Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan on Saturday declared Kerala as the first state in the country to go fully digital in its banking service and said this recognition would boost the state economy. In an event held here, Vijayan said this achievement was possible due to social interventions through local self-government institutions along with infrastructure development and technological advances in the banking sector. "I would like to congratulate everyone who worked behind this and declare Kerala as the first fully digital banking state in the country," Vijayan said. "In order to make the digital services universally accessible, we need to ensure that the digital divide is completely eliminated," he added. The Chief Minister also said the ambitious Kerala Fibre Optic Network (K-FON) project of the state government, which was almost 90 per cent completed, will reduce the digital divide. "The K-FON will ensure internet facility to everyone in the state and 17,155 km-long optic fibre c
The headcount in small finance banks was 14,179 in 2016-17, when they arrived on the scene
IndusInd sees 19% credit growth in Q3; deposit growth outpaces loans for HDFC Bank, YES Bank
Public sector Banks have travelled a long distance since 2017 when they posted a net loss of Rs 85,390 crore to a profit of Rs 66,539 crore in FY22 and are estimated to touch a milestone of Rs 1 lakh crore by the end of the current fiscal. There was a time when 11 out of 21 PSBs were placed under the prompt corrective framework of the Reserve Bank due to deteriorating financial health on account of mounting bad loans to alarming levels of 14.58 per cent of the total credit. PSBs suffered from a host of problems, including a dismally low capital base, unprofessional management, demoralised staff and huge inefficiencies. Many of them were on the brink of default posing a threat to the financial security of the country. Their share prices were hitting a rock bottom. PSBs booked collective losses to the tune of Rs 2,07,329 crore for five straight years -- from 2015-16 to 2019-20. The highest amount of net loss was registered in 2017-18 at Rs 85,370 crore, followed by Rs 66,636 crore in
Credit growth in the banking system is touching decadal highs but deposit growth has lagged
While the deposit growth came in healthy at 3 per cent QoQ (up 14.3 per cent YoY to Rs 3.25 trillion), the CASA mix declined 40bp QoQ to 42 per cent
Banks have been slow to pass the rate hikes on the liabilities while the assets side saw immediate revision
Punjab National Bank (PNB) on Tuesday increased the interest rate of fixed deposits across various tenures by 50 basis points or 0.5 per cent in a bid to attract deposits. Interest rates on term deposits below Rs 2 crore between one year and three years have been raised by 50 basis points to 6.75 per cent from earlier rate of 6.25 per cent, PNB said in a statement. The bank said that new rates of FDs are effective from January 1, 2023. It has also said that senior citizens will be getting an additional 50 basis points hike in interest rate of fixed deposits on any domestic deposit maturities which is worth less than Rs 2 crore. On PNB Uttam Scheme with no premature withdrawal option, the rate has been revised to 6.80 per cent from 6.30 per cent, it said. Apart from the revised interest rates, it said, the bank will continue to offer attractive interest rates 8.1 per annum for fixed deposit of 666 days.
Pace of customer liabilities expands at slower pace of 12.8 per cent YoY
Lenders regarded as too big to fail; classification based on data they gave in March 2022
Soma Sankara Prasad, managing director and chief executive officer of the Kolkata-based lender in an interview that he expects strong interest for the rupee trade from several nations
In March 2021, the GNPAs for SCBs were at 7.5 per cent of the total outstanding loans
While there is still a large talent pool in state-run banks, the reality is that it may not walk in as in the past
Jammu and Kashmir Bank on Saturday said it has raised Rs 1,021 crore as Tier-II bonds from the market as part of its efforts to strengthen its capital position. The issue was oversubscribed by more than 100 per cent, J K Bank MD & CEO Baldev Prakash said. It will not only help boost our expansion plans as envisaged in our strategy for business growth especially in the rest of the country by improving our risk bearing capacity substantially but will also go a long way in maintaining adequate capital buffers over and above the regulatory BASEL - III compliance requirement, he added. Bank CFO P D Punjabi said the bank has accomplished the task well and it will be reckoned in the capital adequacy for the quarter ending December 2022. The capital issuance Committee of the bank's board has approved the allotment of these bonds, a spokesman of the bank said.
As of March 2020, that is before amalgamation - Canara Bank business was over Rs 10 trillion
After successful completion of about 27 years in Allahabad Bank he was elevated as Executive Director of IOB in October 2017
Private sector Tamilnad Mercantile Bank Ltd (TMB) has drawn up plans to strengthen itself by opening up additional branches across the country in the near future, said a top official of the bank on Friday. The over-a-century old bank recently inaugurated its 510 and 511th branches here and in Salem respectively. "Upon being listed on the stock exchanges, Tamilnad Mercantile Bank Ltd is back to enrich our vision in expanding the network pan-India. The bank has opened its 510th and 511th new branches in Tamil Nadu. We have plans to also open many more in the near future...," said managing director and CEO of the bank S Krishnan in a statement. The Tamil Nadu-based bank currently has presence across 16 States and four Union Territories and serves over 5 million customers.
Credit growth in the system has touched a decade high, a level seen last in 2011
Stress test show banks capable of absorbing shocks without capital infusion
The banking sector was a standout performer in 2022 with the Nifty PSU Bank rallying almost 70 per cent