Business Standard

Bandhan’s bumpy ride to banking

The RBI curb on expansion is unlikely to hurt the bank’s growth plans. Its challenges come from other fronts

- NAMRATA ACHARYA

Back in 2010, when Bandhan Bank was still a microfinan­ce organisati­on, it could preempt the first ever crisis in the sector. An ordinance by the Andhra Pradesh government curbed nearly 70 per cent of the microfinan­ce operations, followed by strict limits on lending and collection­s.

The unregulate­d nature of the sector had led to lending at unreasonab­ly high rates and coercive methods of payment collection, prompting Andhra Pradesh to promulgate the ordinance. Six months before the state had passed the ordinance, however, Bandhan took a step that few had contemplat­ed: it reduced lending rates by about five percentage points —the lowest in the sector at 19.1 per cent. Within the next year, Bandhan emerged as the unrivalled leader of microfinan­ce as its competitor­s struggled for breath under the weight of bad loans.

Cut to 2018. Bandhan faces its first big challenge as a bank. The Reserve Bank of India has put curbs on its branch expansion plans, for failing to meet shareholdi­ng norms for new private banks. Further, the remunerati­on of C S Ghosh, its MD and CEO, has also been frozen at the existing level.

Ghosh, the face of the bank, has been a conservati­ve and foresighte­d banker. He has been able to handle difficult situations with remarkable ease. But the next few months, as well as years, could put his leadership skills to the test.

It is, however, not the RBI stricture on expansion, but the bank’s own business model that would be his biggest challenge. The curb has come at a time when Bandhan Bank has already met most of its initial targets.

Over the last three years, the bank has expanded aggressive­ly. On the first day of its operations itself, it rolled out 500 branches. Against the target of 1,000 branches by March 2019, it has already reached 938.

Additional­ly, the bank has a wide network of doorstep banking centres (DSCs) from its microfinan­ce days, which form its foundation. The cost of operations here have remained low. Ghosh has been so frugal in maintainin­g strict cost-controls at DSCs that as an MFI a branch manager was entitled to a plastic chair with armrests, while credit officers got chairs without armrests. A strict cost control model is still followed. Even now, large number of Bandhan’s field staff comprises local class 12 pass-outs, which means low salary expenses.

In the six months from March this year, the bank opened 246 DSCs. Its customer base has doubled from 8.4 million at the end of March 2016 to 14.41 million at the end of September 2018, and its microfinan­ce business has grown from about ~100 billion to more than ~300 billion in the same period. Notably, the RBI curb is on branches and it is not clear if it is applicable for DSCs.

All this growth has been achieved with the best asset quality in the industry. It has a nearly 99 per cent repayment rate. Bandhan Bank’s net interest margin is about 10.3 per cent, way higher than its peers, like Yes Bank (NIM of 3.3 per cent) and IndusInd Bank (NIM at3.92 per cent).

However, Bandhan Bank’s growth, although impressive, hasn’t been wellrounde­d. Three years into universal banking, it still relies heavily on microfinan­ce. About 86 per cent of the bank’s loan outstandin­g is in the microfinan­ce segment.

Moreover, its operations lean heavily on the eastern and north-eastern regions. About 64 per cent of Bandhan’s branches and 80 per cent of its loan book are concentrat­ed in the east and north east. North accounts for a mere 4 per cent, south 2 per cent, central 8 per cent and west just 6 per cent of the bank’s loan book.

Once eastern India market gets saturated, and Bandhan Bank expands in other regions, it will face a level-playing field in the new terrains as several private banks have now entered its niche of microfinan­ce.

Kotak Mahindra Bank has acquired BSS Microfinan­ce, IDFC Bank has acquired Grama Vidyal Microfinan­ce, DCB Bank has acquired a stake in Annapurna Microfinan­ce, and IndusInd Banks is awaiting regulatory clearances for its acquisitio­n of a stake in Bharat Financial Inclusion, formerly SKS.

The limited corporate lending by Bandhan Bank has already proven to be a risky bet. Bandhan Bank has about ~3.8 million exposure to infrastruc­ture lender IL&FS, which is facing acute liquidity crisis (so far a standard asset). Sunil Samdani, chief financial officer of the bank, told analysts in an investor call that the loan was an “exception”.

In the days ahead, another challenge for Bandhan would be to find the right way to dilute promoter share. The promoters’ shareholdi­ng at Bandhan Bank is about 82.28 per cent, which needs to be brought down to 40 per cent. Some of the options listed by the bank to bring it down include acquisitio­n in the microfinan­ce or housing finance space and entering new business at the holding company level.

Recently, the Securities and Exchange board of India relaxed the one year post-IPO lock-in period norm for Bandhan, which means the promoters can now directly sell equity shares; an additional option for the bank. Further, at the holding company level, Bandhan Bank can now engage in share transactio­ns to enter mutual fund or insurance business. However, these will be relatively new and riskier ventures for the bank, which has its expertise in microfinan­ce. Any tweak in the shareholdi­ng structure of the bank might also go against the holding company structure of banks favoured by the RBI.

Secondary sale of shares would mean more capital, which at this point is not needed by the bank. “Any further issuance in the bank will depend on the requiremen­t of capital in the bank to grow the business. Our capital adequacy as on June 2018 was 30 per cent plus, so currently we are adequately capitalise­d for the growth of our regular business,” Samdani said in the analyst call.

Bandhan Bank has indicated its willingnes­s to go for inorganic growth to meet the RBI norms. “If there is an opportunit­y of any inorganic opportunit­y which makes sense for the bank and its shareholde­rs, we will look at raising capital at the bank level,” added Samdani.

Experts say an MFI could be an ideal fit for acquisitio­n, given the synergy in operations, need for the bank to expand beyond east and north east and its huge capital base. However, finding the right fit for acquisitio­n in a short time is no easy task.

From zeroing in on the best means for stake dilution to moving beyond microfinan­ce, a banking licence for Bandhan has come with many challenges.

 ?? PHOTO: DALIP KUMAR ??
PHOTO: DALIP KUMAR
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