Recognition of NPAs in PSBs must be swift
Indian banks may see bad loans double despite signs of an improvement in the economic impact of the Covid-19 pandemic
Regulator's projections higher by 250-350 bps, analysts may have jumped gun on faster recovery
Move to increase 90-day window to 120 days to give more time to borrowers to service loans
Their net revenues could expand by just about 1.8 per cent in the reporting period, according to Bloomberg estimates
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has expressed some concerns over zero-coupon bonds for the recapitalisation of public sector banks (PSBs) and discussion is on between the central bank and Finance Ministry to find a solution, according to sources. The government resorted to recapitalisation bonds with a coupon rate for capital infusion into PSBs during 2017-18 and interest payment to banks for holding such bonds started from the next financial year. To save interest burden and ease the fiscal pressure, the government has decided to issue zero-coupon bonds for meeting the capital needs of the banks. The first test case of the new mechanism was a capital infusion of Rs 5,500 crore into Punjab & Sind Bank by issuing zero-coupon bonds of six different maturities last year. These special securities with tenure of 10-15 years are non-interest bearing and valued at par. However, the RBI has raised some issues with regard to calculation of an effective capital infusion made in any bank ...
Here's a selection of Business Standard opinion pieces for the day
While it will make payments via cheques safer, it will also make the process a tad cumbersome, especially for people who issue high-value cheques frequently but are not tech savvy
The digital super cycle will encompass progress in all areas and will accelerate further on advancements in machine learning and artificial intelligence
Large non-banking financial companies (NBFCs) and a few private banks - that have disclosed December quarter trends of advances - are showing signs of improved credit demand
Small and mid-sized private sector banks have reported a healthy deposit growth in the third quarter
The strong, dynamic, innovative and proactive policy response of the RBI and the government went a long way to stabilise the system
The government's shareholding in the lender is 47.11 per cent, while LIC holds 51 per cent in it
Both the banks have relied on inorganic options for growth and diversification
India Inc could make a re-entry into commercial banking - 40 years after the last round of bank nationalisation in 1980
They will soon take a call on tech spending
Those banks that remain complacent, bragging about their captive customer base, may turn dinosaurs
The last couple of years saw the RBI taking up the sheet anchor role to steer the economy. The accommodative interest-rate stance implies that it is ready to walk the extra mile to bolster the economy
Outstanding loans rose 518.61 billion rupees ($7.09 billion) to 105.50 trillion rupees in the two weeks to Dec. 18
Here's a selection of Business Standard opinion pieces for the day