Business Standard

IDFC Bank, Shriram scrap merger talks

Fail to reach an agreement on a mutually acceptable swap ratio

- ABHIJIT LELE & ANUP ROY Mumbai, 30 October

IDFC Bank and the Shriram group have called off their talks for a merger after failing to agree on a swap ratio. The two parties had, on July 8, entered into a 90-day agreement to evaluate a strategic combinatio­n of their relevant financial services. With no finality in sight, the parties had extended talks by a month till early November.

“Despite best efforts the two groups have not been able to reach an agreement on a mutually acceptable swap ratio. As a consequenc­e, the exclusivit­y period stands terminated with immediate effect,” IDFC informed the stock exchanges.

Shriram City Union Finance and Shriram Transport Finance also issued statements saying, “Despite best efforts by both Shriram and IDFC, we could not reach common ground and arrive at a mutually acceptable structure and valuation.” Both parties had agreed to terminate any further discussion­s on the proposed potential combinatio­n, the statement added.

Rajiv Lall, founder managing director and chief executive officer of IDFC Bank, said, “We were actually very confident of carrying the majority of our shareholde­rs at a valuation that we believe was reasonable and fair. We made an offer to Shriram Capital shareholde­rs, but we did not receive a formal counter-offer from the Shriram group.” Lall believes it probably was because Shriram shareholde­rs were not comfortabl­e with IDFC’s offer. Shriram group officials did not respond to

Business Standard’s queries. The proposal involved Shriram City Union Finance and the group’s retail operation being merged with IDFC Bank and Shriram Transport Finance delisting to become a wholly owned subsidiary of IDFC.

“WE NEVER GOT A FORMAL COUNTER-OFFER, PRESUMABLY, BECAUSE THEIR SET OF SHAREHOLDE­RS COULD NOT GET COMFORTABL­E WITH OUR ASK” RAJIV LALL, MD & CEO, IDFC BANK

Two insurance companies from the Shriram stable were also to be brought into the IDFC fold.

IDFC Bank in a statement said while focusing on enhancing its strategic momentum, it would continue to explore opportunit­ies for inorganic growth. The bank had, in July 2016, acquired the south-based Grama Vidiyal Microfinan­ce for an undisclose­d amount. Elaboratin­g on the rationale for considerin­g mergers and acquisitio­ns, Lall said, “IDFC Bank has legacy burden that creates a drag on its profit and loss statement for two reasons. There are stressed assets, which impact the pre-tax profit to the tune of ~175 crore a year. We also have ~36,000 crore of fixed rate bonds with coupons of 8-9 per cent that have migrated from the infrastruc­ture company to the bank.” The pre-tax impact of these bonds is about ~350-400 crore.

Both are adversely impacting the return on assets (RoA) and return on equity (RoE). “The only way I get superior RoAs and RoEs is to grow out of this problem. We believe that by FY21, this RoA drag would be coming down from 35 basis points to under 10 basis points. But it will take me three to three-and-ahalf years to grow out of my legacy challenges. If I can cut this journey from six years down to three through inorganic growth, it’s not a bad thing,” he said. IDFC Bank’s strategy is to expand its retail business and diversify its corporate business beyond its traditiona­l infrastruc­ture focus. Over the past 24 months, IDFC Bank has developed a diversifie­d retail asset portfolio of ~18,000 crore. By the end of 2017-18, excluding infrastruc­ture, the bank would have a corporate loan book of over ~20,000 crore, it said.

The announceme­nts were made after the markets closed. Shares of IDFC Bank declined 1.8 per cent to ~55.95 and IDFC lost 2.7 per cent to ~61.70. Shriram Transport Finance gained 1.8 per cent to ~1,180.40, while Shriram City Union Finance was up 1.9 per cent to ~2,186.25 on the Bombay Stock Exchange. Bankers said it was a setback for both groups. While the Shriram group has a strong franchise and network, IDFC’s plans to garner retail presence will get delayed.

IDFC has certain strengths to fall back on, such as a strong management team, comfortabl­e capital base, and diversific­ation of business mix and revenue streams, they said. However, attracting retail customers would be a cost-intensive and time- consuming propositio­n for the private lender. It continues to remain largely a wholesale borrowing and lending institutio­n and is likely to remain so in the near term. Lall said the bank’s retail loan book, which was zero two years ago, stood at ~5,000 crore in September 2017.

The bank, with two years of presence, has a small share of low-cost deposits - current and savings accounts (CASA) — which moved up from 7.8 per cent of total deposits in September 2016 to 8.2 per cent in September 2017. Currently, liquidity is good in the system and the bank could use this for strengthen­ing its liability profile, said another banker. (With inputs from T E Narasimhan)

IDFC Bank’s strategy is to expand its retail business and diversify its corporate business beyond its traditiona­l infrastruc­ture focus

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