Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Banks can't lend to jewellers for purchase of gold: RBI



After putting curbs on non-banking finance companies (NBFCs) lending against gold, the Reserve Bank of India on Tuesday banned banks from lending for purchase of gold by jewellers. 

"No advances should be granted by banks against gold bullion to dealers or traders in gold if, in their assessment, such advances are likely to be utilised for purposes of financing gold purchase at auctions or speculative holding of stocks and bullion," the RBI said in its half-year review of the monetary policy. The RBI has been concerned over banks' exposure to gold finance companies and has taken steps to curb it. 

Earlier this year, the central bank asked banks to reduce their exposure to NBFCs giving loans against gold, as it was concerned by the significant rise in gold imports in recent years. The RBI set up a working group to suggest ways to deal with the rising imports of gold. 

The central bank said that direct bank financing for purchase of gold in any form - bullion or primary gold, jewellery, gold coin - could lead to fuelling of demand for gold for speculative purposes. 

RBI governor D Subbarao said this step is more of a reiteration of an old policy and banks should not finance gold purchases unless it is a working capital need for a jeweller. 

In March, the RBI has restricted NBFCs from lending against bullion.

Tuesday, October 30, 2012

CRR is a waste for economy: SBI Chief



SBI Chairman Pratip Chaudhuri today once again expressed his open disagreement with the RBI on CRR saying it is a “waste” for the economy and successive interest rate cuts by central bank have failed to contain inflation.

“Of course, I am an incurable optimist and I had expected a 50 basis points CRR cut. I still hold that CRR is a waste for the economy,” he said after RBI Governor D Subbarao unveiled the half-year review of the credit policy which had a 0.25 per cent cut in CRR.

“But anyway it (CRR) has been cut by 25 basis points and governor had his own reasons and his own compulsions to see the inflation down,” he said.

This is not the first time the head of the largest bank has had a run-in with the RBI. Chaudhuri had raised the issue of CRR in August too, but was vehemently countered by RBI Deputy Governor K C Chakrabarty.

“If the SBI Chairman is not able to do business as per our regulatory environment, he has to find some other place,” Chakrabarty had said.

Taking a jibe at RBI’s attempts at reining in inflation by effecting 10 interest rate hikes, Chaudhuri said it did yield desired result.

“But I do not think that the 10 rate increases that happened have not helped in lowering the inflation because today’s inflation is largely cost push. It is not so much of demand pull,” he said. “So to try to address that the rate of interest as an instrument may not be very effective,” he said.

RBI chides banks for not sharing info on loans



The Reserve Bank of India has pulled up banks for not sharing information on loans, derivatives and unhedged forex currency exposures of borrowers among themselves.
In its monetary policy statement, the Reserve Bank of India drew attention to the significant increase in non-performing assets and restructured loans of banks. It said that a major reason for the deterioration in the asset quality of banks is the lack of effective information sharing among them, despite specific instructions issued in September and December 2008.
It has asked banks to put in place an effective mechanism for information sharing by December. 
It has also said that any sanction of fresh loans/ad hoc loans/renewal of loans to new/existing borrowers with effect from January 1, 2013, should be done only after obtaining/sharing necessary information.

RBI maintains status quo on policy rates; cuts CRR by 0.25%



The RBI maintained status quo and left its key repo rates unchanged.
The repo rate remains at 8 per cent, at the same level that it has been for the past six months. This was in line with the hint thrown in its review of macroeconomic and monetary developments released yesterday evening, that it may cut policy rates 'down the line'.
In doing so, the RBI chose to not oblige the Government expectations that it would cut rates in response to policy measures unveiled over the past month as well as the 5-year fiscal consolidation plan released yeseterday. The government hopes to cut the fiscal deficit to 3 per cent of GDP over the next five years.
For the current fiscal, the Government has admitted that keeping the fiscal deficit to the budgeted 5.1 per cent would be difficult while 5.3 per cent was doable.
Infuses liquidity into the system
The RBI, however, cut the Cash Reserve Ratio (the amount parked by banks with the RBI) by 25 basis points from 4.5 per cent to 4.25 per cent. This measure is expected to infuse Rs 17,500 crore liquidity into the system.
The RBI said in its guidance, "The reduction in the CRR is intended to pre-empt a prospective tightening of liquidity conditions, thereby keeping liquidity comfortable to support growth. It anticipates the projected inflation trajectory which indicates a rise in inflation before easing in the last quarter. While risks to this trajectory remain, the baseline scenario suggests a reasonable likelihood of further policy easing in the fourth quarter of 2012-13. The above policy guidance will, however, be conditioned by the evolving growth-inflation dynamic."
It expected these actions to enable liquidity conditions to facilitate a turnaround in credit growth to productive sectors so as to support growth; reinforce the growth stimulus of the policy actions announced by the Government as inflation risks moderate; and anchor medium-term inflation expectations on the basis of a credible commitment to low and stable inflation.
The RBI has also been paring its GDP growth forecasts through successive quarterly reviews. In its April policy, the RBI had projected a GDP growth forecast of 7.3 per cent. That was cut to 6.5 per cent in July and further to 5.7 per cent yesterday. Simultaneously, the RBI has also revised upwards its baseline projections for WPI inflation. This has been raised from 6.5 per cent given at the beginning of the fiscal to 7.5 per cent for March 2013.

Monday, October 29, 2012

Smart ATMs to count cash, read cheques and credit in real time



New smart ATMs that can count your cash, read the cheques and credit it to your account immediately at any hour are on the way.
“We’ve already rolled out 40 ATMs that can do that and we’ll have 150 of that type out by the end of this financial year,” the Commonwealth Bank’s executive general manager of retail products, Michael Cant, said.
“You deposit your cash or a cheque into an ATM that’s smart enough to count the cash, read the cheque ... and credit that immediately to your account,” Cant said.
Australian Bank ANZ is also set to introduce 800 ATMs by the end of the 2012-13 financial year that have the ability to deposit coins, notes and cheques and have them instantly credited to the customer’s account, ‘news.com.au’ reported.
Cant says customers will also be able to personalise their settings on ATMs that will pop up each time they use it.
“When you put in your card, it identifies you as the customer and preferences that you set,” he says.
The smart ATMs will also be able to read the EMV (EuroPay, MasterCard and Visa) chip instead of the magnetic strip on a card.
This will improve customer security, with the card’s chip containing encrypted information, making it harder for fraudsters to skim details, the report said..
Digital strategy agency New Republique spokesman Nima Yassini says banking is being redefined in a digital age.
“A lot of stuff you saw in the branch network is slowly shifting to ATMs. So you don’t have to queue up to put your cash or cheques in at the branch,” Yassini said.

Friday, October 19, 2012

Aadhar-enabled micro-ATM delivers money to villagers



Rampati Debbarma, a 71-year-old tribal woman of Burakha village in West Tripura district today pressed her finger on a Aadhar-enabled micro-ATM to get her old-age pension in cash.
Rampati is not alone, but hundreds of old-age pensioners of this village today collected their pensions in the same way with the help of Aadhar-enabled payment system introduced here today.
"Earlier I used to walk about 10 km from my village to Mandwi Block headquarters for withdrawal of my pension from Gramin Bank, but today I got it at my doorstep," she said.
Unique ID Authority of India in collaboration with United Bank of India and Tripura Grameen Bank today undertook field trial of Aadhaar-enabled payment system with online authentication of biometric of the beneficiaries in Mandwi Block.
"Our endeavour was successful today," Dinesh Mushahary, Chairman of Gramin Bank Tripura, who was present during cash transfer, said.
Mushahary appealed to the people to register their Aadhar numbers with the banks so that people could get their money directly and no middleman could cheat them.
The Unique Identification (UID) project is a flagship project of the Centre to provide old-age pensions, wage of NREGA etc directly to the beneficiaries, Kiran Gitye, District Magistrate of West Tripura, said.
The project (12-digit Unique Identification (UID) number) for digitization of identity was started on pilot basis in Mandwi Block in West Tripura district in November 2010 and later extended to all over the state.

Priority sector lending norms eased for banks



The Reserve Bank of India has made it a tad easier for banks to meet the priority sector lending norms in the agriculture sector.
Loans up to an aggregate limit of Rs 2 crore per borrower to corporates, including farmer producer companies, partnership firms and co-operatives of farmers directly engaged in agriculture and allied activities, will be classified as direct agriculture lending.
However, this classification will apply only if the loans are for raising crops, including traditional/non-traditional plantations, horticulture and allied activities and for pre-harvest and post-harvest activities (spraying, weeding, harvesting, grading and sorting).
Further, the direct lending classification will apply to medium- and long-term loans taken for agriculture and allied activities and export credit given for exporting own farm produce.

INDIRECT FINANCE

If the aggregate loan limit per borrower is more than Rs 2 crore in the above cases, then the entire loan will be treated as indirect finance to agriculture, said the RBI.
The direct and indirect agriculture lending targets for banks are set at 13.5 per cent and 4.5 per cent, respectively, of the adjusted net bank credit (ANBC) obtaining as of March-end of the previous year.
Banks lending to agriculture, micro and small enterprises (MSEs), export credit and weaker sections of society are classified as priority sector lending. The overall target for priority sector lending for banks is set at 40 per cent of ANBC.
Bank loans to any government agency for construction of dwelling units or for slum clearance and rehabilitation of slum dwellers subject to a ceiling of Rs 10 lakh per dwelling unit will be considered priority sector lending.
Loans sanctioned by banks for housing projects exclusively for the economically weaker sections and low-income groups, the total cost of which does not exceed Rs 10 lakh per dwelling unit, will also qualify for priority sector status.
For identifying the economically weaker sections and low-income groups, the family income limit of Rs 1,20,000 per annum, irrespective of location, has been prescribed.

HFC

The eligibility under priority sector loans to housing finance companies is restricted to five per cent of the individual bank’s total priority sector lending, on an ongoing basis. The maturity of bank loans should be co-terminus with average maturity of loans extended by housing finance companies (HFCs).
The RBI said banks should ensure that loans extended under priority sector are for approved purposes and the end use is continuously monitored.

Thursday, October 18, 2012

Law of limitation will not apply when court decrees an amount as debt



When bank guarantees are enforced and the bank pays up, the amount thus payable to the bank becomes a debt to which the law of limitation applies. But when the firm disputes the amount payable to the bank and such dispute is finally resolved in favour of the bank, the amount payable not only becomes a debt but in addition is not subject to the law of limitation.

C.S. COMPANY CASE

This was the verdict of Kerala High Court in C. S. Company vs Punjab and Sind Bank. The petitioner was a partnership firm at whose request the respondent-bank had furnished two guarantees for Rs 1 lakh and Rs 19 lakh in 1983 to Kerala State Electricity Board.
On enforcement of the guarantees by the electricity board, the bank demanded payment of the guarantee amount with interest from the petitioner. The matter got embroiled in litigation with the trial court holding in favour of the bank, but the High Court reversed the trial court verdict leading to appeal before the Supreme Court which ruled in favour of the bank.
The firm continued to persist with its delaying tactics and prevarications when the bank sought to read the riot act to it, invoking the Securitisation Act of 2002 to seize the firm’s properties to realise its dues.

NOT AN NPA

First the firm raised the bogey of the amount not having been declared an NPA (non-performing asset) when the amount decreed by the apex court was not paid.
The Kerala High Court, however, was not amused and held that the amount decreed by the apex court indeed was a debt within the meaning of the Securitisation Act and it was not necessary to declare the amount as NPA after every court proceeding.
That the amount was declared an NPA in 1987 was good enough for the purposes of the Securitisation Act.
The petitioner wanted to wriggle out of his liability on another ground — that between 1983 when the guarantee was extended and 2012 much had happened and the law of limitation of 12 years had caught up with the bank. The High Court pointed out that the law of limitation did not apply to amounts decreed by courts.

Wednesday, October 17, 2012

Xpress Money plans to offer more cash transfer channels


Xpress Money, a global money transfer brand which currently operates in the cash-to-cash remittances market, plans to get into other channels for money transfer.
The company is looking to offer remittance facility through channels such as cash-to-account and cash-to-mobile on getting requisite approvals from the Reserve Bank of India.
According to Sudhesh Giriyan, head of Xpress Money Business, as per RBI’s Money Transfer Service Scheme (MTSS), the company is currently permitted to operate only in the cash-to-cash segment.
“We are in talks with the RBI. Once it gives us a go-ahead, we will launch these services,” he said.

TICKET SIZE

In 2011, India received remittances worth $66.13 billion. Of this, nearly $15 billion was through the cash route.
The company holds a 10 per cent share in the cash-to-cash market, he said.
“The average ticket size is small for cash remittances and they primarily come from countries such as United Arab Emirates, Qatar and Oman,” he said.
The entry into other channels will help the company grow its business and tap in a big way the markets of, among others, North America, Europe and Australia which largely operate through the cash-to-account channel.
The average ticket size in this channel is nearly four-to-five times higher than by way of cash remittances.
Xpress Money is also eyeing a 30 per cent growth in remittances business this year.
The depreciating rupee and the recent increase in the inward remittance limit will aid the growth, he said.

SBT to hire specialist cadre officers


State Bank of Travancore (SBT) has invited applications for appointment of 37 vacancies under specialist cadre officers.
Listed vacancies are those of deputy managers and assistant managers in systems, civil engineering, electrical engineering, official languages, law and security.
A candidate can apply for only one post.
Details of essential qualifications, minimum and maximum age as on October 1, 2012, approximate monthly emoluments, etc are furnished in the State Bank of India central recruitment and promotion department advertisement No. CRPD/SCO/2012-13/02 dated September 28, 2012.
Online registration of applications has been started from October 8, 2012, and the last date of registration is October 28.
A written test will be conducted on December 2, 2012. Candidates can visit SBI websites www.statebankofindia.com or www.sbi.co.in for online registration. The advertisement is also available in www.statebankoftravancore.com.

Standard Chartered Bank to pay Rs 2.97L for deficient service



The State Consumer Commission has dismissed a Standard Chartered Bank’s plea against a district forum order to it to pay Rs 2.97 lakh to a loanee for seizing her car for non-payment of a meagre sum of Rs 30,000 and selling it despite subsequent payment of all dues by her.
The vehicle was sold after the loanee refused to take it back as its crucial parts had allegedly been removed, rendering the vehicle to a non-working condition.
The Delhi State Consumer Commission observed the woman’s willingness to pay the remaining loan amount of Rs 30,000 showed she was keen to take the car back and there must have been some compelling reason for her for not doing so.
“It appears that statement of respondent (loanee) that the vehicle was not in a condition for taking possession needs to be accepted. It is evident that on one hand the appellant bank (Standard Chartered) is entering into an arrangement to return the car on payment of Rs 30,000 and on the other hand its officers allowed parts of the car to be removed which is a case of negligence and serious deficiency-in-service.
“We are of considered opinion that a case of deficiency in service is made out beyond doubt and to serve the ends of justice it would not be proper to interfere with the order of the district forum. The appeal is accordingly dismissed,” the bench presided by Justice Barkat Ali Zaidi said.
In her complaint to the district forum, Delhi resident Sunita Verma had alleged that her car, a Maruti Omni, bought in August 2001 on a loan from the bank was taken away by it on default of payment and despite her paying the remaining amount the vehicle was sold.
While admitting that Sunita Verma had paid the remaining Rs 30,000 to it, the Standard Chartered had alleged that the car was sold after she refused to take possession of it.
The district forum, however, had held the bank guilty of rendering deficient service and had directed it to refund her Rs 2.37 lakh she had paid to clear her loan and also another sum of Rs 60,000 as compensation and litigation cost.

IDBI Bank now live on Google Maps



IDBI Bank launched its geotagging initiative to enable the customers to search for the nearest IDBI bank branch or ATM on Google Maps through an application hosted on its website.
This search facility available on the public sector bank's website will help the customers of the Bank to get the location, facilities available within the branch, direction on how to reach the particular branch (map and milestone description), bank said in a statement.
Customers of the bank can locate over 998 branches and 1,592 ATMs of IDBI Bank across India and UAE with the help of this application, the bank said.
B K Batra, Deputy Managing Director, IDBI Bank said, “This is a key initiative taken towards ensuring that banking with IDBI Bank is a convenient and hassle free experience.”

Banks should credit interest every month, says depositors’ body


When banks receive interest on loans at monthly intervals, then shouldn’t depositors also get the same deal?
A depositors’ body has flagged the issue of depositors getting a raw deal with the Reserve Bank of India (RBI).
Banks have been charging interest on loans and advances at monthly intervals (as against quarterly intervals earlier) with effect from April 1, 2002. Due to the reduction in the interest application frequency, the yield on bank loans have increased, the All-India Bank Depositors Association said.
However, banks pay interest on savings bank (SB) and term deposits at ‘quarterly or longer intervals’, resulting in depositors getting relatively less yield on their deposits.
The association pointed out that throughout the RBI’s regulated as well as deregulated regime on SB and term deposit interest rate, there was no standard on the interest application frequency. This resulted in the annual percentage yield on the deposits being different for different banks.
“We are pursuing with the central bank to get banks to credit interest on deposits uniformly at monthly rests. This will help depositors realistically compare deposits rates.
“Currently, depositors are not able to make an objective comparison of deposit rates as interest is credited at quarterly or longer intervals,” said Ashok Ravat, Honorary Secretary, All-India Bank Depositors’ Association.
He emphasised that the central bank should balance the interests of banks and the depositors. The depositors’ body said the question of the RBI’s inability, till date, on standardising the interest application frequency was a cause for concern. In the interest of depositors, it wants to have only one simple standard (based on crediting of interest at monthly intervals) to compare returns on deposits.
Usha Thorat, Director, Centre for Advanced Financial Research and Learning, in a speech last year, said that the current asymmetry between the periodicity of interest paid to depositors on their savings account and the interest charged on their loan account needs to be reviewed by regulators to address the existing anomaly.
As per RBI data, banks in India had deposits aggregating to about Rs 65-lakh crore as on September 28, 2012.

Tuesday, October 16, 2012

Shriram Transport Finance Company - Enters Gold Loan Business



Truck finance company Shriram Transport Finance Company (STFC) plans to enter the gold loan business from November. But the company will not compete with established players such as Muthoot Finance and Manappuram Finance, as the new service will be limited to existing customers.

“We are doing this entirely for the benefit of our existing customer, so he doesn’t need to go out for a gold loan if he needs it,” said Umesh Revankar, managing director and CEO.

The company targets a disbursal of Rs 5 crore a month. “As more customers become aware, probably the disbursals can go up,” said Revankar.

STFC had started disbursals of gold loans in May 2010 on behalf of its group company Shriram City Union Finance, (Scuf), whose main presence is in south India. Compared with Scuf, STFC has more branches in other parts of the country.

Revankar said: “Earlier we were doing gold loans in very small numbers for Scuf. Now we have decided to do gold loans, which would be in our books from this quarter.”

According to a Reserve Bank of India (RBI) order issued in March 2012, loan to value (LTV) is capped at 60 per cent for non-banking finance companies (NBFCs) that have more than 50 per cent of financial assets in gold.

The apex bank has also barred these companies from lending against primary bullion and gold coins. The guidelines have hit the existing gold loan companies, which saw a negative growth in their assets under management (AUM) sequentially in the first quarter.

“These guidelines are not applicable to us,” Revankar said.

A recent Icra report says that organised gold loan industry in the country has grown at a compound annual growth rate of 78 per cent in the past two years to reach Rs 1,25,000 crore.

According to the Icra report, recent regulatory pronouncements such as the RBI guidelines are bound to impact the growth and margins of the NBFCs whose main business is gold loan. Margins could come down by about 100-150 basis points, the report said.

Two biggest players in organised gold loan industry, Muthoot Finance and Manappuram Finance, showed a negative growth in the first quarter in assets under management (AUM). “We would like to maintain our margins 9-9.5 per cent” George Alexander Muthoot told Business Standard.

Reiterating that the company is not looking at competing with the biggies, Revankar said: “We are looking at our existing customers. We are giving them an additional service. Therefore, we won’t go building business beyond our existing customers and there is no question of competition with other companies.”

Apart from financing commercial vehicles, STFC also provides tyre loans, engine replacement loans and working capital.

The company’s net profit as of June 2012 was Rs 322 crore, dropping 7 per cent year-on-year.

PSL norms for foreign banks: K C Chakrabarty dismisses criticism

http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/news-by-industry/banking/finance/banking/psl-norms-for-foreign-banks-k-c-chakrabarty-dismisses-criticism/articleshow/16827709.cms


Dismissing criticism of RBI's stance of treating foreign banks at par with domestic peers with regard to priority sector lending, RBI Deputy Governor K C Chakrabarty today said overseas lenders who have been in India for over a hundred years should not complain about this issue. 

Speaking at a banking summit at Mumbai, he also responded to criticism in the western press that foreign banks now have to track the prices of ploughs and livestock to do business India. 

A passionate votary of the financial inclusion, Chakrabarty said till the banks come to know the prices of these two products associated with the rural areas, they will have to comply with the PSL (priority sector lending) norms. 

Under PSL norms, certain percentage of overall loans should be to sectors like agriculture. 

Under the revised norms, foreign banks with over 20 branches are considered on par with domestic lenders, and have to allocate 40 per cent of annual lending to the priority sector. 

The PSL target of smaller foreign banks has been maintained at 32 per cent. 

Among the 40-odd multinational banks in the country, only three -- Standard Chartered, Citi, and HSBC -- have more than 20 branches each. 

"If banks say they believe in empowering the social sector, the results should be visible in PSL compliance," Chakrabarty said, speaking at a summit organised by the Financial Times and Yes Bank. 

Replying to a question, he said RBI is also against financial sector companies indulging in real sector activities and asked for `a Chinese wall', by way of opening subsidiaries. 

The leverage ratios of a real sector company is twice the capital employed while the same for a financial company can go up to ten times, so it is essential that financial companies do not "muddle" in real sector, he said.

Monday, October 15, 2012

Change the Game - Education Loans

http://www.thehindubusinessline.com/industry-and-economy/banking/why-education-loan-schemes-are-not-ticking/article3997032.ece

Why not bring Education Loans under the fold of Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) of banks?


Every bank could earmark a certain percentage of their yearly net profit for distributing to meritorious students as scholarships through a carefully chosen set of educational institutions. The modus operandi can be worked out.



During 2010-11, ELs constituted 9.7 per cent of net profit of scheduled commercial banks, which is not a big sum. This will help banks boost their image in terms of CSR, which is of immense importance in today’s corporate world (even the Prime Minister mentioned about it recently in one of his speeches), particularly for financial institutions traditionally known as “agents” of socio-economic change.



Also, it will help save on both administrative and recovery costs involved in ELs. To let Education Loans continue as a loan scheme will be equivalent to allowing it to wither away like the Differential Interest Rate scheme of the yore.



If banks are aiming at serving a ‘noble’ cause, the CSR, rather than loan, route may be explored for Education Loans. This will be less harmful and embarrassing than a possible ‘waiver’ of the loans at a later stage.



(Business Line - M.R Das)

Kingfisher - Banks should have acted tougher with the airline

http://www.business-standard.com/india/news/the-kingfisher-exemption/489070/


On October 5, the Directorate General of Civil Aviation, or DGCA, finally wrote to the troubled Kingfisher Airlines, asking it to show cause why its licence should not be revoked. Kingfisher’s employees, many of whom have not been paid for seven months, are currently on strike; the company itself has declared a lockout till October 12. 

The company’s share price, already low, has lost another quarter of its value. And last week Pratip Chaudhuri, chairman of State Bank of India (SBI), said there was “no more room” for bank loans to Kingfisher. It certainly looks like the end of the road for the airline — but is it? Its owners and management continue to insist that a revival plan is just around the corner, and it is reported that some online portals are selling tickets on the airline from October 13 onwards.

Kingfisher is emblematic of a problem with Indian capitalism: the way companies with well-connected promoters can last much longer than they should, soaking up the system’s resources in the process. 

Kingfisher should probably, on purely economic grounds, have shut down two years ago. Its business model had been shown up as unworkable well before then, and it was clear that the management and owners were incapable or unwilling to change it. Yet banks, especially public sector banks, threw good money after bad into the airline. 

Kingfisher owes Rs 7,000 crore (in principal alone) to 17 lenders; they are now non-performing assets for, in particular, SBI, Bank of Baroda, Bank of India and Punjab National Bank. The banks are concerned that they will get just a fraction of this money back. If they were not scared, would they be so desperate to keep a company alive that should so obviously be shut down?

Clearly, the banks had lent too much — and, given that the company in question is owned by a member of Parliament, questions must be asked about those decisions. Banks should be conservative with their depositors’ money, and that they chose to raise their stake in a large, troubled company in a risky sector – after paying a hefty premium of 70 per cent on the share price – needs further explanation. 

The kid gloves with which Kingfisher has been treated are visible, too, in the puzzling silence over whether its owner and management are criminally liable, under Section 405 of the Indian Penal Code, for defaulting on payments to their employees’ provident funds. 

Given that many of the promoters’ assets are pledged, including the Kingfisher brand itself, the airline’s creditors should have been able to force a result to their liking. Instead, they have delayed the inevitable, at great cost to their depositors, Kingfisher’s employees, the aviation sector and perhaps even the systemic stability of India’s financial sector. True, Reserve Bank of India Deputy Governor K C Chakrabarty denied on Monday that any systemic risk was posed by bank lending to Kingfisher. 

It is certain, though, that unless the lessons of this episode are learned, and banks are more ruthless even with well-connected enterprises, systemic troubles from bad debts are inevitable

Sunday, October 14, 2012

Common Abbreviations


ABCI - Association of Business Communicators of India
ABCP - Asset Backed Commercial Paper
ACU - Asian Clearing Union
ADB - Asian Development Bank
ADF - Augmented Dicky Fuller
ADR - Asset Development Reserve
ADRs - American Depository Receipts
ADs - Authorised Dealers
AERA - Airport Economic Regulatory Act
AFI - Annual Financial Inspection
AIFI - All India Financial Institution
AIMSCS - Advanced Institute of Mathematics, Statistics and Computer Science
ALM - Asset Liability Management
AMA - Advanced Measurement Approach
AMFI - Association of Mutual Funds in India
AML - Anti-Money Laundering
AMU - Asian Monetary Unit
ANBC - Adjusted Net Bank Credit
APS - Annual Policy Statement
AS - Accounting Standard
ATM - Automated Teller Machine
BAFT - Bankers’ Association for Finance & Trade
BC - Business Correspondent
BCBS - Basel Committee on Banking Supervision
BCP - Business Continuity Planning
BCSBI - Banking Codes and Standards Board of India
BE - Budget Estimates
BF - Business Facilitator
BFS - Board for Financial Supervision
BFSI - Banking Financial Services and Insurance
BIS - Bank for International Settlements
BMP - Basic Management Programme
BoP - Balance of Payments
BPLR - Benchmark Prime Lending Rate
BPSS - Board for Regulation and Supervision of Payment and 
Settlement Systems
BRBNMPL - Bharatiya Reserve Bank Note Mudran Private Limited
BSA - Bilateral Swap Arrangements
BSE - Bombay Stock Exchange, Mumbai
BSR - Basic Statistical Returns
BTC - Bankers’ Training College
CA - Concurrent Audit
CAB - College of Agricultural Banking
CACP - Commission for Agricultural Costs and Prices
CAD - Current Account Deficit
CAMELS - Capital Adquacy, Asset Quality, Management, Earnings, 
Liquidity, Systems and Control
CAS - Central Account Section
CBDT - Central Board of Direct Taxes
CBLO - Collateralised Borrowing and Lending Obligation
CBS - Consolidated Banking Statistics
CBS - Core Banking Solutions
CC - Cubic Capacity
CCB - Central Co-operative Bank
CCC - Central Complaints Committee
CCIL - Clearing Corporation of India Limited
CCR - Counterfeit Currency Report
CCRS - Currency Chest Reporting System
CD - Certificate of Deposit
C-D - Currency-Deposit
CDBMS - Centralised Data Base Management System
CDOs - Collateralised Debt Obligations
CDR - Corporate Debt Restructuring
CDS - Credit Default Swap
CENVAT - Central Value Added Tax
CFMS - Centralised Funds Management System
CFSA - Committee on Financial Sector Assessment
CFT - Combating Financing of Terrorism
CGFTMSE - Credit Guarantee Fund Trust for Micro and Small Enterprises
CGRA - Currency & Gold Revaluation Account
CIC - Central Information Commission
CICs - Credit Information Companies
CIS - Commonwealth of Independent States
CMCPS - Compulsorily and Mandatorily Convertible Preference Shares
CMIS - Currency Management Information System
CoBoSAC - Corporate Bonds and Securitisation Advisory Committee
CODs - Central Office Departments
CoR - Certificate of Registration
CP - Commercial Paper
CPADS - Centralised Public Accounts Department System
CPC - Cheque Processing Centre
CPDO - Centralised Public Debt Office
CPFF - Commercial Paper Funding Facility
CPI - Consumer Price Index
CPI-AL - Consumer Price Index- Agricultural Labourers
CPI-RL - Consumer Price Index- Rural Labourers
CPI-IW - Consumer Price Index for Industrial Workers
CPIO - Central Public Information Officer
CPIs - Consumer Price Indices
CPMG - Corporate Performance Monitoring Group
CPPC - Central Pension Payment Cell
CPSEs - Central Public Sector Enterprises
CR - Contingency Reserve
CRAR - Capital to Risk-Weighted Assets Ratio
CRCS - Central Registar of Co-operative Societies
CRR - Cash Reserve Ratio
CSAA - Control Self Assessment Audit
CSD - Customer Services Department
CSF - Consolidated Sinking Fund
CSGL - Constituant Subsidiary General Ledger
CSO - Central Statistical Organisation
CTR - Cash Transaction Receipt
CTS - Cheque Truncation System
CTS - Complaint Tracking System
CVD - Countervailing Duty
CVPS - Currency Verification and Processing System
CWC - Central Water Commission
DAD - Deposit Accounts Department
DAP - District Agricultural Plan
DAPM - Department of Administration and Personnel Management
DBOD - Department of Banking Operations and Development
DBS - Department of Banking Supervision
DCC - District Consultative Committee
DCCB - District Central Cooperative Bank
DCM - Department of Currency Management
DEAP - Department of Economic Analysis and Policy
DEBC - Department of Expenditure and Budgetary Control
DEIO - Department of External Investments and Operations
DEPB - Duty Entitlement Pass Book
DGBA - Department of Government and Bank Accounts
DGCI & S - Directorate General of Commercial Intelligence and Statistics
DIC - District Industries Centre
DICGC - Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporation
DIP - Disclosure and Investor Protection
DIT - Department of Information Technology
DMIS - Document Management Information System
DNBS - Department of Non-Banking Supervision
DOC - Department of Communication
DoT - Department of Telecommunication
DRG - Development Research Group
DRI - Differential Rate of Interest
DRT - Debt Recovery Tribunal
DS - Difference Stationary
DSB - Designated Settlement Banks
DSIM - Department of Statistics and Information Management
DvP - Delivery versus Payment
EACB - European Association of Co-operative Banks
EBT - Electronic Benefit Transfer
ECB - European Central Bank
ECBs - External Commercial Borrowings
ECGC - Export Credit Guarantee Corporation
ECR - Export Credit Refinance
ECS - Electronic Clearing Services
EEA - Exchange Equalisation Account
EEFC - Exchange Earners’ Foreign Currency
EFT - Electronic Funds Transfer
EMEs - Emerging Market Economies
EOU - Export Oriented Unit
EPCG - Export Promotion Capital Goods
ESOS - Employees Stock Option Scheme
EU - European Union
EXIM Bank - Export Import Bank
FAO - Food & Agriculture Organisation
FAQs - Frequently Asked Questions
FATF - Financial Action Task Force
FBT - Fringe Benefit Tax
FC - Financial Conglomerate
FCAs - Foreign Currency Assets
FCCB - Foreign Currency Convertible Bond
FCI - Food Corporation of India
FCNR(B) - Foreign Currency Non-Resident (Banks)
FDI - Foreign Direct Investment
FED - Foreign Exchange Department
FEDAI - Foreign Exchange Dealers’ Association of India
FI - Financial Institutions
FIEO - Federation of Indian Export Organisation
FIIs - Foreign Institutional Investors
FIPB - Foreign Investment Promotion Board
FITL - Funded Interest Term Loan
FIU-IND - Financial Intelligence Unit-India
FLCCs - Financial Literacy and Credit Counseling Centres
FMCG - Fast Moving Consumer Goods
FMD - Financial Markets Department
FOF - Flow of Funds
FPS - Focus Product Scheme
FRBM - Fiscal Responsibility and Budget Management
FRBs - Floating Rate Bonds
FRL - Full Reservoir Level
FRLs - Fiscal Responsibility Legislations
FSB - Financial Stability Board
FSF - Financial Stability Forum
FST - Financial Sector Technology
FVCIs - Foreign Venture Capital Investors
GCC - Gulf Cooperation Council
GCCs - General-purpose Credit Cards
GDP - Gross Domestic Product
GDRs - Global Depository Receipts
GFCE - Government Financial Consumption Expenditure
GFD - Gross Fiscal Deficit
GFSR - Global Financial Stability Report
GIPSA - General Insurer’s (Public Sector) Association of India
GoI - Government of India
GRF - Guarantee Redemption Fund
GSDP - Gross State Domestic Product
GST - Goods and Services Tax
HFCs - Housing Finance Companies
HLAC - High Level Advisory Committee
HLCCFM - High Level Coordination Committee on Financial Markets
HLG - High Level Group
HR - Human Resources
HRDD - Human Resources Development Department
HRMS - Human Resources Management System
HSUI - Housing Start Up Index
HTM - Held-to-Maturity
IAS - Integrated Accounting Systems
IASC - Inspection and Audit Sub-Committee
IBA - Indian Banks’ Association
ICAC - International Cotton Advisory Committee
ICAI - Institute of Chartered Accountants of India
ICAR - Indian Council for Agricultural Research
ICCOMS - Integrated Computerised Currency Operations and Management System
ICT - Information and Communication Technology
IDMD - Internal Debt Management Department
IDR - Indian Depository Receipt
IDRBT - Institute for Development & Research in Banking Technology
IEM - Industrial Entrepreneurs Memoranda
IES - Integrated Establishment System
IGIDR - Indira Gandhi Institute of Development Research
IIA - Institute of Internal Auditors
IIBM - Indian Institute of Bank Management
IIFCL - India Infrastructure Finance Company Limited
IIFT - Indian Institute of Foreign Trade
IIP - Index of Industrial Production
ILO - International Labour Organisation
IMA - Internal Models Approach
IMD - India Millennium Deposits
IMD - India Meteorological Department
IMF - International Monetary Fund
IMFC - International Monetary and Financial Committee
IODP - Integrated Officers Development Programmes
IPAs - Issuing and Paying Agents
IPCC - Inter-Govermental Panel on Climate Change
IPCs - Irrevocable Payment Commitments
IPDIs - Innovative Perpetual Debt Instruments
IPOs - Initial Public Offerings
IP-RR - Interest Payment - Revenue Receipt
IRB - Internal Ratings-Based
IRDA - Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority
IRFs - Interest Rate Futures
ISA - Information Systems Audit
ISACA - Information Systems Audit and Control Assessment
ISMS - Information Security Management System
ISO - International Organisation for Standardisation
IT - Information Technology
IT-BPO - Information Technology - Business Process Outsourcing
ITEs - Intra-Group Transactions and Exposures
IWMP - Integrated Watershed Management Programme
JLG - Joint Liability Group
JNNURM - Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission
KCCs - Kisan Credit Cards
KVIBs - Khadi and Village Industries Boards
KVIC - Khadi and Village Industries Commission
KYC - Know Your Customer
LAF - Liquidity Adjustment Facility
LB - Lowest daily outstanding Balance
LCD - Liquid Crystal Display
LIBOR - London Inter-Bank Offer Rate
LOI - Letter of Intent
LPA - Long Period Average
MASI - Management Audit Systems Inspection
MAT - Minimum Alternate Tax
MCA - Ministry of Corporate Affairs
MBS - Mortgage Backed Securities
MF - Mutual Funds
MFDEF - Micro Finance Development and Equity Fund
MFDF - Micro Finance Development Fund
MFI - Micro Finance Institution
MICR - Magnetic Ink Character Recognition
MMA - Macro Management of Agriculture
MMBCS - Magnetic Media Based Clearing System
MMMFs - Money Market Mutual Funds
MMS - Multi Modal Settlements
MODVAT - Modified Value Added Tax
MoU - Memorandum of Understanding
MPD - Monetary Policy Department
MPI - Macro-Prudential Indicators
MPLS - Multi Protocol Label Switching
MSE-CDP - Micro and Small Enterprises Cluster Development Programme
MSEs - Micro and Small Enterprises
MSMEs - Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises
MSOE - Minimum Standards of Operational Efficiency
MSP - Minimum Support Price
MSS - Market Stabilisation Scheme
MTM - Mark-to-Market
NAB - New Arrangement to Borrow
NABARD - National Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development
NASSCOM - National Association of Software and Services Companies
NAV - Net Asset Value
NBFCs - Non-Banking Financial Companies
NBFC-D - Deposit taking NBFC
NBFC-ND - Non-deposit taking NBFC
NBFC-ND-SI - Systemically Important Non-deposit taking NBFC
NCR - National Capital Region
NBO - National Building Organisation
NDA - Net Domestic Asset
NDS - Negotiated Dealing Systems
NDS - OM - Negotiated Dealing System - Order Matching
NDTL - Net Demand and Time Liability
NECS - National Electronic Clearing System
NEFT - National Electronic Funds Transfer
NFS - National Financial Switch
NFA - Net Foreign Assets
NFSM - National Food Security Mission
NGO - Non-Government Organisation
NHB - National Housing Bank
NIBM - National Institute of Bank Management
NIC - National Informatics Centre
NIF - National Investment Fund
NIMSME - National Institute for Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises
NIPFP - National Institute of Public Finance and Policy
NOC - No Objection Certificate
NOF - Net Owned Funds
NPAs - Non-Performing Assets
NPCI - National Payments Corporation of India
NPS - New Pension Scheme
NRAA - National Rain Fed Area Authority
NREGS - National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme
NR(E)RA - Non-Resident (External) Rupee Account
NRI - Non-Resident Indian
NRRDA - National Rural Road Development Agency
NSE - National Stock Exchange
NSM - Note Sorting Machine
NSSF - National Small Saving Fund
NSSO - National Sample Survey Organisation
OBE - Off- Balance Sheet Exposures
OD - Overdraft
OECD - Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
ODI - Offshore Derivative Instruments
OLTAS - Online Tax Accounting System
OMO - Open Market Operation
OMS - Open Market Sales
OPEC - Organisation for Petroleum Exporting Countries
ORFS - Online Returns Filing System
OSMOS - Off-Site Monitoring and Surveillance
OTC - Over-the-Counter
OTS - One-Time Settlement
PACS - Primary Agricultural Credit Socity
PAD - Public Accounts Department
PAN - Permanent Account Number
PCA - Prompt Corrective Action
PCPS - Perpetual Cumulative Preference Shares
PDs - Primary Dealers
PDI - Perpetual Debt Instruments
PDO - Public Debt Office
PDO-NDS - Public Debt Office - Negotiated Dealing System
PDS - Public Distribution System
PE - Private Equity
PFCE - Private Final Consumption Expenditure
PFRDA - Pension Fund Regulatory and Development Authority
PGPBF - Post Graduate Programme in Banking & Finance
PIT - Personal Income Tax
PMEGP - Prime Minister Employment Generation Programme
PMLA - Prevention of Money Laundering Act
PMRY - Prime Minister’s Rojgar Yojana
PNCPs - Perpetual Non-Cumulative Preference Shares
POL - Petroleum, Oil and Lubricants
PPP - Public Private Partnership
PSBs - Public Sector Banks
PSS Act - Payment & Settlement Systems Act
PSUs - Public Sector Undertakings
QCBS - Quality and Cost Based Selection
QIB - Qualified Institutional Buyer
QIP - Qualified Institutional Placement
QMS - Quality Management System
R&D - Research & Development
RBIA - Risk Based Internal Audit
RBSC - Reserve Bank Staff College
RCs - Reconstruction Companies
RCC - Regional Complaints Committee
RCS - Registar of Co-operative Societies
RE - Revised Estimates
REER - Real Effective Exchange Rate
REGP - Rural Employment Generation Programme
RIDF - Rural Infrastructure Development Fund
RKVY - Rashtriya Krishi Vikas Yojana
RNCPS - Redeemable Non-Cumulative Preference Shares
RoA - Return on Assets
ROE - Return on Equity
ROSC - Report on Observance of Standards and Codes
RPCD - Rural Planning and Credit Department
RRBs - Regional Rural Banks
RTGS - Real Time Gross Settlement
RTI - Right to Information
RTP - Reserve Tranche Position
SAARC - South Asian Association for Regional Co-operation
SACPs - Special Agricultural Credit Plans
SAD - Single Administrative Document
SDDS - Special Data Dissemination Standards
SAMIS - Service Area Monitoring and Information System
SAP - State Agricultural Plan
SARFAESI - Securitisation and Reconstruction of Financial Assets and Enforcement of Security Interest
SCs - Securitisation Companies
SCB - Scheduled Commercial Bank
SDLs - State Development Loans
SDR - Special Drawing Rights
SEBI - Securities and Exchange Board of India
SEZs - Special Economic Zones
SFCs - State Finance Corporations
SFMS - Structured Financial Messaging System
SFURTI - Scheme for Fund for Regeneration of Traditional Industries
SGL - Subsidiary General Ledger
SHGs - Self-Help Groups
SIDBI - Small Industries Development Bank of India
SIFI - Systemically Important Financial Intermediaries
SIPS - Systemically Important Payment System
SITP - Scheme for Integrated Textile Parks
SIVs - Structured Investment Vehicles
SLAF - Second Liquidity Adjustment Facility
SLA(IC) - Sundry Liabilities Account (Interest Capitalisation)
SLB - Securities Lending and Borrowing
SLBC - State Level Bankers’ Committee
SLR - Statutory Liquidity Ratio
SMEs - Small and Medium Enterprises
SMO - Special Market Operations
SPMCIL - Security Printing and Minting Corporation of India Ltd.
SPV - Special Purpose Vehicle
SREP - Supervisory Review and Evaluation Process
SRMS - Self Employment Scheme for Rehabilitation of Manual Scavangers
SSS - Securities Settlement System
StCB - State Co-operative Bank
STCRC - Short-Term Co-operative Rural Credit
STOs - State Treasury Offices
STR - Suspicious Transaction Report
STRIPS - Separate Trading for Registered Interest and Principal of Securities
TAC - Technical Advisory Committee
TAFCUBs - Task Force for Urban Co-operative Banks
TAG - Technical Advisory Group
TALF - Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility
TFC - Twelfth Finance Commission
TFCI - Tourism Finance Corporation of India
TFP - Total Factor Productivity
TFTS - Trade for Trade Settlement
TIN - Tax Information Network
TMSM - Training Methods and Skills for Managers
TMT - Thermo Mechanically Treated
ToRs - Terms of References
TS - Trend Stationary
TUFS - Technology Upgraded Fund Scheme
UBD - Urban Banks Department
UCBs - Urban Cooperative Banks
UCNs - Uniform Code Numbers
UNDP - United Nations Developement Programme
UNICO - Umbrella Organisation for Large Cooperative Banks in Europe
UNDP - United Nations Development Programme
UNIDO - United Nations Industrial Development Organisation
UNME - Urban Non-Manual Employees
UTs - Union Territories
VAR - Vector Autoregression
VaR - Value at Risk
VKGUY - Vishesh Krishi Gram Udyog Yojana
VPN - Virtual Private Network
WADR - Weighted Average Discount Rate
WEO - World Economic Outlook
WMA - Ways and Means Advances
WPI - Wholesale Price Index
WSS - Weekly Statistical Supplement
WTO - World Trade Organisation
XBRL - eXtensible Business Reporting Language
XML - Extensible Markup Language
Y-o-Y - Year-on-Year
ZTC - Zonal Training Centre

Saturday, October 13, 2012

SBI to acquire 50,000 PoS machines

State Bank of India group plans to acquire 50,000 Point-of-Sale (PoS) machines for deployment over the next 18 months.

These are being done as part of its plans to upgrade its technological infrastructure and improve the speed of customer handling at its branches as well as merchant locations.
SBI has over 14,100 branches while its five associate banks have over 4,500 branches. The group has about 28,000 ATMs.
At present, the bank and its associates have a Single Window Operator counter called Green Channel at their branches. Under this facility, it is possible to withdraw, deposit or remit amount up to Rs 40,000.
The SBI group plans to enlarge the type of transactions at these Green Channel counters through deploying these terminals.
Among other things, the transactions would include bill payment, bus/train/air ticketing, gold coin sale, mobile top-up, merchant acquiring business activity, etc.
Currently about 35 per cent of the transactions done by SBI’s 200 million customers is through alternate channels (non-branch) such as internet, mobile, ATMs, PoS terminals etc.