Banking
Banking
Banking
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•How did India manage the global financial downturn of 2008-09?
•Classification of Banks
•Advances
•NPAs
•Deposits
•CRR , SLR
•Basel 3 Norms : Background and Impact
•What are Small Banks and what are their prospects?
•What are Payment Banks and what are their prospects?
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Global Financial Melt-down (2008-09)
and India
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•Firstly, Indian banking system was not greatly affected because our Forex
exposure in Indian banks were low.
•We did not fall into sub-prime crisis.
•High Household savings
•But still we were affected to some extent due to increase in crude oil prices
which increased the inflation.
•Crude oil increased close to $150 per barrel.
•Inflation increased from 7.7% in march 2008 to 12.8% in August 2008, highest in
the previous 4-5 years.
•In summary, during the global financial crisis, Indian banking system was
not affected but Indian economy was affected due to high inflation.
RBI and Government Measures
To reduce the inflationary pressures, the CRR was increased to 9% during the
same time almost 8 to 10 times in just 4-5 months.
These measures reduced the inflation which began to drop from September
2008.
But this also sucked out the liquidity and the credit availability, investments
and growth were severely affected.
RBI began to reduce both CRR and Repo beginning from October 2008.
GOI also announced fiscal stimulus in December 6, 2008 which include:
• Low interest loans
• Higher spending on infrastructure
• Cut in the excise duty
• Made home loans below Rs. 2 mn as priority sector.
Classification of Banks
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How the players are classified in the banking industry?
For all analysis, banking players are classified into 3 categories
•Public sector banks (SBI& Associates and Nationalized
Banks)
•Private sector banks
•Foreign banks
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In the last 5 years, Private banks have tripled their share in
loans and more than doubled their share in deposits.
MARKET SHARES
Market Share in Deposits (in
Market Share in Loans (in percentage)
percentage)
Year PSU 2011-12
Private Foreign Year PSU Private Foreign
Banks Sector Banks Banks Sector Banks
Banks Banks
2000 79.41 12.56 8.03 2000 81.29 12.63 5.47
2010 77.24 18.08 4.67 2010 77.68 17.31 5.05
2015 74.28 21.26 4.45 2015 76.26 19.44 4.3
2021 58.68 36.41 4.91 2021 64.7 30.5 4.8
Source:
https://theprint.in/economy/in-just-5-years-private-banks-have-narrowed-public-sectors-huge-lead-in-loans-deposits/550570/
RBI
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Analysis of Advances
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PRIORITY SECTOR LENDING NORMS
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Credit growth dropped sharply after 2014 compared to the previous
5 years.
Source: https://www.ceicdata.com/en/indicator/india/domestic-credit-growth
Credit growth for Private banks has been much higher than that of
PSU Banks
Source:
RBI, Banks
Share of credit to the industry has come down from 44% in 2015
to 29% in 2021. While the share of Retail and Services have
increased.
CHANGE IN CREDIT PROFILE
• Corporates using alternate funding options - IPOs/FPOs/Rights issues and using past
reserves.
• Banks are focusing on Retail and Services credit as they have much less NPAs
NPA Trends
14.00%
12.00% 11.60%
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How banks under reported NPAs?
Illustration
• Ever-greening
• Disburse working capital loans to the stressed companies
• Disburse fresh loans in addition to the already sanctioned loans
• Disburse loans to the other group companies
• Restructuring of loans
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PSU Bank’s NPAS has been much higher than Private bank’s NPAs.
Source: RBI
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IBC is seen as a long-term solution to tackle NPAs
• The first major case resolved under IBC was the sale of Bushan Steel to Tata
Steel in May 2018.
• Bushan Steel had an outstanding debt of around Rs. 46,000 crores
• The company was sold to Tata Steel and Banks recovered Rs. 35,200 crores.
(76% of the outstanding debt)
• Also got 12% equity stake in the company.
. Till December 2020, Rs. 4.99 lac crores worth of Cases have been
resolved and the creditors got 43% of the outstanding value.
• 480 Bad loans worth than Rs 7 lakh crore to lenders, have gone through
resolution process as on December 2020.
• Banks recovered Rs. 2.22 lakh crores, around 32% of outstanding value
since the inception of IBC.
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PROMPT CORRECTIVE ACTION (PCA)
• PCA is process or mechanism to ensure that banks don’t go bust.
• Weak banks below certain performance level are included in PCA.
• According to latest PCA framework, banks to be placed under it are assessed on three
parameters viz. Capital ratios, Asset Quality and Profitability.
Banks placed under PCA were restricted from expanding number of branches, staff
recruitment and increasing size of their loan book, disbursal only to those companies
whose borrowing is above investment grades.
It is a temporary measure. After showing improvement in performance, Banks are taken
out of PCA category.
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11 PSBs were put under PCA list in 2018. Of which 8 banks came
out of PCA list by February 2021.
• In April 2018, RBI placed the following 11 PSBs under its Prompt Corrective Action
IDBI Bank, UCO Bank, Bank of India (BoI), Central Bank of India, Indian Overseas
Bank, Dena Bank, Oriental Bank of Commerce (OBC), Bank of Maharashtra (BoM),
All banks except Central Bank of India all other banks have come out of PCA list.
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BANK CONSOLIDATION
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In 2019 and 2020, 13 PSBs got consolidated into 5 banks.
Bank
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IMPACT OF BANK MERGERS
• Merging banks account for ~22-23% of the total banking market share and
long run.
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Analysis of Deposits
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Deposit growth has moderately increased after FY 20.
DEPOSIT GROWTH
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Market share of private sector banks in CASA deposits have
increased significantly in the last 10 years.
Pvt Banks
Pvt Banks
PSU Banks
PSU Banks
Source: https://www.zeebiz.com/market-news/news-sbi-hdfc-bank-axis-bank-icici-bank-yes-
bank-in-psb-vs-pvt-lenders-tussle-on-casa-deposits-look-who-is-winning-and-who-is-losing-
32 145678
Why Private Sector and Foreign Bank’s CASA is increasing?
• Private Sector and Foreign Banks are able to tap in salaried segment market
current deposits
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CRR and SLR
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SLR
CRR
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CRR and SLR has reduced significantly from its peak of 1990s
Source:
https://www.numberbasket.com/india/finance/rbi-key-rates/cash-reserve-ratio-crr
https://www.numberbasket.com/india/finance/rbi-key-rates/statutory-liquidity-ratio-slr
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Basel 3 Norms
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BACKGROUND
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Capital Adequacy Ratio (CAR) = (Tier 1 capital + Tier 2 capital)/(Risk weighted
assets)
Problem
State Bank of India has a Tier 1 capital of Rs. 1 crore and Tier 2 capital of Rs. 1
crore. They had given personal loans of Rs. 10 crore whose risk weightage is 100%
and Homes loans of Rs. 10 crore whose risk weightage is 35%. Calculate the
Capital Adequacy Ratio.
= 0.148 or 14.8%
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Basel 3 norms require banks to bring in more equity capital.
Basel 2 Basel 3
Tier 1 Capital 4% 6%
Tier 2 Capital 4% 2%
Capital Conservation 0% 2.5%
Buffer
Tier 1 Capital + 4% 8.5%
Capital Conservation
Buffer
Source: RBI
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PSU banks see recapitalisation from government worth Rs 3.4
trillion over last 7 years
Source: GoI
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Small Finance Banks
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SMALL BANKS : SCOPE
•At least 50 per cent of the bank's loan portfolio should constitute loans and
enterprises.
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SMALL BANKS : KEY REGULATORY REQUIREMENTS
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Payment Banks
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PAYMENT BANKS: KEY REGULATIONS
•Acceptance of demand deposits, i.e. current and savings bank deposits.
However, payment banks will initially be restricted to holding a maximum
balance of Rs. 100,000 per customer.
•Payment banks will not be allowed to disburse credit.
•They can also distribute simple financial products like mutual funds and
insurance.
•They can also charge MDR for Debit cards.
• The minimum capital of a payment bank is Rs. 1 billion.
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ACTIVE PAYMENT BANKS
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