Healthy collections, focus on reducing stressed asset flow will aid asset quality in H2FY22: Carol Furtado, COO, Ujjivan Small Finance Bank

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Also, the aspiring middle class [is] an area we will be focusing on, and we have various segments like senior citizens, small traders, and manufacturers, so we will be introducing value-added products for these segments.

By Piyush Shukla

Ujjivan Small Finance Bank is likely to witness an improvement in the asset quality in the second half of the current fiscal on the back of overall healthy collections and higher focus on reducing flow of stressed loans towards NPA category, Carol Furtado, chief operating officer, Ujjivan Small Finance Bank, tells Piyush Shukla. Excerpts:

Your disbursements in July-September rose sharply, but overall gross advances grew 5% to Rs 14,514 crore. What is your credit growth outlook?

The economy has opened, and all our business verticals are doing well. We had given a growth guidance of 15-20% or so sometime in August; we are keeping up to it. Since the economy has opened, we are aiming to get all our business lines to contribute well, and September and October have been good months for us. We hope to see even double the growth in November. [We are doing quite well in our] 100 days’ plan, where rebuilding our business momentum was one of our key focus areas … and disbursements in the second quarter (Q2FY22) have improved to Rs 3,000-plus crore, which is around 114% growth year-on-year and around 138% quarter-on-quarter. So improvement is across all business verticals.

Are there any new loan products in the pipeline?

Yes, this year … we will also be launching products like the ECLGS (Emergency Credit Line Guarantee Scheme), CGTMSE (Credit Guarantee Fund Trust for Micro and Small Enterprises), the MSE (micro and small enterprises) segment and GST-based working capital finance and some products in the healthcare segment. On the personal loan side, we will be expanding it to balance transfer, pre-approved loans and pre-approved digital products. So those will be the kind of new products that we will be launching. But our focus is on core, and some of the other products that we are incubating we will continue to do so and maybe in the next financial year we will take it up for review.

Your retail deposits account for 52% of the overall book. Where do you think its share will be at the end of the current financial year?

We will go more granular in our retail liabilities strategy and that should serve two purposes: stickiness and low cost. We are more focused on delivering value to the customers in the form of customer service and products that will be the need for each segment, and we want to gain customer loyalty in this segment so that is where our focus is. Also, the aspiring middle class [is] an area we will be focusing on, and we have various segments like senior citizens, small traders, and manufacturers, so we will be introducing value-added products for these segments.

As you move gradually towards non-micro finance loans, till when will you be able to maintain net interest margin (NIM) at 8.1%?

NIMs are currently subdued as GNPA are high. Actual yields in businesses are intact. Over the next few years, with change in business mix, there will be some reduction in overall yield. However, current NIMs are not comparable due to derecognition of interest income on GNPA pool of 11.8%.

You spoke about higher bad loans. Do you think that GNPAs have peaked at 11.8% and what is your view on asset quality in FY22?

Collections have picked up well. We are focused on reducing PAR (portfolio at risk) flow to higher buckets, collections from restructured and NPA pool, further increasing overall collections. With this context, we believe things in H2 (Oct-March) would be better on the credit quality front.

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Reserve Bank of India – Press Releases

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The Government of India announces the conversion/switch of its securities through auction for an aggregate amount of ₹30,000 crore (face value). The security-wise details of the conversion/switch are given as under:

Date of Auction Source Securities Amount (FV) of Source Securities Destination Securities
November 15, 2021 5.09% GS 2022
(Maturing on Apr 13, 2022)
₹4,000 crore FRB 2031
(maturing on Dec 07, 2031)
₹4,000 crore FRB 2034
(maturing on Oct 30, 2034)
8.35% GS 2022
(Maturing on May 14, 2022)
₹4,000 crore 7.57% GS 2033
(maturing on Jun17, 2033)
8.15% GS 2022
(Maturing on June 11, 2022)
₹8,000 crore 7.57% GS 2033
(maturing on Jun17, 2033)
8.13% GS 2022
(Maturing on Sep 21, 2022)
₹4,000 crore FRB 2031
(maturing on Dec 07, 2031)
₹6,000 crore FRB 2034
(maturing on Oct 30, 2034)
  Total ₹30,000 crore  

The market participants are required to place their bids in e-Kuber giving the amount of the source security and the price of the source and destination security expressed up to two decimal places.

The auction would be a multiple-price based auction, i.e. successful bids will get accepted at their respective quoted prices for the source and destination securities.

Bids for the auction should be submitted in electronic format on the Reserve Bank of India Core Banking Solution (e-Kuber) system on November 15, 2021 (Monday) between 10:30 AM to 11:30 AM. The result of the auction will be announced on the same day and settlement will take place on November 16, 2021 (Tuesday).

Government of India reserves the right to:

  • Accept offers for less than the notified amount.

  • Purchase marginally higher than the notified amount due to rounding-off effect.

  • Accept or reject any or all the offers either wholly or partially without assigning any reason.

Operational guidelines for switch transactions and other details are given in the Annex.

(Yogesh Dayal)     
Chief General Manager

Press Release: 2021-2022/1179


Annex

Operational Guidelines for Switch/Conversion Transactions with the Government of India

Switch module on e-kuber

1. The market participants can bid in the switch auction through the Switch Transaction module provided in the e-kuber portal.

Bidding in a switch transaction

2. Bidding in the auction implies that the market participants agree to sell the source security/ies to the Government of India (GoI) and simultaneously agree to buy the destination security from the GoI at their respective quoted prices.

Placing of bids

3. Each bid should specify the following details:

  1. Amount of the source security (Face Value) that the participants are willing to sell.

  2. Price of the source security (expressed up to two decimal places).

  3. Choice of destination security and the price of the destination security (expressed up to two decimal places), at which the participants are willing to buy the destination security.

4. The participants can choose to bid for any/all the destination security/ies, but the aggregate amount of bids for the source security should not exceed their holdings of the source security in face value terms.

Minimum Bid size

5. Minimum bid size would be ₹10,000 and in multiples of ₹10,000 thereafter. The participants are allowed to submit multiple bids. However, the aggregate amount of bids submitted should not exceed the notified amount of source security/basket of source securities in the auction.

Price of source security

6. The price of the source security quoted must be equal to the FBIL closing price of the source security as on the previous working day.

7. Bids for source security not as per the price mentioned above will be rejected.

Price of destination security

8. Bids for the destination security may be placed after taking into account the price of source security as mentioned above.

Method of auction

9. The auction will be a multiple-price based auction, i.e. successful bids will get accepted at their respective quoted prices for the source and destination securities.

Auction decision

10. The auction cut-off will be decided based on the price of the destination security/ies.

11. Successful bidders are those who have placed their bids at or above the cut-off price. All bids lower than the cut-off price will be rejected.

12. There will be provision of pro-rata allotment, should there be more than one successful bid at the cut-off price.

Amount of destination security and dealing in odd amounts during switch auction

13. The switch ratio, which is the ratio of the price of the source security to the price of the destination security, would be rounded off at 8 decimal places.

14. The amount of destination security to be issued for each successful bid will be computed by multiplying the allotted amount (FV) of the source security with the rounded-off switch ratio. The amount of destination security (FV) would be rounded-off to the nearest lower value in multiples of ₹10,000.

15. The odd amount of destination securities (less than ₹10,000) which has been rounded-off, would be notionally allotted and bought back from the bidders at the quoted bid price of the destination security. The net cash consideration to be paid to the bidder for such odd amounts would be the clean price of these securities (as the accrued interest received during notional allotment and paid during notional buyback offset each other).

Fund settlement

16. Though the conversion would be broadly cash neutral, there will be fund settlement for the net accrued interest (accrued interest for the source security FV – accrued interest for the destination security FV) for each bid. Cash consideration (due to rounding-off of face value of destination security) computed for each bid would be added to the net accrued interest. Accordingly, fund settlement will be done for the final amount (Net accrued interest + cash consideration) for each bid.

Note: An illustration for the calculation of cash consideration due to rounding-off of destination security face value is as given below:

Amount of Source Security (FV) ₹10,00,00,000.00
Price of Source Security ₹97.50
Price of Destination Security ₹99.20
Switch Ratio (rounded-off at 8 decimals) 0.98286290
Destination Security FV before rounding off ₹9,82,86,290.00
Destination Security FV re-issued after rounding-off ₹9,82,80,000.00
Odd amount of rounded-off destination security (FV) ₹6290.00
Cash consideration due to rounding off (Clean Price calculated at the quoted price of destination security) ₹6240.00

17. The settlement of the auction would be held on T+1 basis.

Help Desk

18. In case of technical difficulties, Core Banking Operations Team should be contacted (email; Phone no: 022-27595415, 27595666, 27523516). For other auction related difficulties, IDMD auction team can be contacted (email; Phone no: 022-22702431, 22705125).

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Reserve Bank of India – Press Releases

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The Reserve Bank of India (RBl) has imposed, by an order dated November 11, 2021, a monetary penalty of ₹25,000 thousand (Rupees Twenty Five Thousand only) on The Deola Merchants’ Co-operative Bank Ltd., Nashik, Maharashtra (the bank) for contravention of/ non-compliance with the directions issued by the RBI to Urban Co-operative Banks on Board of Directors and Exposure Norms. This penalty has been imposed in exercise of powers vested in RBI under the provisions of Section 47 A (1) (c) read with Section 46 (4) (i) and Section 56 of the Banking Regulation Act, 1949, taking into account the failure of the bank to adhere to the aforesaid directions issued by RBI.

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

Background

The inspection report of the bank based on its financial position as on March 31, 2019, revealed, inter alia, that the bank had granted CC loan to a relative of one of its directors in contravention of/ non-compliance with directions issued by RBI to Urban Cooperative Banks on Board of Directors and Exposure Norms. Based on the same, a Notice was issued to the bank advising it to show cause as to why penalty should not be imposed for non-compliance with the directions.

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

(Yogesh Dayal)     
Chief General Manager

Press Release: 2021-2022/1178

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Reserve Bank of India – Notifications

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RBI/2021-2022/123
DOR.SOG (SPE).REC.No 67/13.03.00/2021-22

November 11, 2021

All Scheduled Commercial Banks (including Regional Rural Banks)
All Small Finance Banks
All Local Area Banks
All Payment Banks
All Primary (Urban) Co-operative Banks/ DCCBs /State Cooperative Banks

Dear Sir / Madam,

Foreign Currency (Non-resident) Accounts (Banks) Scheme [FCNR(B)] – Master Direction on Interest Rate on Deposits

Please refer to the instructions on the Foreign Currency (Non-resident) Accounts (Banks) Scheme contained in Section 19 of the Master Direction – Reserve Bank of India (Interest Rate on Deposits) Directions, 2016 dated March 03, 2016 and Section 18 of the Master Direction – Reserve Bank of India (Co-operative Banks – Interest Rate on Deposits) Directions, 2016 dated May 12, 2016.

2. In view of the impending discontinuance of LIBOR as a benchmark rate, it has been decided to permit banks to offer interest rates on FCNR (B) deposits using widely accepted ‘Overnight Alternative Reference Rate (ARR) for the respective currency’ with upward revision in the interest rates ceiling by 50 bps.

3. As a measure to handle the information asymmetry during the transition, FEDAI may publish the ARR till such time the widely accepted benchmark is established. The relevant sections of the Master Directions as amended are indicated in the Annex.

4. All other instructions in this regard shall remain unchanged.

Yours faithfully,

(Neeraj Nigam)
Chief General Manager-in-Charge
Encl: As above


ANNEX

[Encl. to circular DOR.SOG(SPE).REC.No 67/13.03.00/2021-22 dated Nov 11, 2021]

Master Direction – Reserve Bank of India (Interest Rate on Deposits) Directions, 2016

Section of MD Existing Provisions Amended Provisions
19(d) Interest on floating rate deposits shall be paid within the ceiling of swap rates for the respective currency/ maturity and in case of fixed rate deposits, interest shall be paid within the ceiling of LIBOR rates for the respective currency/ maturity. Interest on floating rate deposits shall be paid within the ceiling of swap rates for the respective currency/ maturity and in case of fixed rate deposits, interest shall be paid within the ceiling of Overnight Alternative Reference Rate* for the respective currency/ maturity.
19(f) The LIBOR/SWAP rates as on the last working day of the preceding month shall form the base for fixing ceiling rates for the interest rates offered effective in the following month. The Overnight Alternative Reference Rate* for the respective currency /SWAP rates as on the last working day of the preceding month shall form the base for fixing ceiling rates for the interest rates offered effective in the following month.
19(g) The interest rates ceiling on FCNR (B) deposits shall be as under:

Period of deposit Ceiling rate
1 year to less than 3 years LIBOR/ Swap plus 200 basis points
3 years and above up to and including 5 years LIBOR/ Swap plus 300 basis points
The interest rates ceiling on FCNR (B) deposits shall be as under:

Period of deposit Ceiling rate
1 year to less than 3 years Overnight Alternative Reference Rate* for the respective currency / Swap plus 250 basis points
3 years and above up to and including 5 years Overnight Alternative Reference Rate* for the respective currency / Swap plus 350 basis points
19(h) The LIBOR / Swap rates quoted/displayed by Foreign Exchange Dealers Association of India (FEDAI) shall be used as the reference for arriving at the interest rates on FCNR(B) deposits. The Overnight Alternative Reference Rate* for the respective currency / Swap rates quoted/displayed by Foreign Exchange Dealers Association of India (FEDAI) shall be used as the reference for arriving at the interest rates on FCNR (B) deposits.

Master Direction – Reserve Bank of India (Co-operative Banks – Interest Rate on Deposits) Directions, 2016

Section of MD Existing Provisions Amended Provisions
18(d) Interest on floating rate deposits shall be paid within the ceiling of swap rates for the respective currency/ maturity and in case of fixed rate deposits, interest shall be paid within the ceiling of LIBOR rates for the respective currency/ maturity. Interest on floating rate deposits shall be paid within the ceiling of swap rates for the respective currency/ maturity and in case of fixed rate deposits, interest shall be paid within the ceiling of Overnight Alternative Reference Rate* for the respective currency/ maturity.
18(f) The LIBOR/SWAP rates as on the last working day of the preceding month shall form the base for fixing ceiling rates for the interest rates offered effective in the following month. The Overnight Alternative Reference Rate* for the respective currency /SWAP rates as on the last working day of the preceding month shall form the base for fixing ceiling rates for the interest rates offered effective in the following month.
18(g) The interest rates ceiling on FCNR (B) deposits shall be as under:

Period of deposit Ceiling rate
1 year to less than 3 years LIBOR/ Swap plus 200 basis points
3 years and above up to and including 5 years LIBOR/ Swap plus 300 basis points
The interest rates ceiling on FCNR (B) deposits shall be as under:

Period of deposit Ceiling rate
1 year to less than 3 years Overnight Alternative Reference Rate* for the respective currency / Swap plus 250 basis points
3 years and above up to and including 5 years Overnight Alternative Reference Rate* for the respective currency / Swap plus 350 basis points
18(h) The LIBOR / Swap rates quoted/displayed by Foreign Exchange Dealers Association of India (FEDAI) shall be used as the reference for arriving at the interest rates on FCNR(B) deposits. The Overnight Alternative Reference Rate* for the respective currency / Swap rates quoted/displayed by Foreign Exchange Dealers Association of India (FEDAI) shall be used as the reference for arriving at the interest rates on FCNR (B) deposits.

*Alternative Reference Rate (ARR) refers to any widely accepted ARR for the respective currency (Ref: RBI circular CO.FMRD.DIRD.S39/14.02.001/2021-22 dated July 08, 2021 on ‘Roadmap for LIBOR Transition’).

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Reserve Bank of India – Tenders

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Reserve Bank of India, Premises Department, Central Office, Mumbai had invited e-tender for Tender for Design, Supply, Installation, Testing and Commissioning of Contraband Trace Detection System with all Accessories for Bank’s Central Office Building at Fort, Mumbai, through Press Advertisement, RBI Website and MSTC Portal on October 14, 2021.

In this context, it has been decided to extend the tender for two weeks.

The Revised Bid Close Date for the captioned e-tender is 22.11.2021 upto 2 p.m.

Chief General Manager

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Suryoday Small Finance Bank posts ₹1.92-crore loss in Q2

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Suryoday Small Finance Bank’s net loss narrowed to ₹1.92 crore in the second quarter ended September 30, 2021 against net loss of ₹47.72 crore in the first quarter. The small finance bank had reported a net profit of ₹27.24 crore in the year ago quarter.

Net interest income (difference between interest earned and expended) was up 34.4 per cent year-on-year to ₹147.2 crore (₹109.5 crore in the year-ago quarter).

Other income, including processing fees, profit on sale of investments, income on dealing in priority sector lending certificates, etc,,jumped 194.3 per cent y-o-y to ₹33.4 crore ( ₹11.3 crore).

While the operating profit was up 61.9 per cent y-o-y to ₹79.7 crore (₹51.1 crore), provisions and contingencies, up more than five times y-o-y to ₹97.3 crore (Rs ₹14.7 crore) weighed down the bottomline.

Gross NPAs rose to 10.2 per cent of gross advances vis-a-vis 9.5 per cent as at June-end 2021 and 2.3 per cent as at September-end 2020. Net NPAs were unchanged at 4.5 per cent of net advances quarter-on-quarter (QoQ) but up 0.4 per cent in the year ago period. Gross advances were up about 20 per cent y-o-y to ₹4,470 crore, disbursements jumped to ₹1,067 crore (₹360 crore in the preceding quarter).

Baskar Babu R, MD & CEO, said the increasing trend of repayment behaviour, which was witnessed in the first quarter, improved during the second quarter as the restrictions across States eased businesses resumed.

Further, during October 2021 as well, the bank disbursed ₹359 crore and reported collection efficiency of 83 per cent (one-EMI adjusted) and 104 per cent (overall).

Deposits declined a shade to Rs ₹3,129 crore against Rs ₹3,140 crore in the year-ago quarter. The proportion of retail deposits increased to 87.9 per cent from 70.5 per cent in the year ago period.

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Indiabulls Housing Finance Q2 profit down 11.4%

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Indiabulls Housing Finance registered an 11.4 per cent drop in its consolidated net profit for the second quarter of the fiscal at ₹286.34 crore compared to ₹323.2 crore a year ago.

Total revenue from operations fell 13.5 per cent to ₹2,232.79 crore for the quarter ended September 30 against ₹2,581 crore in the same period last fiscal.

Retail loan disbursal grows

Its loan book was at ₹64,062 crore, down 2.1 per cent from ₹65,438 crore as on June 30.

“With co-lending partnerships in place, retail disbursal growth has gained momentum in FY22.

The company disbursed retail loans of ₹325 crore through co-lending in the month of September. This will scale up to ₹500 crore by December 2021 and ₹800 crore by March 2022, Indiabulls Housing Finance said in a statement on Thursday.

It is on track to disburse ₹1,000 crore of retail loans through co-lending in the third quarter of the fiscal, it added.

Gross NPAs were at 2.69 per cent as on September 30 versus 2.86 per cent as on June 30 and 2.21 per cent as on September 30, 2020.

Net NPAs were at 1.53 per cent as on September 30 compared to 1.63 per cent a year ago.

Shoring up provisions

“The balance sheet has been strengthened by shoring up provisions to ₹3,153 crore, 4x times the regulatory requirement and equivalent to a healthy 4.9 per cent of our loan book and 152 per cent of gross NPAs,” the statement said.

The company restructured loans of ₹96.7 crore, equivalent to 0.15 per cent of its loan book, under the restructuring frameworks 1.0 and 2.0 combined.

Collection efficiency has now normalised to pre-Covid levels.

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This Pesticides And Agro Chemicals Company To Soon Pay A Special Dividend Of Rs. 125

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Investment

oi-Roshni Agarwal

|

Dividend is a passive source of income that is always chased upon by investors for better gains other than stock’s appreciation. There are three type of dividends-interim, final and special dividend. Here we shall discuss about one such company that will soon be paying special dividend of Rs. 125. Special dividend is recommended by board of the company and approved by its shareholders in the Annual General Meeting (AGM).

This Pesticides And Agro Chemicals Co. To Soon Pay A Special Dividend Of Rs. 125

This Pesticides And Agro Chemicals Company To Soon Pay A Special Dividend Of Rs. 125

The stock of Bayer Crop Science turned ex-date today i.e. November 11, 2021 and usually the dividend is received or payment is received by eligible shareholders within 30 days of its approval.

About the company:

Bayer Crop Science is a mid cap company that has capabilities in the areas of biotechnology, crop protection and data sciences. The company manufactures crop protection products such as herbicides, insecticides, fungicides and seed treatment, non agricultural pest-control, seeds and plant biotechnology. The company’s latest m-cap stood at Rs. 21,356 crore.

In the last September ended quarter of FY22, the firm total income from operations at Rs. 1365.1 crore and consequently its net profit for the period came in at Rs. 154.1 crore lower than Rs. 254 crore reported in the previous quarter. Also, the company has a history of being a debt free enterprise.

Bayer Crop Science dividend history

Dividend ex-date Type Dividend in Rs.
27th July 2021 Final 25
27th July 2020 Final 25
23rd June 2020 Interim 90
10th July 2019 Final 18
6th August 2018 Final 18



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Department of Posts, payments bank arm to sell Bajaj Allianz Life products

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Bajaj Allianz Life Insurance Company (BALIC) has entered into a strategic partnership with Department of Posts and India Post Payments Bank to offer two Point of Sale (PoS) products — a term product and an annuity product — through the postal department’s network of 1,36,000 banking access points and the payments bank’s 650 branches.

Through this alliance, BALIC has become the first private life insurer in the country to enter into a tie up with the Department of Posts for sale of PoS products.

Augment earlier offerings

Speaking to BusinessLine post the announcement of this partnership, Tarun Chugh, Managing Director & Chief Executive Officer, BALIC, said that Bajaj Allianz Life Smart Protect Goal and Bajaj Allianz Life Guaranteed Pension Goal will be available to customers in addition to DOP’s existing Postal Life Insurance and Rural Postal Insurance products.

Chugh said. While SPG is a term insurance product, GPG is an annuity product that aims to meet post retirement expenses as it offers guaranteed and fixed pension product. “It’s a guaranteed pension product”, Chugh said.

Expand access

This alliance will enable the lakhs of Gramieen Dak Sevaks to offer financial solutions in rural areas.

We are confident that this partnership will play an integral role in increasing the adoption of life insurance across various customer segments.”, Chugh said.

It maybe recalled that BALIC had, in 2018, entered into corporate agency agreement with IPPB. Now, this arrangement is being expanded into a more comprehensive and expansive agreement with the inclusion of the Department of Posts (DoP). , according to Chugh.

Pawan Kumar Singh, DDG – FS & PBI, Department of Posts (DoP), said, “With this partnership, we will take financial inclusion forward. The Department of Posts is going to play a major role in ensuring financial inclusion in days to come,” he said.

Financial inclusion

Singh added that technology will play a major role in financial inclusion and highlighted that the entire network of 1.57 lakh post offices is seamlessly connected.

J Venkatramu, MD & CEO, India Post Payments Bank, said that IPPB already offers Pradhan Mantri Jeevan Jyoti Bima Yojana to its customers that aligns with Government’s mission of creating a universal social security net and making insurance affordable for the underprivileged and disadvantaged sections.

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Banks allowed to offer interest rate on FCNR (B) deposits linked to ARR

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The Reserve Bank of India has decided to permit banks to offer interest rates on FCNR (B) deposits using widely-accepted ‘Overnight Alternative Reference Rate (ARR) for the respective currency’ with an upward revision in the interest rates ceiling by 50 basis points (bps).

This comes in view of the impending discontinuance of LIBOR (London Inter-Bank Offered Rate) as a benchmark rate.

As a measure to handle the information asymmetry during the transition, the Foreign Exchange Dealers Association of India (FEDAI) may publish the ARR till such time the widely-accepted benchmark is established, the central bank said in a circular to banks.

The RBI said the interest rates ceiling on FCNR (B) deposits of 1 year to less than 3 years shall be overnight ARR for the respective currency / Swap plus 250 bps against LIBOR/ Swap plus 200 bps now.

Further, the interest rates ceiling on FCNR (B) deposits of 3 years and above up to and including 5 years shall be overnight ARR for the respective currency / Swap plus 350 bps against LIBOR/ Swap plus 300 bps now.

Foreign Currency (Non-Resident) Account (Banks) scheme allows non-resident Indians (NRIs) and Person of Indian Origin (PIO) to open a term deposit account (for terms not less than 1 year and not more than 5 years) in India in any permitted currency — that is a foreign currency which is freely convertible.

Such accounts may be held jointly in the names of two or more NRIs/ PIOs. NRIs/ PIOs can also hold such accounts jointly with a resident relative on ‘former or survivor’ basis (relative as defined in Companies Act, 2013).

The resident relative can operate the account as a Power of Attorney holder during the life time of the NRI/ PIO account holder.

RBI said the overnight ARR for the respective currency / Swap rates quoted/ displayed by FEDAI shall be used as the reference for arriving at the interest rates on FCNR (B) deposit.

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