meeting November 24, 2021 at 11:00 AM onwards vi. Security-Deposit Only the successful bidder will be required to provide Security Deposit of 5% of the contract value and the same shall be retained till the duration of the Contract. No interest shall be paid on Security Deposit amount.

Failure to submit Security Deposit or failure on the part of Vendor to perform its contractual obligations shall be treated as a violation and can lead to cancellation of the Contract and the EMD of Rs.80,000/- (Rupees Eighty Thousand only) submitted by it shall be forfeited.

vii. Earnest Money Deposit Every Bidder must remit Rs.80,000/- (Rupees Eighty Thousand only) as EMD to Reserve Bank of India account up to 10:00 AM on December 06, 2021. The account details for NEFT transactions are as under:

Beneficiary name: – Reserve Bank of India
IFSC code: RBIS0BBPA01

Account No.: 186004001 Proof of remittance indicating transaction number and other details shall be uploaded on Bank’s approved e-tender portal along with other tender documents.

EMD of the successful bidder shall be returned on receipt of Security-Deposit from the successful bidder after signing the Agreement. EMD of the unsuccessful bidder will be returned within 30 days of the award of the Contract. EMD shall be forfeited if the bidder withdraws his bid during the Tender Evaluation Process. Further, no interest will be paid on EMD.

Note: – No exemption for EMD is available for this tender to any category of bidder including MSMEs.

viii. Tender Fees Nil ix. Transaction Fee
Please note that the Vendors will have the access to online e-tender only after payment of transaction fees online. Payment of Transaction fee through MSTC Gateway/NEFT/RTGS in favor of MSTC Limited, as advised by M/s MSTC Ltd. x. Start Bid date – Date of Starting of e-Tender for submission of online Techno- Commercial Bid and Price Bid at www.mstcecommerce.com/eprochome/rbi November 26, 2021 at 12 noon onwards xi. Close Bid date – Date of closing of online e–tender for submission of Techno- Commercial Bid and Price Bid December 06, 2021 at 10:00 AM xii. Part I Bid opening date December 06, 2021 at 12:00 PM xiii. Part II Bid opening date Part-II (Financial Bid) of only those tenderers will be opened electronically in the MSTC portal who qualify in the technical bid evaluation. The Date and time of opening of Part-II (Financial Bid) will be intimated to the tenderers who are found eligible in the Part-I (Technical Bid evaluation). 8. The Bank is not bound to accept the lowest tender and reserves the right to accept either in full or in part of any tender. The Bank also reserves the right to reject all the tenders without assigning any reason thereof.

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Axis Bank Revises Interest Rates On Fixed Deposits: Latest Rates Here

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Investment

oi-Vipul Das

|

To cater to all types of customers and their personal financial needs, Axis Bank offers a range of deposit options such as Express FD, Fixed Deposits, Recurring Deposits, Tax Saver Fixed Deposit, Fixed Deposit Plus, and Auto Fixed Deposit. The bank offers a range of benefits on such deposits such as flexible tenure, minimum deposit limit, seamless fund transfer, online account opening, reinvestment deposit, multiple interest payout options and so on. However, the bank has recently revised its interest rates on domestic fixed deposits and NRI Fixed Deposits / FCNR Deposit. The new rates are listed below which are in effect from 1st November 2021.

Axis Bank Fixed Deposit Interest Rates For Regular Customers

Axis Bank Fixed Deposit Interest Rates For Regular Customers

Axis Bank is currently providing 2.50 percent interest on FDs maturing between 7 and 29 days, 3 percent interest on FDs maturing between 30 days and less than 3 months, and 3.5 percent interest on FDs maturing between 3 months and less than 6 months for deposits of less than Rs 2 crore. After the most recent modification, Axis Bank offers a 4.40 percent interest rate on FDs maturing in six months to less than 1 year. For deposits maturing in 1 year to less than 1 year 5 days and 1 year 5 days to less than 1 year 11 days, the bank is offering an interest rate of 5.10% and 5.15%.

The bank is providing a 5.20 percent interest rate on deposits maturing in 1 year 11 days to less than 13 months. For deposits maturing in 13 months to less than 18 months, and 18 months to less than 2 years Axis Bank is offering an interest rate of 5.10% and 5.25%. For deposits maturing in 2 years to less than 5 years and 5 years to less than 10 years, Axis Bank is now offering an interest rate of 5.40% and 5.75% to the general public.

Tenure Regular FD Rates In %
7 days to 14 days 2.5
15 days to 29 day 2.5
30 days to 45 days 3
46 days to 60 days 3
61 days to less than 3 months 3
3 months to less than 4 months 3.5
4 months to less than 5 months 3.5
5 months to less than 6 months 3.5
6 months to less than 7 months 4.4
7 months to less than 8 months 4.4
8 months to less than 9 months 4.4
9 months to less than 10 months 4.4
10 months to less than 11 months 4.4
11 months to less than 11 months 25 days 4.4
11 months 25 days to less than 1 year 4.4
1 year to less than 1 year 5 days 5.1
1 year 5 days to less than 1 year 11 days 5.15
1 year 11 days to less than 1 year 25 days 5.2
1 year 25 days to less than 13 months 5.2
13 months to less than 14 months 5.1
14 months to less than 15 months 5.1
15 months to less than 16 months 5.1
16 months to less than 17 months 5.1
17 months to less than 18 months 5.1
18 months to less than 2 years 5.25
2 years to less than 30 months 5.4
30 months to less than 3 years 5.4
3 years to less than 5 years 5.4
5 years to 10 years 5.75
Source: Axis Bank, W.e.f. 01/11/2021

Axis Bank Fixed Deposit Interest Rates for Senior Citizens

Axis Bank Fixed Deposit Interest Rates for Senior Citizens

Senior citizens will continue to get an additional rate of 0.50% on deposits maturing in 6 months to less than 10 years. After the most recent revision on interest rates, senior citizens will now get an interest rate of 2.50% to 6.50% on deposits maturing in 7 days to less than 10 years.

Tenure Interest Rates for Senior Citizens In %
7 days to 14 days 2.5
15 days to 29 day 2.5
30 days to 45 days 3
46 days to 60 days 3
61 days to less than 3 months 3
3 months to less than 4 months 3.5
4 months to less than 5 months 3.5
5 months to less than 6 months 3.5
6 months to less than 7 months 4.65
7 months to less than 8 months 4.65
8 months to less than 9 months 4.65
9 months to less than 10 months 4.65
10 months to less than 11 months 4.65
11 months to less than 11 months 25 days 4.65
11 months 25 days to less than 1 year 4.65
1 year to less than 1 year 5 days 5.75
1 year 5 days to less than 1 year 11 days 5.8
1 year 11 days to less than 1 year 25 days 5.85
1 year 25 days to less than 13 months 5.85
13 months to less than 14 months 5.75
14 months to less than 15 months 5.75
15 months to less than 16 months 5.75
16 months to less than 17 months 5.75
17 months to less than 18 months 5.75
18 months to less than 2 years 5.9
2 years to less than 30 months 6.05
30 months to less than 3 years 6.05
3 years to less than 5 years 6.05
5 years to 10 years 6.5
Source: Axis Bank, W.e.f. 01/11/2021

Axis Bank Interest Rates For NRi Deposits

Axis Bank Interest Rates For NRi Deposits

Axis Bank has also revised its interest rates on NRI deposits. For an NRI deposit amount of less than Rs 2 Cr, Axis Bank is currently offering the following interest rates which are in force from 1st November 2021.

PERIOD INTEREST RATES (% P.A.)
1 Y 5.1
1 Y 5 D 5.15
1 Y 11 D 5.2
1Y 25 D 5.2
13 M 5.1
14 M 5.1
15 M 5.1
16 M 5.1
17 M 5.1
18 M 5.25
2 Y 5.4
30 M 5.4
3 Y 5.4
5 Y to 10 Y 5.75
Source: Axis Bank, W.e.f. 01/11/2021

Story first published: Thursday, November 4, 2021, 13:20 [IST]



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