Reserve Bank of India – Press Releases
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e-Tender No. RBI/Guwahati/Guwahati/7/21-22/ET/144 The captioned tender was published on September 14, 2021 through RBI website (www.rbi.org.in). Last date for online submission of the tender through MSTC website (www.mstcecommerce.com) was specified on or before 14:00 hours on October 07, 2021. It is informed that the last date for submission has been extended to October 25, 2021 till 14:00 hours. All the terms and conditions mentioned in the tender remain unchanged. GM (O-i-C), North Eastern States |
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Emkay Global suggests buying the stock of Apollo Tyre for a target price of Rs. 305 per share, i.e. an upside of over 37 percent from the last traded price of Rs. 222.
The APMEA (20%) and Europe areas will drive revenue growth (3 percent ). Despite the greater size, EBITDA margins should fall due to delays in commodity inflation pass-through.
Exide Industries
Emkay Global suggests buying the stock of Exide Industries for a target price of Rs. 4,420 per share, i.e. an upside of over 17 percent from the last traded price of Rs.3771.
Replacement and industrial markets should drive revenue growth. Due to a favorable base, the company should outperform AMRJ in terms of sales growth. Despite the greater size, EBITDA margins should fall due to delays in commodity inflation pass-through.
Motherson Sumi‘s stock is recommended by Emkay Global with a target price of Rs. 300 per share, representing a gain of almost 34% over the latest traded price of Rs.224.
Total revenues are likely to fall due to poor performance in the SMR PBV sector (-20 percent yoy). In comparison, the solo (22 percent) and PKC (42 percent) categories are predicted to increase at a good rate. Due to lower scale and delays in commodity inflation pass-through, the EBITDA margin may fall.
Emkay Global has set a target price of Rs. 920 per share for Bharat Forge’s stock, reflecting a gain of over 27% over the current market price of Rs.722.
Domestic CVs (115 percent yoy), foreign CVs (189 percent), and overseas industrials should all see considerable growth (77 percent ). Despite a lag in commodity inflation pass-through, we estimate EBITDA margin expansion due to increased scale.
Emkay Global has set a target price of Rs. 840per share for Minda Industries’s stock, reflecting a gain of over 14% over the current market price of Rs734.
Growth in sectors such as Castings, Seating, Switches, and Others (sensors, etc.) will boost total revenue growth. Acoustics and lighting systems, on the other hand, are expected to decline. EBITDA margins may decline, owing to delays in commodity inflation pass-through and increasing personnel expenses.
Stocks | Current market price | Target price | Likely gains % |
---|---|---|---|
Apollo Tyres | Rs 222 | Rs 305 | 37% |
Exide Industries | Rs 179 | Rs 210 | 17% |
Motherson Sumi | Rs 224 | Rs 300 | 34% |
Bharat Forge | Rs 722 | Rs 920 | 27% |
Minda Industries | Rs 734 | Rs 840 | 14% |
The investment ideas are picked from Emkay Global Auto report. Investors should note that investing in stocks is risky and neither the author, nor Greynium Information Technologies Pvt Ltd, nor the brokerage would be responsible for losses based on a decision from the above article.
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Public sector banks have been witnessing many changes in their top management, be it extension of tenure or appointment of new key managerial personnel.
The finance ministry had in July asked the Department of Personnel and Training (DoPT) to extend the tenure of a number of managing directors and executive directors to ensure stability and continuity at state-owned lenders.
The Appointments Committee of the Cabinet (ACC), headed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, has extended the tenure for three managing directors and chief executive officers, and 10 executive directors of public sector banks.
Only one bank, Indian Bank, has appointed its new MD and CEO so far..
Here’s a quick recap of all the noteworthy movements, recommendations and tenure extensions of top PSB officials:
Indian Bank
Shanti Lal Jain was appointed the Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer of Indian Bank for a period of three years. His tenure started from September 1, 2021, and is extendable for two years or until attaining the age of retirement, whichever is earlier.
He replaced Padmaja Chunduru, whose term with the bank ended on August 31. Jain was previously working as the Executive Director of Bank of Baroda.
Meanwhile, the ACC extended the term of Shenoy Vishwanath Vittal, executive director, till the age of superannuation.
PNB
BBB last month recommended Atul Kumar Goel as the MD & CEO of Punjab National Bank, after interviewing 11 candidates.
Apart from this, BBB has kept Ajay Kumar Shrivastava on the reserve list for the post.
Currently, Goel is serving as the MD & CEO of Kolkata-based UCO Bank. He is also on the boards of Star Union Dai-ichi Life Insurance and The New India Assurance.
The government in August extended the term of S S Mallikarjuna Rao, the existing MD & CEO of PNB chief till January 31, 2022. Rao’s term was supposed to end on September 18, 2021.
Further, terms of Sanjay Kumar and Vijay Dube, executive directors, have been extended until their age of superannuation.
UCO Bank
The government may appoint Soma Sankara Prasad, currently the deputy managing director of State Bank of India, as managing director of UCO Bank.
According to PTI, since Prasad was in the reserve list for the post of managing director at Indian Bank, he has been recommended to head UCO Bank. The final decision will be taken by the ACC.
The government had extended the tenure of Atul Kumar Goel for two years. His term was scheduled to end on November 1, 2021.
Bank of Maharashtra
The government extended the tenure of AS Rajeev, MD and CEO of Bank of Maharashtra, for a two years beyond the notified term, expiring on December 1, 2021.
Bank of Baroda
The tenure of Ajay Khurana as executive director has been extended by two years. He is also on the reserve list for PNB’s MD and CEO post. Meanwhile, the tenure of Vikramaditya Singh Khichi, another ED, has been extended until his age of superannuation.
Canara Bank
The tenure of A Manimekhalai, executive director, has been extended by two years.
Bank of India
The tenure of P R Rajagopal, executive director, has been extended by two years. .
Union Bank of India
The government has extended the terms of Gopal Singh Gusain and Manas Ranjan Biswal as executive directors until their age of retirement.
Central Bank of India
The tenure of Alok Srivastava has been extended until his age of superannuation.
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Banking sector experts said that most of these merchants offering various bouquet of service have migrated to the new Standard Instruction Platform put in place by the banks in the country. This would mean that payment instruction to these compliant vendors would have to be revalidated once and it would move seamlessly in subsequent months without any hindrance to the service.
As part of measures to secure recurring transactions made by customers using their cards, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has mandated new auto-debit rules that have kicked in from October 1. The apex banks directive states that there will be no automatic recurring payment for various services including utility bills, recharge of phone, DTH, and OTT, among others as the additional factor of authentication (AFA) will become mandatory.
This created confusion initially as customers were flooded with messages to update their payment instruction or else such transactions would be declined from the beginning of October.
“We have not experienced any disruption in service or customer complaints over new system of recurring payments. Most banks are already compliant with new security measure and several large merchants have also updated their transaction systems and have joined the standard instruction platform of banks. Some merchants are still non compliant to the changes and customers would have to authorize payments under an additional factor of authentication (AFA),” said a senior executive from country’s largest private sector bank asking not to be named as he was not authorized to speak to media.
The new RBI rules will not impact any standing instructions registered using bank accounts for mutual funds, SIPs, equated monthly instalments. It will also not impact payment to complaint merchants.
Customers will have to go through a one-time registration process, and subsequent transactions can be performed without the additional factor authentication.
While registering, customers can now provide the validity period for future transactions. For recurring payments above Rs 5,000, banks are required to send a one-time password to customers as per the new guidelines.
–IANS
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Banking sector experts said that most of these merchants offering various bouquet of service have migrated to the new Standard Instruction Platform put in place by the banks in the country. This would mean that payment instruction to these compliant vendors would have to be revalidated once and it would move seamlessly in subsequent months without any hindrance to the service.
As part of measures to secure recurring transactions made by customers using their cards, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has mandated new auto-debit rules that have kicked in from October 1. The apex banks directive states that there will be no automatic recurring payment for various services including utility bills, recharge of phone, DTH, and OTT, among others as the additional factor of authentication (AFA) will become mandatory.
This created confusion initially as customers were flooded with messages to update their payment instruction or else such transactions would be declined from the beginning of October.
“We have not experienced any disruption in service or customer complaints over new system of recurring payments. Most banks are already compliant with new security measure and several large merchants have also updated their transaction systems and have joined the standard instruction platform of banks. Some merchants are still non compliant to the changes and customers would have to authorize payments under an additional factor of authentication (AFA),” said a senior executive from country’s largest private sector bank asking not to be named as he was not authorized to speak to media.
The new RBI rules will not impact any standing instructions registered using bank accounts for mutual funds, SIPs, equated monthly instalments. It will also not impact payment to complaint merchants.
Customers will have to go through a one-time registration process, and subsequent transactions can be performed without the additional factor authentication.
While registering, customers can now provide the validity period for future transactions. For recurring payments above Rs 5,000, banks are required to send a one-time password to customers as per the new guidelines.
–IANS
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“On the whole we would require $2 billion for FY22. We may tap the bond market in January again subject to favourable market conditions,” Bangari added. The export credit agency is looking at raising $1 billion.
Exim borrows $2-3 billion annually on average. The exact quantum would depend on demand. “We have already borrowed around $1 billion, mostly on the bilateral market,” Bangari says. Bilateral market borrowing gives the borrower an advantage of 15-20 basis points over bonds in terms of pricing. Exim has factored in a loan book growth of 8-10 per cent for FY22, higher than its earlier forecast of 5-7 per cent made in May 2021.
“A stable outlook gives us a lot of comfort. I hope investor appetite gets much better. We are getting a pricing that is given to a higher rated entity. Besides, Exim would also be borrowing Rs 15,000-20,000 crore from the domestic market.”
Exim Bank is also seeing some improvement in the asset quality. “It is much better than the last two-three years. There are a few accounts that have slipped and are very much in the bank’s radar,” Bangari says. As part of a consortium, the bank has identified nine accounts worth Rs 700-800 crore to be transferred to the National Asset Reconstruction Company (NARCL).
Exim Bank’s slippage ratio improved to 1.52 per cent in FY21 from 1.94 per cent in FY20. Net NPA stood at 0.51 per cent from 1.77 per cent in FY20. Bangari says the provision coverage ratio was at over 95% last year & will be higher this fiscal.
It has received a capital support of Rs 750 crore from the government of India so far, against the budgeted amount of Rs 15,00 crore.
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“On the whole we would require $2 billion for FY22. We may tap the bond market in January again subject to favourable market conditions,” Bangari added. The export credit agency is looking at raising $1 billion.
Exim borrows $2-3 billion annually on average. The exact quantum would depend on demand. “We have already borrowed around $1 billion, mostly on the bilateral market,” Bangari says. Bilateral market borrowing gives the borrower an advantage of 15-20 basis points over bonds in terms of pricing. Exim has factored in a loan book growth of 8-10 per cent for FY22, higher than its earlier forecast of 5-7 per cent made in May 2021.
“A stable outlook gives us a lot of comfort. I hope investor appetite gets much better. We are getting a pricing that is given to a higher rated entity. Besides, Exim would also be borrowing Rs 15,000-20,000 crore from the domestic market.”
Exim Bank is also seeing some improvement in the asset quality. “It is much better than the last two-three years. There are a few accounts that have slipped and are very much in the bank’s radar,” Bangari says. As part of a consortium, the bank has identified nine accounts worth Rs 700-800 crore to be transferred to the National Asset Reconstruction Company (NARCL).
Exim Bank’s slippage ratio improved to 1.52 per cent in FY21 from 1.94 per cent in FY20. Net NPA stood at 0.51 per cent from 1.77 per cent in FY20. Bangari says the provision coverage ratio was at over 95% last year & will be higher this fiscal.
It has received a capital support of Rs 750 crore from the government of India so far, against the budgeted amount of Rs 15,00 crore.
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This is a ten-fold increase since the beginning of last year. The launch of several digital asset exchanges, rollout of innovative wallets, changes in mining technology and wide issuance of stablecoins have kept the momentum strong for crypto, the report said.
Also read: China announces cryptocurrency bank – what does it mean for India?
Countries like India and China are keeping a close eye on crypto assets, as the scale and scope of this asset class are large enough to have systemic implications, it said.
Multiple reasons for the ban have been cited by the governments, such as security and governance, consumer protection, surveillance gap and monetary policy efficacy.
Also read: What are stablecoins, and how stable are they?
China’s central bank, in the last week of September, declared all transactions involving Bitcoin and other virtual currencies illegal, stepping up a campaign to block use of unofficial digital money. This was the second time the government announced a ban on crypto.
In March, it was reported that India would propose a law banning cryptocurrencies, fining anyone trading in the country or even holding such digital assets. This, again, is not the first time when India is declaring its inhibition towards adopting crypto.
The resilience of crypto assets after the ban suggests that the market impact of China’s opposition to crypto could be declining. Year-to-date, Ether is outperforming Bitcoin by 400% in price return terms.
The ban has also led miners to migrate their businesses to crypto-friendly locations, which can offer cheap, reliable and greener sources of electricity, the report said.
Kazakhstan, US and Russia are some of the preferred locations.
According to experts, China’s ban was likely because the government wants to remove competition for its digital yuan. Adding to this, India’s Reserve Bank of India has also said that it was eyeing a phased implementation of its central bank digital currency (CBDC).
CBDC adoption will help drive future usefulness, acceptance by merchants and improve cross-border payments, according to banking regulators.
However, there is still a lot of time for countries to roll out their CBDCs. To maintain stability, CBDCs would need to have a careful design and implementation, the report said.
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State Bank of India will soon roll out its Environmental, Social, and Governance structure, with an aim to increase its exposure to climate-change-mitigation companies, such as renewable energy, by extending credit relaxations, said Chairman Dinesh Khara.
For loans exceeding Rs 50 crore, borrowers are assigned scores on the basis of their performance on various ESG parameters, Khara said at the ESG India Leadership Awards 2021 on Thursday.
“The bank acknowledges the increasing risk of climate change that is embedded in its credit portfolio, and is in the process of devising a framework for climate risk management. We are also in the process of identifying and managing risk arising out of ESG practices, to increase our exposure to climate-change-mitigation companies, which includes relaxation in extending credit facilities to borrowers in the renewable energy sector,” Khara said.
Unless banks are able to provide adequate credit to green projects and measure risk in their portfolio, the bank’s depositors and shareholders will continue to carry ESG risk that can erode returns, Khara said.
According to experts, ESG investors are likely to face risks of small cap and single stock investments, and interest rate and inflation.
SBI aims to be carbon neutral by 2030, and in line with this target the bank has taken a number of initiatives to reduce its carbon impact, including installation of solar power plants, tree plantation, organic farming and banning the use of single use plastic, Khara said.
The bank has taken a two-fold approach to reach its 2030 goal – managing the impact of its own operations and directing its funding to climate-change-mitigation sectors, he added.
On India’s approach towards sustainable growth, Khara said the banking sector should accelerate green lending and report their ESG portfolio performance. India should define its green finance by combining international practices, developing its set of principles, and obtaining stakeholders’ views.
“To support acceleration in green financing, a number of structural changes will be needed in the traditional lending approach, including evaluation and certification of the green credentials of each project, understanding of the corporate roadmap to achieve net zero, and how projects will contribute to the achievement of net zero emissions,” he said.
Meanwhile, at the award function, Infosys emerged as a ESG leader across industries, while Axis Bank led the pack in transparency and disclosures, said ESGRisk.ai, the organiser, in a note.
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