The amalgamation of public sector banks has helped in improving customer services and creating strong banks, Minister of State for Commerce and Industry Som Parkash said on Wednesday. In a written reply to a question in the Lok Sabha, the minister said the objective of amalgamation of the banks was to facilitate consolidation among PSBs to create "strong and competitive banks" capable of achieving economies of scale and realisation of synergy benefits with wider product and service offering to customers. "As a result of this effort, customers of amalgamated banks received access to increased number of branches and ATMs from which they can now avail banking services. Customers have also received access to a larger bouquet of products and services," he said. The amalgamation also enhanced their lending capacity for loans of a larger size and has also enabled banks to open/reorganise, controlling offices and processing centres, equipping them for better customer serving, Parkash ...
Punjab & Sind Bank managing director Swarup Kumar Saha has said that the lender is targeting a Current Account Savings Account (CASA) ratio of 35 per cent by the end of the ongoing fiscal and the bank has undertaken various efforts to achieve the goal. CASA ratio, the low cost deposit base, of the state-owned bank stood at 33.36 per cent (Rs 35,102 crore) at the end of September, 2022. Higher CASA ratio pushes profitability of banks as banks can earn higher spreads. "We are looking at CASA ratio of 35 per cent...second half is good for our bank, which is north based, as a lot of savings from agriculture income is routed to these accounts post harvest," he told PTI in an interview. Besides, he said, the bank is focussing on mobilising salary accounts and salary deposit to augment low cost deposit base. As part of this endeavour, he said, the bank has recently tied up with Chandigarh Municipal Corporation to open salary accounts of their 10,000 employees. Similarly, he said, the ...
Private sector banks' outlook is brighter on a relative basis, and the players will outperform benchmark indices from a 6-12 months' perspective, analysts say
In a Q&A, the country managing director of the world's largest ATM maker, says he sees a lot of banks come to firms such as his to run their ATM network for them in the future
The boards of the banks have to examine the compliance with the FWSM criteria and pass necessary resolutions and inform RBI immediately
Morgan Stanley remain bullish on consumer discretionary, industrials, financials, and technology; and remain underweight all other sectors
Aims to involve 50,000 merchants, customers in the next few days
On a year-on-year (YoY) basis, spends were up over 25 per cent, despite a high base
Fitch Ratings on Monday said India's bank credit will see strong growth in current financial year despite effects of higher interest rates. It said the strong loan growth should benefit net revenue, particularly as it will be coupled with wider net interest margins. "We see bank credit expanding by around 13 per cent in FY23, up from 11.5 per cent in FY22. The acceleration will be driven by the normalisation of economic activity after the COVID-19 pandemic, and high nominal GDP growth, which we expect to boost demand for retail and working-capital loans," Fitch said in a statement. Fitch forecasts India's real GDP growth at 7 per cent in 2022-23. It said Indian banks generally remain open to additional capital-raising to fund growth, despite the rise in rates. "Private banks are generally better than state banks at capital planning, although moves to raise fresh equity are likely to be opportunistic and incremental," Fitch added. The rating agency expects greater competition for .
Circular embraces all commercial banks, leaves out local area banks, RRBs and payments banks
Three others got permission earlier, but no deal so far
Longer terms for PSB chiefs address the talent gap partly
The union government decided to increase the term of wholetime directors in public sector banks, including MD & CEOs, to 10 years, from five years
Credit rose by Rs 0.43 trillion to Rs 129.26 trillion and deposits grew by Rs 1.7 trillion to Rs 173.7 trillion in the reporting fortnight
The current edition is focused on the broader theme of 'Indian SMEs: Shifting Gears for Next Level Growth'
Banks expressed concerns about trade impact, disruptions seen in OIS, bond markets
Riding on a broad-based economic recovery and stronger, cleaner balance sheets, lenders are expected to see their credit growing at 15 per cent this fiscal and the next, a report said on Tuesday. Credit growth so far this fiscal has printed in at around 18 per cent, which is a decadal high. Already, large lenders have seen corporates flocking to banks for funds for capital expenditure and also for working capital as the demand side of the economy is faring better. SBI has the best corporate loan sales in Q2 recording a 20 per cent growth and so did most other lenders including private sector banks. Bank credit is seen growing 15 per cent per annum in fiscals 2023 and 2024, Crisil said in a report. The agency said that its forecast is based on an expected 7 per cent GDP growth this fiscal, as well as the expected continuation of the credit push from government's infrastructure spends, higher working capital demand in a high-inflation environment, and some substitution of debt capit
Reserve Bank Governor Shaktikanta Das will hold a meeting with CEOs of public sector banks on Wednesday to discuss issues concerning slow deposit growth and sustainability of high credit demand. As per the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) data, deposits rose by 9.6 per cent as compared to 10.2 per cent on a year-on-year basis, while credit offtake witnessed a jump of 17.9 per cent as against 6.5 per cent a year ago. According to an agenda circulated for the meeting, sources said, sustainability, including pricing and slow growth of deposits, would be discussed. There would be deliberation on asset quality in the retail and MSME segment, sources said. Besides, the meeting would also review the functioning of Digital Banking Units launched by Prime Minister Narendra Modi last month. The robust growth performance in the first half of the current fiscal has been ably supported by a well-capitalised banking system that witnessed an upswing in credit disbursement to the retail, industry and
State-owned Punjab & Sind Bank would take a call on raising equity capital through qualified institutional placement (QIP) after taking into account third quarter numbers and pace of loan growth, the bank's managing director Swarup Kumar Saha said. As far as capital adequacy is concerned, the bank is well-capitalised at 15.68 per cent and it can easily take care of business growth this year, he told PTI in an interaction. However, he said, "There is a need to build some buffer on the equity side. So, we would plan a small amount of capital mobilisation either through equity or bonds, say Rs 250 crore or Rs 300 crore. "We will watch our third quarter performance and momentum of credit demand and based on that make a decision with regard to QIP or other means." The bank has redeemed Additional Tier 1 (AT1) bonds, he said, adding, now the bank would try other means including QIP, which is cost effective. The government of India's holding in the bank stood at 98.25 per cent at the end
The fight among Hinduja brothers was caused because of a pact signed by them in 2014 that said that 'everything belongs to everyone and nothing belongs to anyone'