IndusInd Bank launches mobile app for merchants

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Private sector IndusInd Bank has launched a comprehensive mobile application (app) to enable merchants, retailers and professionals to carry out banking transactions digitally, on a single platform.

“Indus Merchant Solutions will enable merchants and retailers to undertake an array of activities such as accept instant cashless payments on mobile phones from customers through multiple digital modes, track inventory via in-built dashboards, apply for an exclusive Point of Sale (PoS) machine to facilitate card based payments, as well as avail small ticket business loans from the bank in a completely digital and paperless manner, without having to visit a bank branch,” it said in a statement on Wednesday.

Any current account holder of IndusInd Bank can download the ‘Indus Merchant Solutions’ app and start using it. A non-customer can open a current account with the bank through a fully digitised process, and get themselves registered as a merchant, it further said.

The app is currently available on smartphones with Android operating systems and will shortly be available for smartphones using the iOS operating system as well.

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Time to clear the air on cryptos

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While the government has had mixed and probably even alternating stance on cryptocurrencies, the currency regulator RBI had been silent for a long time and, of late, has shared its concerns on cryptos with the government.

The securities regulator SEBI could be the ideal regulatory candidate if cryptos were to be treated as an asset class.

The Indian investor community has been euphoric about the instrument, despite noise that crypto investing could become illegal or taxed harshly. All this, when the issue of crypto was purportedly settled last year with the Supreme Court of India lifting the RBI’s crypto ban of 2018.

A to G of crypto

Arbitrary actions and reactions will continue as the financial industry has showcased so far. A few months ago, some banks stalled operations or pass-through of the crypto exchanges; purportedly, as the market guesses, to avoid irritating their regulator. The day there is clarity on how crypto would be seen under Indian law, and if it is for holding crypto as an asset, every BFSI and fintech would jump onto the bandwagon.

The banking sector’s lack of understanding of cryptos continues. It is more about understanding the liquidity of various cryptos available. As long as the rules bring clarity on what other information other than KYC would be needed, the sector can chug ahead.

Crypto consumers will stay invested probably until they get hurt by crypto falsehood or misleading investments. It is rightfully the RBI’s endeavour to have consumer protection in mind. But as we regulate the sector, we also have to move to a market-led economy, where, as long as the consumers get into an investment position without being mis-sold or forced to invest, the industry should not be ostracised.

It is also worthwhile to mention that the RBI is planning to launch its own CBDC (central bank digital currency). Debt leverage worry of the lending community will continue until they are allowed by the regulator. End-usage fears that cryptos could potentially be used for terror financing, etc., seem far-fetched, considering the granularity of its traceability. Interestingly, usage of gold or realty seems far in the wrong end of illegal funding.

Functionality of its core, which is blockchain, cannot be brushed away. It has tremendous usage and potential across public finance, banking and financial services; this could help build a secure financing backbone for the entire country as we seek to expand the inclusive-nature of our financial offerings.

The government’s stand cannot vacillate on policy matters without taking wide range of inputs, not just from a commercial angle but also from a deeper technological understanding if it can bring potential good. Let’s remember that our grandparents could not have imagined mobile-payments or transactions without seeing/touching the monies or writing a cheque. So let us not discount the emerging digital monies, for the short term notion of “not wanting it happen in my watch.”

Any asset class’ trade-worthiness and consequent liquidity is determined by a crucial factor: “trust”. Regulations can offer confidence around legality of the asset class and its usage, but cannot determine public acceptance or asset pricing. Regulations can surely offer consumer confidence and consumer protection if they are light-touch and use latest digital supervisory capabilities.

It is essential that the government does not give into knee-jerk reactions of the stakeholders, and takes a pragmatic call. It has displayed tremendous initiative by adopting digital across various facets including financial markets, e-governance, public outreach, etc. It should engage in depth with various stakeholders to understand how digital finance can be used for larger public good, and not give in to short-term worries and lack of capacity.

It’s a good sign that the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Finance has invited crypto industry players to hear their views on the opportunities and challenges. If our regulators take a leaf from this and invite multi-stakeholder discussions and seek inputs about the draft Bill, it would be a comforting exercise.

In the spirit of democratic transparency, it would be welcome if the ‘Cryptocurrency and Regulation of Official Digital Currency Bill, 2021’ is put in public domain, and comments sought.

The writer is corporate advisor and markets commentator

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APIs help India build one of the finest digital financial systems, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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APIs or application programming interfaces are these little pieces of code at the endpoint of a software that allows other software to connect and communicate with it. They have brought a revolution to the Indian banking and finance industry – one that many other countries are trying to learn from – and they could do the same in healthcare and other fields.

In many cases, organisations charge a fee for their API connections, and that brings substantial revenues. In other cases, they offer APIs free, in the expectation it will help create an ecosystem that will eventually benefit everyone, including them. So profound is their influence that many now talk in terms of the `API economy’.

The government initiative called IndiaStack, which is a set of public APIs, is the finest example of this. Its Aadhaar Auth API launched in 2010 is what allows a vast number of third-party service providers today to connect to the Aadhaar database and authenticate you when you provide your biometric inputs. Its eSign API allows service providers to enable an Aadhaar holder to electronically sign a form or document anywhere and on any device. Its UPI API, in combination with a virtual payment address, enables bank account holders to send and receive money instantly from their smartphones without the need to enter bank account information or net banking user id and password. Even third party service providers can use these APIs, which is how the likes of Google Pay and PhonePe made transfers so delightful.

Sharad Sharma, co-founder of iSpirt Foundation, which has been central to building India-Stack, notes that a shared API that Aadhaar created that allows you to do KYC of an individual in a presence less but trusted manner suddenly unlocks the platform’s ability to serve the customer virtually. No other country in the world, he says, has built such a comprehensive suite of open APIs for digital financial services.

Older banks are saddled with older IT infrastructures, and cannot move very fast. So they are opening up more of their systems through APIs so that newer digital players – call them fintechs or neobanks, who have cloud-based architectures based on what are called containers and microservices – can quickly offer a variety of new services to new segments of people that older banks cannot.

“Banks have opened their APIs so that different fintechs can utilise them,” says Akash Jain, principal analyst at Gartner. Neobanks don’t have a banking license. They partner with traditional banks, and API integrations with these banks are core to their operations.

Next-gen shift

Shashank Mehta, head of RazorpayX, the B2B neobank of payments solutions company Razorpay, says the country is now seeing a next-gen shift, where apart from money movement, APIs are being used to help businesses interact with money better. Digital-native businesses, for instance, can’t afford to manage their money manually – so RazorpayX offers an easy-to-use bank account, a one-click payroll solution, and a corporate card to run ads on social media and for other purchases.

Neobank Zolve provides working professionals and students who are bound for the US with a host of financial facilities they would need, like bank accounts in the US, high-limit credit and debit cards, all without the need for a US social security number or credit history.

At the root of these are the neobanks’ connections with traditional banks. The latter also takes the big burden of compliance with RBI regulations off the backs of fintechs.

That foundational role is what players like Digio do as well. Digio enables authentication services – Aadhaar eSign and eKYC, digital signatures – for fintechs. Digio does the heavy-lifting involved in, for instance, the constant changes in KYC regulations. They have a battery of legal consultants to ensure systems are compliant. “People wanted a solution which could abstract out the technology, maintenance, as well as the compliance factor. That’s where we put out these APIs that allow any business entity to connect and pretty much create a complete digital KYC, signing and recurring payments workflow,” says Sanket Nayak, co-founder of Digio.

Zerodha too opened up its core capability of executing trades, and it does not even charge those who use its APIs. “That was a philosophical call,” says Kailash Nadh, CTO. He says technologists were not coming forward to build securities tech because of legal barriers, red tape and compliance requirements involved in a broking license.

Today, there are entire businesses built on top of Zerodha’s APIs. Smallcase, with over 2 million customers, offers tailor-made baskets of stocks people can trade in; Sensibull enables options trading; Quicko pulls people’s transactions to do taxation. An entire ecosystem is getting created that will also benefit Zerodha. For one, its demat account is an option for Smallcase customers.



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ITI Mutual Fund launches banking and financial services fund, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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ITI Mutual Fund has announced the launch of ‘ITI Banking and Financial Services Fund’. The NFO will be available for subscription till November 29. Minimum application amount is Rs 5,000 and in multiples of Rs. 1 thereafter. The fund will be jointly managed by Pradeep Gokhale and Pratibh Agarwal. This is the 15th fund launched by the AMC in two years of its existence.

The fund will invest in banking and financial services which will include banks, insurance companies, rating agencies and new fintechs that are emerging among others.

“Banking and Financial Services are well regulated in India and have witnessed uninterrupted growth over the last few years. The fund house is confident of offering a unique investment experience to its investors by adopting a diligent and research-backed investment process. The fund house follows the investment philosophy of SQL – Margin of Safety, Quality of the business and Low Leverage, and offers a superior investment experience to its investors,” said George Heber Joseph, Chief Executive Officer and Chief Investment Officer, ITI Mutual Fund.

According to the press release, the current AUM of the fund house is Rs 2,239 crore as on 31st October, 2021. Out of the total AUM, equity AUM accounted for Rs 1,588 crore while hybrid and debt schemes accounted for Rs 319 crore and Rs 333 crore respectively.



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Reserve Bank of India – Tenders

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Reserve Bank of India, Jammu invites tender for ‘Supply of 5 No. IPCCTV Cameras including Lifetime Camera License for existing IPCCTV System at Main Office Building Reserve Bank of India, Jammu.’ All eligible and interested companies / agencies / firms must submit their bids in two sealed envelopes, Part-I consisting of Technical Bid and Part-II consisting of Price Bid. The Schedule of tender is as follows:

Estimated cost of the work ₹4,90,000 (Rupees Four Lakh Ninety Thousand Only)
Availability of application form on Bank’s website November 17, 2021
Last date and time for submission of sealed envelopes December 2, 2021 up to 02:00 P.M.
Date of opening of part-I of applications December 2, 2021 02:30 P.M. onwards

Regional Director

Date: 17.11.2021

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2 MidCap Company Stocks to Buy As Recommended By ICICI Securities

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Buy East India Hotels with upaide potential of 23%

East India Hotels’ stock has a ‘Buy’ recommendation from ICICI Securities, with a price target of Rs. 180. At the present price of Rs. 146, potential investors can make a 23 percent profit.

Q2FY22 Results

  • Due to higher revenues, the operational performance exceeded our expectations. However, impairment loss had a negative influence on the bottom line.
  • Revenues increased by 233.6 percent year over year to Rs 201.6 crore (or 70% of pre-Covid levels), owing to high demand from the leisure category.
  • Operating losses were also reduced to Rs 12.3 crore (compared to an I-direct forecast of an EBITDA loss of Rs 45.9 crore).
  • A loss of Rs 27.4 crore on non-current investments by a subsidiary resulted in a net loss of Rs 50.4 crore.

Target and Valuation

“The b/s provides strong immunity to weather the challenges while strategic property locations provide visibility to ride on the longterm tourism growth story. Hence, we remain positive on the company with BUY rating on the stock. Target Price and Valuation: We value company at | 180 i.e. 30x FY23E EV/EBITDA,” the brokerage has said.

Key triggers for future price-performance:

In the next three to four years, the current crisis will limit overall room supply in the industry, bode good for branded businesses like EIH.

Expect company to recover to 94 percent of pre-Covid levels by FY23E, with EBITDA exceeding pre-Covid levels; margins are expected to be close to 23 percent; venturing into the premium café industry has the potential for long-term value development.

Buy Nesco with upside potential upto 22%

Buy Nesco with upside potential upto 22%

ICICI Securities has a ‘Buy’ recommendation on Nesco, with a price objective of Rs. 770. Potential investors can make a 22 percent profit at the current price of Rs. 629.

Company update

Nesco had a sluggish FY21 and H1FY22, but is on the mend thanks to higher IT park occupancy and a steady pick-up in the show industry.

Revenues were increased 26 percent year over year in Q2FY22, coming in at Rs 80.8 crore. The IT park’s sales increased by 18 percent year on year to Rs 65.2 crore, while exhibition revenues were flat. EBITDA increased by 62.3 percent year over year to Rs 50.3 crore, while PAT increased by 54 percent to Rs 44 crore.

Target and Valuation

“Nesco’s share price was up ~65% over the past five years. We maintain BUY rating on the stock. With improved occupancies in IT park and gradual recovery in exhibition business, earnings recovery to be sharp, going ahead Target Price and Valuation: We value Nesco at Rs 770/share,” the broekrage has said.

Key triggers for future price performance

Exhibition business will progressively rebound with improved vaccination rates and economic recovery, with pre-Covid run rates projected by H2FY23.

Improving IT park occupancy and identifying a strategic sweet spot in the Goregaon micro market to ensure long-term demand for existing and planned capex.

Dsiclaimer

Dsiclaimer

The above stock has been picked from the brokerage report of ICICI Direct. 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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Reserve Bank of India – Press Releases

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(Amount in ₹ crore, Rate in Per cent)

  Volume
(One Leg)
Weighted
Average Rate
Range
A. Overnight Segment (I+II+III+IV) 4,77,105.92 3.28 0.01-5.20
     I. Call Money 6,786.86 3.16 2.20-3.40
     II. Triparty Repo 3,66,229.60 3.28 2.95-3.32
     III. Market Repo 1,04,044.46 3.32 0.01-3.45
     IV. Repo in Corporate Bond 45.00 5.20 5.20-5.20
B. Term Segment      
     I. Notice Money** 198.40 3.23 2.75-3.40
     II. Term Money@@ 31.00 3.20-3.40
     III. Triparty Repo 5,900.00 3.38 3.30-3.40
     IV. Market Repo 2,208.59 3.44 3.35-3.50
     V. Repo in Corporate Bond 2,161.00 3.65 3.58-5.35
  Auction Date Tenor (Days) Maturity Date Amount Current Rate /
Cut off Rate
C. Liquidity Adjustment Facility (LAF) & Marginal Standing Facility (MSF)
I. Today’s Operations
1. Fixed Rate          
     (i) Repo          
    (ii) Reverse Repo Tue, 16/11/2021 1 Wed, 17/11/2021 2,51,559.00 3.35
    (iii) Special Reverse Repo~          
    (iv) Special Reverse Repoψ          
2. Variable Rate&          
  (I) Main Operation          
     (a) Reverse Repo          
  (II) Fine Tuning Operations          
     (a) Repo          
     (b) Reverse Repo Tue, 16/11/2021 7 Tue, 23/11/2021 2,00,010.00 3.94
3. MSF Tue, 16/11/2021 1 Wed, 17/11/2021 100.00 4.25
4. Special Long-Term Repo Operations (SLTRO) for Small Finance Banks (SFBs)£          
5. Net liquidity injected from today’s operations
[injection (+)/absorption (-)]*
      -4,51,469.00  
II. Outstanding Operations
1. Fixed Rate          
    (i) Repo          
    (ii) Reverse Repo          
    (iii) Special Reverse Repo~ Wed, 03/11/2021 15 Thu, 18/11/2021 1,158.00 3.75
    (iv) Special Reverse Repoψ Wed, 03/11/2021 15 Thu, 18/11/2021 291.00 3.75
2. Variable Rate&          
  (I) Main Operation          
     (a) Reverse Repo Wed, 03/11/2021 15 Thu, 18/11/2021 4,34,492.00 3.99
  (II) Fine Tuning Operations          
     (a) Repo          
     (b) Reverse Repo Tue, 02/11/2021 28 Tue, 30/11/2021 50,007.00 3.97
3. MSF          
4. Long-Term Repo Operations# Mon, 17/02/2020 1095 Thu, 16/02/2023 499.00 5.15
  Mon, 02/03/2020 1094 Wed, 01/03/2023 253.00 5.15
  Mon, 09/03/2020 1093 Tue, 07/03/2023 484.00 5.15
  Wed, 18/03/2020 1094 Fri, 17/03/2023 294.00 5.15
5. Targeted Long Term Repo Operations^ Fri, 27/03/2020 1092 Fri, 24/03/2023 12,236.00 4.40
  Fri, 03/04/2020 1095 Mon, 03/04/2023 16,925.00 4.40
  Thu, 09/04/2020 1093 Fri, 07/04/2023 18,042.00 4.40
  Fri, 17/04/2020 1091 Thu, 13/04/2023 20,399.00 4.40
6. Targeted Long Term Repo Operations 2.0^ Thu, 23/04/2020 1093 Fri, 21/04/2023 7,950.00 4.40
7. On Tap Targeted Long Term Repo Operations Mon, 22/03/2021 1095 Thu, 21/03/2024 5,000.00 4.00
  Mon, 14/06/2021 1096 Fri, 14/06/2024 320.00 4.00
  Mon, 30/08/2021 1095 Thu, 29/08/2024 50.00 4.00
  Mon, 13/09/2021 1095 Thu, 12/09/2024 200.00 4.00
  Mon, 27/09/2021 1095 Thu, 26/09/2024 600.00 4.00
  Mon, 04/10/2021 1095 Thu, 03/10/2024 350.00 4.00
  Mon, 15/11/2021 1095 Thu, 14/11/2024 250.00 4.00
8. Special Long-Term Repo Operations (SLTRO) for Small Finance Banks (SFBs)£ Mon, 17/05/2021 1095 Thu, 16/05/2024 400.00 4.00
Tue, 15/06/2021 1095 Fri, 14/06/2024 490.00 4.00
Thu, 15/07/2021 1093 Fri, 12/07/2024 750.00 4.00
Tue, 17/08/2021 1095 Fri, 16/08/2024 250.00 4.00
Wed, 15/09/2021 1094 Fri, 13/09/2024 150.00 4.00
Mon, 15/11/2021 1095 Thu, 14/11/2024 105.00 4.00
D. Standing Liquidity Facility (SLF) Availed from RBI$       21,695.80  
E. Net liquidity injected from outstanding operations [injection (+)/absorption (-)]*     -3,78,255.2  
F. Net liquidity injected (outstanding including today’s operations) [injection (+)/absorption (-)]*     -8,29,724.2  
G. Cash Reserves Position of Scheduled Commercial Banks
     (i) Cash balances with RBI as on 16/11/2021 6,07,818.59  
     (ii) Average daily cash reserve requirement for the fortnight ending 19/11/2021 6,34,320.00  
H. Government of India Surplus Cash Balance Reckoned for Auction as on¥ 16/11/2021 0.00  
I. Net durable liquidity [surplus (+)/deficit (-)] as on 22/10/2021 11,79,109.00  
@ Based on Reserve Bank of India (RBI) / Clearing Corporation of India Limited (CCIL).
– Not Applicable / No Transaction.
** Relates to uncollateralized transactions of 2 to 14 days tenor.
@@ Relates to uncollateralized transactions of 15 days to one year tenor.
$ Includes refinance facilities extended by RBI.
& As per the Press Release No. 2019-2020/1900 dated February 06, 2020.
* Net liquidity is calculated as Repo+MSF+SLF-Reverse Repo.
# As per the Press Release No. 2020-2021/287 dated September 04, 2020.
^ As per the Press Release No. 2020-2021/605 dated November 06, 2020.
As per the Press Release No. 2020-2021/520 dated October 21, 2020, Press Release No. 2020-2021/763 dated December 11, 2020, Press Release No. 2020-2021/1057 dated February 05, 2021 and Press Release No. 2021-2022/695 dated August 13, 2021.
¥ As per the Press Release No. 2014-2015/1971 dated March 19, 2015.
£ As per the Press Release No. 2021-2022/181 dated May 07, 2021 and Press Release No. 2021-2022/1023 dated October 11, 2021.
~ As per the Press Release No. 2021-2022/177 dated May 07, 2021.
ψ As per the Press Release No. 2021-2022/323 dated June 04, 2021.
Ajit Prasad            
Director (Communications)
Press Release: 2021-2022/1209

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RBI officers, employees withdraw call for agitation

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The United Forum of Reserve Bank Officers and Employees, the umbrella organisation representing employee and officer unions in the Central Bank, have withdrawn its call for an agitation to press the pending issue of wage revision.

Protest programmes were scheduled to begin from Tuesday, but the United Front said that they are being withdrawn in response to an intervention by the Chief General Manager-in-Charge of the Human Resources Management Department.

HRM Department intervenes

“The CGM-in-Charge requested that in view of issues related to wage settlement in the Bank being in an advanced stage, our agitational program may be withdrawn and cooperation extended” for an early closure, said Samir Ghosh, Arun Samaddar, Gavin Coelho and Meet Pathak, leaders of the constituent unions of the United Front.

“Our leaders demanded a formal letter from the Bank, which was separately made available to the constituent unions late on Tuesday evening. We discussed amongst ourselves and decided to respond to the call and facilitate the wage settlement early.”

Earlier, the United Front had said that RBI officers and employees were embarking on an agitational path from today (Tuesday) after their ‘several attempts’ to revive talks on the long-pending issue of wage settlement failed repeatedly.

‘Several bids had failed’

“We have no option but to protest strongly the Central Bank’s inexplicable dilly-dallying on a very highly sensitive matter such as wage revision of the staff, pending for the last four years and more,” said leaders of the constituent unions had said.

Lunch-time gate demonstrations were to begin from Thursday and officers and employees would wear a badge during November 23 to 26. Lunch-time mass deputations would be taken out to the offices of the Regional Directors/Officers-in-charge on November 26. All staff coming under the current wage settlement were to go on mass casual leave on November 30.

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Real capex will revive in 9-12 months. says Axis Bank CEO Amitabh Chaudhry, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Even as large corporations firm up greenfield and brownfield investment plans, Amitabh Chaudhry, CEO, Axis Bank, believes that real capex will revive in the next 9-12 months and will signal the revival of credit offtake. Chaudhry, who was reappointed as MD of the bank for another three years, tells Saloni Shukla that he had pivoted the bank toward a better quality franchise and the bank would soon catch up with the NIMs and RoAs reported by the likes of ICICI Bank and HDFC Bank. Edited excerpts:

What’s your view on the Indian economy? Is it on the mend?
The festive season has been better than what was expected. Optimism is returning, there have been a lot of conversations around incremental capex which will take place soon. Some of them have announced investment plans but the real capex will start coming in only in the next 9-12 months when the credit offtake will start. On the government side, earlier only a couple of areas were spending like defence and infrastructure but I am now told other departments are also being pushed to spend. The GST and tax collections are looking good, so the government has some spare money to spend.

What are the signs of concern for you?
Yes, there are signs of worry. While the third Covid wave has not come as expected after the festive season, some concerns remain on that front. On the upside, 57% of the population has got at least the first dose of vaccination. But we do see the fourth wave in Europe, so you cannot ignore that fact. We are hearing of shutdowns for unvaccinated people.

Plus there are supply chain issues, this is impacting India also especially the car industry. My impression is it could go on for another 12 months. Commodity prices remain high. Geo-political issues are worrisome, especially what is happening between the Western world and China.

What kind of capacity utilisation are you seeing and which sectors would see capex pick up?
The capex conversations are coming from infrastructure sectors and those supporting them. India’s exports are up 55%, so some of the industries which are reliant on exports also have a lot of capex coming through. Generally, as capacity utilisation starts touching 70-75%, they do need to start planning for capex as it doesn’t come overnight. My view is that once the supply chain issues in the auto industry go away that will also see demand pick up. On the service side, the bigger players have raised a lot of capital; so when things open up they could acquire assets at cheaper rates.



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RBI governor to banks, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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RBI governor Shaktikanta Das on Tuesday asked lenders to proactively identify loans to firms that have turned non-viable but not yet recognised as a non-performing asset (NPA) due to the special dispensation during Covid. The governor also asked banks to review the usability of capital for absorbing losses during a crisis.

Pointing out that numerous high-frequency indicators are showing that economic recovery is taking hold, Das said that there have been several resolution frameworks announced in the wake of the pandemic. “As the support measures start unwinding, some of these restructured accounts might face solvency issues over the coming quarters. Prudence would warrant proactive recognition of such non-viable firms for pragmatic resolution measures,” said Das.

Speaking at an economic conclave organised by the State Bank of India, Das noted that banks have weathered the Covid shock better than expected and, according to early trends, their bad loans and capital position has improved in September 2021 from their levels in June 2021. He said that the profitability metrics of banks were highest in several years. However, the improved parameters partly reflect regulatory relief provided to banks during Covid as well as fiscal guarantees and financial support given by the government, he said.

“Certain concerns have re-emerged from the crisis which warrant our attention. Most importantly, we are faced with the question of capital and provisioning buffers of banks, their adequacy and resultant usability during a crisis,” said Das. He urged banks to focus and further improve their capital management processes to envisage the capacity for loss absorption as an ongoing responsibility of the lending institutions.

In his speech, the governor also cautioned banks on the “technological invasion” that they face. “A word of caution is in order: Globally, the ‘phygital’ revolution has played out into several collaborative models between banks, NBFCs and fintech players such as incubation, capital investment, co-creation, distribution and integration… it must be recognised that the risks ultimately lie in the books of banks and NBFCs and hence the collaboration should be appropriately strategised,” Das said.



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