Bank of Baroda to raise up to Rs 2,000 cr via AT1 bonds today

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Last week, Union Bank of India raised Rs 2,000 crore via AT1 bonds at an 8.70% coupon, and the issue has seen full subscription. All AT1 bonds were issued based on regulations amended by Sebi earlier this year.

Bank of Baroda, the country’s second-largest state-owned lender, is planning to raise Rs 2,000 crore through the issuance of Basel-III compliant Additional Tier-I (AT1) bonds on Wednesday.

The offer comprises a base issue of Rs 500 crore with a greenshoe option to retain oversubscription up to Rs 1,500 crore, according to the placement memorandum of the bank.

Funds raised will be utilised for regular business activities and are not meant for financing any particular project. “The bank undertakes that proceeds of the issue shall not be used for any purpose which may be in contravention of the regulations/ guidelines,” the bank said in a notice.

AT1 bonds are types of perpetual debt instruments that banks use to augment their core equity base and, thus, comply with Basel-III norms. The coupon on the AT1 bonds will be set during the bidding on Wednesday on the electronic bidding platform of the National Stock Exchange.

“We expect better coupons on our AT1 bonds compared to other banks which recently raised funds through these securities,” bank officials said.

Market participants expect rates between 7.95% and 8.05% on Bank of Baroda’s bonds. The deemed date of allotment and pay-in date on the bonds is November 26, while the minimum bid lot size is Rs 1 crore with a bid value step size of Rs 1 crore.

The bonds have been rated AA+ with a “stable” outlook by Crisil and Icra on November 17 and November 12, respectively. The bank has appointed IDBI Trusteeship Services and KFin Technologies as debenture trustee and registrar to the issue, respectively. The AT1 bonds have a call option after five years.

Last week, Union Bank of India raised Rs 2,000 crore via AT1 bonds at an 8.70% coupon, and the issue has seen full subscription. All AT1 bonds were issued based on regulations amended by Sebi earlier this year.

As per amended regulations, the residual maturity of the AT1 bonds is 10 years till March 31, 2022, and will be increased to 20 and 30 years over the subsequent six months. From April 2023, the maturity of these bonds will become 100 years from the maturity date.

Get live Stock Prices from BSE, NSE, US Market and latest NAV, portfolio of Mutual Funds, Check out latest IPO News, Best Performing IPOs, calculate your tax by Income Tax Calculator, know market’s Top Gainers, Top Losers & Best Equity Funds. Like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter.

Financial Express is now on Telegram. Click here to join our channel and stay updated with the latest Biz news and updates.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

HDFC Bank to tap into Equitas SFB’s customer base with co-branded credit card

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


In August, the lender had said it would recoup its share over the next three to four quarters.

HDFC Bank is looking to tap into the customer base of Chennai-headquartered Equitas Small Finance Bank (SFB) with two co-branded credit cards launched on Tuesday. The target is to issue the cards to 20% of Equitas SFB’s customer base over the next 12-18 months.

The two categories of cards on offer will be the Excite credit card, with a credit limit between Rs 25,000 and Rs 2 lakh, and the Elegance credit card, with a credit limit of over `2 lakh.

Murali Vaidyanathan, senior president and country head – branch banking liabilities, products & wealth – Equitas SFB, said close to five lakh customers will be eligible for the cards. “At a product penetration level, at least two in every 10 customers should have our co-branded card one year or 18 months from now — that is the approach within the qualified base with which we are moving forward. That means we are talking 20-25% penetration of the qualified base which incrementally gets added every month,” he said.

The underwriting for the co-branded cards will be done by HDFC Bank using the processes and algorithms it uses for its other customers. The outstanding amounts will also be reflected on HDFC Bank’s books.

Parag Rao, group head – payments, consumer finance, digital banking & IT, HDFC Bank, said the bank intends to address the under-penetration of electronic payment instruments in India and expand the market in association with Equitas SFB, whose roots lie in microfinance. “We’ve decided that competition and working with competition actually is a merit rather than a demerit and therein comes our strategy of partnerships with other banks,” Rao said.

He said, “Our job, beyond just looking at businesses at HDFC Bank, as market leader is to expand the market and we do believe partnerships and alliances wherein two like-minded entities come together for a co-created product to offer it to a certain set of customers will only deepen the market.”

HDFC Bank leads the credit card market in terms of the number of cards in force, with 1.5 crore cards outstanding at September-end as per data from the Reserve Bank of India. The bank’s incremental issuances took a hit between December 2020 and August 2021 due to a regulatory embargo on new credit card issuances during the period. Rival ICICI Bank took pole position in new issuances during the eight-month period. HDFC Bank is now working to claw its way back to the top. In August, the lender had said it would recoup its share over the next three to four quarters.

The co-branded cards will be issued by Visa. TR Ramachandran, group country head – India, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh, Visa, said credit card penetration in the country stands at about 6% in terms of the number of cards and only 3-4% in terms of individuals owning credit cards.

“There is a large nascent market for everyday digital payments more so on the credit side, because credit is also becoming a day-to-day feature rather than only for luxury and discretionary items, which means grocery, transport, everyday spends particularly —as the line between online and offline payments blurs,” Ramachandran said.

The cards will be issued through application programming interface (API) banking. As a result, there will be no data flow from Equitas SFB into the HDFC Bank system, Vaidyanathan said. “We will let the rule engine decide. We’ll pre-qualify accounts on first sight and then start selling it to our consumers,” he said.

Thereafter, based on Cibil ranking, Equitas will start identifying new-to-bank customers. “HDFC Bank handles only the card side of the issue and they will have the details relevant to the card with them and nothing from liabilities or transactions will be reflected or seen on that side,” Vaidyanathan said.

Get live Stock Prices from BSE, NSE, US Market and latest NAV, portfolio of Mutual Funds, Check out latest IPO News, Best Performing IPOs, calculate your tax by Income Tax Calculator, know market’s Top Gainers, Top Losers & Best Equity Funds. Like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter.

Financial Express is now on Telegram. Click here to join our channel and stay updated with the latest Biz news and updates.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

CredAvenue’s bond platform facilitates Rs 150 cr MLD issuance for SK Finance

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Plutus has facilitated primary bond issuances in excess of Rs 6,000 crore for more than 20 entities since its inception.

Chennai-headquartered debt markets platform CredAvenue has facilitated market-linked debenture (MLD) issuance of Rs 150 crore for SK Finance through its online bond platform Plutus.

Till date, the firm has raised close to Rs 11,000 crore, and aims to issue another Rs 1,000 crore of debt in the coming months.

SK Finance is one of the leading NBFCs in the country, with over 2.25 lakh customers with assets under management (AUM) of Rs 4,000 crore and a presence in 10 states through more than 375 branches.

In May, SK Finance raised equity capital from marquee investors like TPG Growth, Norwest Venture Partners and Evolvence India. After the latest funding round, the overall capital raised from external investors crossed ₹1,000 crore.

Rajendra Setia, MD & promoter of SK Finance, said, “Plutus — the bond platform of CredAvenue — has been instrumental in providing NBFCs access to a diversified pool of capital. These funds will largely be utilised towards onward lending and further consolidation of our market share and in the process enable generation of livelihoods, meet aspirational needs and improve lifestyles. These are basically individuals & small road and transport operators running small commercial vehicles and micro businesses.”

Plutus has facilitated primary bond issuances in excess of Rs 6,000 crore for more than 20 entities since its inception.

Gaurav Kumar, founder & CEO, CredAvenue, said, “Our bond platform has emerged as a unique platform of choice for retail investors for meeting all their debt investments. Plutus offers a wide variety of fixed income products across various tenors, ratings, and yield spectrums. We are working with a large set of issuers to further broad-base the market and target offshore lenders, major banks and key fund managers.”

CredAvenue recently raised $90 million in equity capital in a funding round led by Sequoia Capital and co-led by Lightspeed, TVS Capital Funds, Lightrock and others. The funding had valued the company at approximately $410 million. The firm has also set up a technology development centre in Bengaluru will house a 200-employee strong workforce by FY 2022-23, accounting for close to 30% of CredAvenue’s overall strength in India.

Get live Stock Prices from BSE, NSE, US Market and latest NAV, portfolio of Mutual Funds, Check out latest IPO News, Best Performing IPOs, calculate your tax by Income Tax Calculator, know market’s Top Gainers, Top Losers & Best Equity Funds. Like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter.

Financial Express is now on Telegram. Click here to join our channel and stay updated with the latest Biz news and updates.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Buy This Small Cap Power Company Stock For 33% Upside; Says ICICI Securities

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Virtual investor conference held on November 22- Key takeaways:

1. CESC intends to become more flexible and digital on the distribution front such that capex can be implemented on just in time basis for higher returns.

2. For the medium term, the company focuses on inorganic expansion of its distribution segment by acquiring new areas. The company bets big on distribution de-licensing and privatisation.

3. Kolkata license area continues to be the key focus business.

4. It aims to scale up adoption of new technologies including EV charging, BESS, microgrids, among others, and is performing well on the ESG front.

State of the art technology deployment at its distribution areas including:

State of the art technology deployment at its distribution areas including:

1) Big data analytics, AI / ML, IoT for predictive analytics and real-time monitoring,

2) automating redundant practices /services

3) deploying smart metering

4) moving from smart to intelligent grid solutions,

5) digitising customer services and providing value-added services for premium customers,

6) leveraging blockchain technology for demand side management.

Recently won bid:

Recently won bid:

Lately the company won the bid for acquiring Chandigarh discom (the transfer though is awaiting court direction).

No concerns around generation front in the next decade:

“CESC has a portfolio of 2,125 MW of operational thermal assets with varying residual lives. However, in-

line with the declaration during COP-26, where India insisted on phasing-downof coal generation vs phasing-out approach insisted upon earlier, the management expects its thermal assets will not face any operational concerns over the next decade, despite sustainability-related challenges”, said the report.

CESC to scale up in EV charging and battery storage infra:

CESC to scale up in EV charging and battery storage infra:

As of now the company has 3 operational public EV charging stations and is looking to increase its penetration and create a larger scale public and home charging infrastructure.

Performing well on the ESG front: CESC’s ESG rating upgrade from B to BB by MSCI is proof of the various steps which the company has taken on the

ESG front. “It considers sustainability as one of the core areas and is working to increase its footprint in tRE, EV, electric cooking and BESS spaces. On the

generation front, despite 100% thermal portfolio, CESC’s plants are among the most efficient in the country and there has been a steady decrease in emission intensity in all its generation stations from FY18 to FY20. It also continues to remain committed on biodiversity, employee and community welfare fronts”, adds the report.

Valuation

Valuation

“We maintain BUY on the stock with SoTP-based target price of Rs120. The stock is currently trading at FY24E P/E of 6.7x, P/BV of 0.9x, and a dividend yield of 7.2%”, says the brokerage firm.

Disclaimer:

Disclaimer:

The stock has been picked from the brokerage report of ICICI 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.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Reserve Bank of India – Tenders

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Nov 26, 2021 Corrigendum – RFP for Engagement of IRDAI licensed Insurance Companies operating in India to manage the OPD (Annual Health Checkup) Programme for employees and their spouses of Reserve Bank of India, Mumbai Nov 28, 2021 165 kb Nov 26, 2021 Supply, Installation, Testing and Commissioning (SITC) of 64 Nos. Sealed Maintenance Free (SMF), valve regulated Lead acid batteries (12V, 65 AH) having Fire Retardant Casing at bank’s Office Building at WTC, Cuffe Parade, Mumbai Jan 06, 2022 PDF document 750 kb Nov 26, 2021 Conducting Electrical Safety Audit of Bank’s Office Building and Bank’s Staff Quarters (Avantika) at Bhopal Dec 27, 2021 PDF document 630 kb Nov 26, 2021 Replacement of Flooring of First floor Corridor, Main Office Building, Reserve Bank of India, Thiruvananthapuram Dec 10, 2021 PDF document 752 kb Nov 25, 2021 Minutes of Pre-bid Meeting – 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 Dec 06, 2021 PDF document 176 kb Nov 25, 2021 Corrigendum – Renovation of Civil & Electrical Works in RBI Ranchi Office Located at Zila Parishad Bhavan Dec 09, 2021 PDF document 171 kb Nov 25, 2021 FIRESPOT ® Self activating Automatic Fire Suppression System for Panel Protection with automatic heat/flame detecting polymer tube and UL Listed Clean Agent System certified by National Test House, Dept of Consumer Affairs, Govt. of India at Bank’s office RBI Chandigarh Dec 23, 2021 PDF document 782 kb Nov 24, 2021 Extension of Time – Design, Supply, Installation, Testing and Commissioning of Contraband Trace Detection System with all Accessories for Bank’s Central Office Building, Fort, Mumbai Dec 03, 2021 PDF document 159 kb Nov 23, 2021 Corrigendum – Operation and Routine Maintenance of Central Air Conditioning (HVAC) Plant, Installed at Main Office Building, RBI Chandigarh Dec 15, 2021 PDF document 111 kb Nov 23, 2021 Design, Supply, Installation, Testing, Commissioning of Thermal Camera System for Bank’s Offices at Fort, Byculla and BKC in Mumbai Jan 03, 2022 PDF document 831 kb Nov 22, 2021 Minutes of Pre-bid Meeting – Design, fabrication and installation of “Storage Compactor Units” on different floors of Bank’s Main Office Building, Fort, Mumbai Dec 02, 2021 PDF document 161 kb Nov 22, 2021 Design, Supply, Installation, Testing and Commissioning of Roof Top Grid Interactive SPV based Solar Power Systems (Mono PERC) with Solar Optimizer or Micro-inverter in the Bank’s residential colony at Hauz Khas, New Delhi Dec 23, 2021 PDF document 1182 kb Nov 22, 2021 Corrigendum – Supply, Fabrication and Installation of Mobile Storage Unit Compactors in Bank’s Office Building at Jaipur Dec 06, 2021 PDF document 144 kb Nov 19, 2021 Supply, Installation, Testing and Commissioning of Cooling Towers at Bank’s Main Office Building, Nagpur Dec 16, 2021 PDF document 1072 kb Nov 18, 2021 Supply, installation, testing and commissioning of one X-Ray baggage scanner system in Bank Premises, RBI, Chandigarh Dec 16, 2021 PDF document 832 kb Nov 17, 2021 Operation and Routine Maintenance of Central Air Conditioning (HVAC) Plant, Installed at Main Office Building, RBI Chandigarh Dec 15, 2021 PDF document 483 kb Nov 17, 2021 Supply of 5 No. IPCCTV Cameras including Lifetime Camera License for existing IPCCTV System at RBI Jammu Dec 02, 2021 PDF document 443 kb Nov 16, 2021 Electrical Safety Audit in Main office buildings of Reserve Bank of India, New Delhi Dec 08, 2021 PDF document 604 kb Nov 12, 2021 Printing and Supply of RBI Publications 2022, Mumbai Dec 03, 2021 PDF document 627 kb Nov 09, 2021 Printing and Supply of Bank’s House Journal “Without Reserve” by HRMD, RBI, Central Office, Mumbai for the calendar year 2022 Dec 02, 2021 PDF document 254 kb Nov 07, 2021 Empanelment of Suppliers for Issue Department stores, Guwahati Nov 29, 2021 PDF document 675 kb Nov 04, 2021 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 Dec 06, 2021 PDF document 721 kb Nov 03, 2021 Empanelment of Suppliers for Supply of Archival Preservative materials (Archival Stationery), Pune Dec 01, 2021 PDF document 279 kb Oct 29, 2021 Annual Maintenance Contract for day-to-day operation and maintenance of Substation & various electrical installations at Main Office Building, Reserve Bank of India, Guwahati Nov 29, 2021 PDF document 1352 kb Oct 29, 2021 Supply, Installation, Testing and Commissioning of full height single lane turnstile gate at VIP Entry Bank’s Main Office Building, Mumbai Dec 13, 2021 PDF document 807 kb Oct 22, 2021 Design, fabrication and installation of “Storage Compactor Units” on different floors of Bank’s Main Office Building, Fort, Mumbai Dec 02, 2021 PDF document 1926 kb

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

RBI may increase reverse repo by 20-25 bps next month, say economists

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) may increase the reverse repo rate by a token 20-25 basis points next month as part of its monetary policy normalisation process, according to economists.

Reverse repo rate is the interest banks receive for parking surplus liquidity with RBI. Currently, this rate is at 3.35 per cent. One basis point is equal to one-hundredth of a percentage point.

The reverse repo rate was cut thrice in calendar year (CY) 2020: from 4.9 to 4 per cent on March 27, 2020, from 4 per cent to 3.75 per cent on April 17, 2020, and from 3.75 to 3.35 per cent on May 22, 2020.

Rahul Bajoria, Director and Chief Economist for India and the Antipodeans, Barclays, said: “We expect the RBI to increase the reverse repo rate by a token 20-25 basis points (bps) at the December policy meeting. However, an increase in the repo rate is likely to only take place in April, 2022.”

Repo rate is the interest banks pay to the RBI for drawing liquidity to overcome short-term mismatches.

This rate was reduced in two stages in CY2020: from 5.15 to 4.4 per cent on March 27, 2020, and from 4.4 to 4 per cent on May 22, 2021.

“With evidence that the economic recovery is well entrenched, policy normalisation could be underway. The RBI has already begun withdrawal of extraordinary stimulus by shelving its bond-purchase programme and stepping-up absorptions through the variable-rate reverse repo rate,” Bajoria said.

According to a Goldman Sachs (GS) economic research report, the RBI is currently in stage 2 (liquidity tightening) of the four-stage monetary policy normalisation process that began with ‘less dovish’ comments from monetary policy committee (MPC) members and will end with repo rate hikes.

“In our view, the RBI will likely move to stage 3 (reverse repo hike) by the end of this year, and start hiking repo rates from Q2 2022. We expect a cumulative 75 bps of repo rate hikes in 2022,” the report said.

GDP growth

Barclays assessed that the Indian economy is still on track to grow in double digits for FY 21-22 at around 10 per cent, along with rapid growth in nominal activity given higher inflation as well.

Strong fiscal and monetary support, along with a rapid improvement in the pace of vaccination has helped nurture a swift economic recovery, it added.

GS expects GDP growth in India to accelerate to 9.1 per cent y-o-y in 2022, from 8 per cent in 2021, post a sharp 7 per cent contraction in 2020.

“We expect consumption to be an important contributor to growth in 2022, as the economy fully re-opens driven by a notable improvement in the virus situation and adequate progress on vaccination.

“We also expect government capital spending to continue, see nascent signs of a private corporate capex recovery, and a revival in housing investment,” the report said.

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

PMC Bank depositors dismayed by move to deny them interest

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Distraught depositors of the scam-hit Punjab and Maharashtra Co-operative (PMC) Bank have a simple question for the Reserve Bank of India (RBI): “How can a bank take a deposit and not pay interest on it?”

They are irked by a clause in the draft scheme of the bank’s amalgamation with Unity Small Finance Bank (transferee bank) that says, “no further interest will be payable on the interest-bearing deposits of transferor (PMC) bank for a period of five years from the appointed date”.

The clause appears at odds with the Reserve Bank of India (Interest Rate on Deposits) Directions, 2016.

PMC’s 1,100 employees can heave a sigh of relief

The master direction says that scheduled commercial banks (SCBs) cannot “accept interest-free deposit other than in current account or pay compensation indirectly”.

Co-operative banking experts opine that the treatment of bank depositors should be evenhanded, irrespective of whether it is an SCB or a scheduled urban co-operative bank.

‘Sweetener for transferee’

S Ravi, Founder and Managing Partner of the chartered accountants firm Ravi Rajan & Co. LLP, said: “It is a sweetener for the transferee bank, giving it access to interest-free cash flow for five years.

“In the case of Yes Bank and Lakshmi Vilas Bank, the bondholders lost their money. Similarly here, the depositors are losing interest. Probably, this is also a way to discourage people from coming into co-operative banks.”

The RBI may have to revisit the “no further interest” clause in the scheme of amalgamation due to its master direction.

According to the RBI’s interest rate framework, SCBs shall pay interest on deposits of money (other than current account deposits) accepted by them or renewed by them.

PMC depositors with over ₹5 lakh disappointed with draft scheme

Further, the interest rates shall be reasonable, consistent, transparent and available for supervisory review or scrutiny.

Chander Purswani, President, PMC Depositors Forum, said depositors felt shortchanged and would submit their objections to the RBI.

He observed that the 10-year period prescribed for withdrawal of large retail deposits from Unity SFB was too long and suggested halving it.

Red flag and after

As at March-end 2021, PMC Bank had deposits aggregating ₹10,535 crore. Of this, about 70 per cent are retail deposits and the rest are institutional deposits, including other urban co-operative banks (216) and co-operative societies (1,750).

PMC Bank came to grief in 2019 as its high exposure to real estate company HDIL turned non-performing.

The central bank red-flagged the fraud and/or financial irregularities in the bank and the manipulation of its books of accounts.

In October 2021, the RBI granted a banking licence to Unity SFB, established jointly by Centrum Financial Services Ltd (CFSL) and Resilient Innovations Private Limited (BharatPe), to carry out SFB business in India.

The RBI had on June 18, 2021, given an “in-principle” approval to CFSL, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Centrum Capital Ltd, to set up an SFB.

The “in-principle” approval was specific to CFSL’s February 2021 offer in response to PMC Bank’s November 2020 expression of interest (EoI) notification.

Unity SFB commenced operations on November 1, 2021.

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

“BUY” This Maharatna Stock With A Target Price of Rs. 167 Says HDFC Securities

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Q1FY22 results of Power Finance Corporation Ltd

According to the brokerage “The company has reported weak growth figures for the Q1FY22; however, the asset quality numbers have improved. Net Interest Income for the quarter stood at Rs.3,525 Cr, up 14.7% for both YoY and QoQ. NIM for the quarter was at 3.7% – up 40 bps QoQ backed by higher lending yields. Management intends to pass on the fall in funding cost in coming quarters. Operating profit grew by 29.5% YoY, while sequentially it was down by 10.5%. Other income was down by 92% QoQ, this has resulted in 2% sequential de-growth in Net profit.”

HDFC Securities has stated that the company’s “Total AUM of Rs. 369983 Cr grew by 7.3%/1.4% YoY/ QoQ. Disbursement during the quarter was weak, due to overall weak demand from the sector. It was down by 45% YoY and 18% QoQ. Under Atamnirbhar Discom Scheme the company has so far sanctioned Rs.67,699 cr and disbursed Rs. 38,501 cr. The company has also declared an interim dividend of Rs. 2.25/- per equity share of Rs. 10/- each for FY22.”

The brokerage claims that “As of Q1FY22, the Capital Adequacy Ratio (CAR) stood at 21.16% with Tier – I capital ratio at 17.56%. Being a Government-owned entity, PFC has the highest domestic credit rating of “AAA” and international ratings stood at “BBB-“. PFC has a well-diversified resource profile with 63% money raised from bonds, 20% via loans from various entities, 1% from commercial papers (CP) and 16% via foreign currency loans. Further, ~86% of the foreign currency exposure with 5 years residual maturity is hedged.”

The brokerage’s take on Power Finance Corporation Limited

The brokerage’s take on Power Finance Corporation Limited

According to the research report of the brokerage “Further, to tap into newer areas of opportunities, the company is looking to fund segments like e-mobility, utility scale energy storage etc. The company has a sufficient capital adequacy level and resources profile is also diversified. The Indian government has recently accorded “Maharatna” status to PFC which will enable it greater operational and financial autonomy to offer competitive financing for the power sector, which will go a long way in making available affordable and reliable ‘Power For All 24×7. This will also help PFC in pushing the government’s agenda of funding under the National Infrastructure Pipeline, a national commitment of 40% green energy by 2030 and effective monitoring and implementation of the New Revamped Distribution Sector Scheme with an outlay of more than Rs.3 Lakh Cr.”

HDFC Securities has also claimed in its research report that “PFC is a consistently high dividend paying company, the yield at the current price stands at ~7.3% which makes it one of the highest dividend paying companies in the listed space. For the last five years, the average dividend payout as a percentage of equity share capital stood above 40% (except for FY19). PFC’s high dividend seems sustainable as it has lent to relatively risk-free public sector entities and its capability to distribute dividends remains good even in case a good portion of its private sector lending goes bad. The stock is trading at only 0.5x FY23E P/ABV. We feel that such high dividend yield and low valuations provide a margin of safety for investment in the company at the current level.”

Buy Power Finance Corporation Ltd with a target price of Rs. 167

Buy Power Finance Corporation Ltd with a target price of Rs. 167

HDFC Securities has noted in its research report that “Since the past few quarters, the company has been able to deliver strong growth momentum along with considerable improvement in the asset quality. Also, the emerging trend in the power sector gives us confidence in the company’s ability to keep growing at a fast growth rate. We have envisaged 6% CAGR growth for top line and 8% for bottom line, while the loan book is estimated to grow at 7.5% CAGR over FY21-23E. We feel that worst in terms of asset quality deterioration in the power finance segment is over. There could be higher recoveries in the next two years than slippages. Further PFC is also holding sufficient provisions. RoAA is estimated at 2.2% for FY23. In the medium term, credit cost normalisation and cost control remains the key drivers for stable RoA and RoE.”

According to the brokerage’s call “We feel that investors can buy PFC at the LTP of Rs.137.3 (0.5xFY23E ABV+ REC value after holding company discount) and add on dips to Rs.123 (0.43xFY23E ABV+ REC value after holding company discount) band. We expect the Base case fair value of Rs.157 (0.6xFY23E ABV+ REC value after holding company discount) and the Bull case fair value of Rs.167 (0.65xFY23E ABV+ REC value after holding company discount) over the next 2 quarters.”

Disclaimer

Disclaimer

The stock has been picked from the brokerage report of HDFC Securities Limited. 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.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Reserve Bank of India – Tenders

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


E-tender No. RBI/Chandigarh/Estate/193/21-22/ET/261.

With reference to the e-tender dated November 17, 2021, it is notified that the MSE firms having Udhyam Registration Number (Udyog Aadhar Memorandum Number) irrespective of the category are exempted from submission of EMD (for tender up to Rs.10 lakh). Necessary MSE registration certificate is needed to be uploaded along with tender.

2. All other terms and conditions of the captioned tender remain unchanged.

Regional Director
Reserve Bank of India
Chandigarh

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Reserve Bank of India – Press Releases

[ad_1]

Read More/Less




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


Next

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

1 50 51 52 53 54 16,280