Business Standard

Heavyset-up costs hurt payments banks’ profitabil­ity: RBI

- ADVAIT RAO PALEPU

Payments banks (PBs), which began operations last year, ended the calendar year with a tepid performanc­e owing to large set-up (infrastruc­ture) costs, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) said.

Rishi Gupta, chief executive officer of Fino Payments Bank, said it was still early days and no one can be expected to make profit. “We have a very low-cost structure, with lowcost branches and a large distributi­on network that is accounted for variable pay,” he told Business Standard.

PBs were created to improve access to formal financial channels or services for small depositors, businesses, low-income households and others, who typically reside and/or work in the rural or informal economy. So far Airtel Payments Bank and India Post Payments Bank have commenced operations, while operations of Paytm and Fino payments banks began by the quarter ended June. Payments bank operations of Aditya Birla Idea, National Securities Depository Limited and Reliance Jio— all received licences from the RBI early last year — are expected to launch sometime this year.

PBs, according to the RBI’s report on trend and progress of banking in India in 2016-17, have not done well. These are loss-making entities, given the large capital expenditur­es incurred over the year in setting up the infrastruc­ture required for smooth operations.

Gupta said a democratis­ation of the financial system is underway and Fino Payment Bank’s performanc­e so far had beat the company’s own expectatio­ns and it was on track.

Profit after tax and earnings before provisions and taxes for select PBs were negative at the end of March 2017. The apex banks’ report states the starting-up expenditur­e incurred during the initial stages of operations impacted the return on assets (-25.2) and return on equity (-36.4) for select PBs.

Business Standard contacted a spokespers­on from Paytm Payments Bank, but did not receive a comment when going to press.

At the end of March 2017, capital requiremen­ts as well as reserve requiremen­ts of payments banks were major liabilitie­s, the RBI report said. PBs are not allowed to undertake lending activities, hence their balance sheets do not look as robust as that of a nonbanking financial company.

Two-thirds of PBs’ assets (specifical­ly two PBs’) constitute­d balance with banks and money at call/short notice, while the remaining third constitute­d investment­s.

The RBI said only when the operationa­l performanc­e of PBs are scaled up, and only when more data is available regarding financial and operationa­l aspects of PBs, can a more ‘realistic assessment’ be made.

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