Business Standard

PMO seeks post-merger financial projection­s

- SOMESH JHA

The Prime Minister’s Office (PMO) has sought specific details from the finance ministry on the benefits of the proposed amalgamati­on of 10 state-owned banks, even as the lenders await necessary approvals from the government to take the process forward.

The anchor banks — Punjab National Bank (PNB), Canara Bank, Union Bank of India, and Indian Bank — which will take over six other public sector banks (PSBS), have been asked to furnish the financial projection­s for the next three-five years by the Department of Financial Services. In the past few days, the government has asked the banks to give their plans for raising capital through the equity and bond markets after the completion of the merger process, a senior PSB executive said, requesting anonymity.

“The PMO has asked for the banks’ plans to close branches and ATMS and the yearly savings arising out of the merger process for the next three years,” the executive said.

The banks have been told to keep handy the data on loan projection­s to the corporate, MSMES, agricultur­e, and retail segments after the merger process, along with the sector-wise credit data for the past two years. Additional­ly, the banks have submitted a road map for technical and technologi­cal integratio­n.

“The anchor banks have been asked to justify the benefits of the amalgamati­on process,” said another PSB executive, who did not want to be named.

Business Standard reported last Saturday that the Union government was treading cautiously on the merger of PSBS, even though the deadline to merge the balance sheets of these lenders was over a month away i.e. April 1.

A senior government official said Prime Minister Narendra Modi wanted to see the “outcome of the amalgamati­on of Bank of Baroda (BOB)” before taking a final call on the merger of the 10 PSBS. The finance ministry is likely to give a presentati­on to the PM soon before a final decision is taken.

“The tricky part is that the immediate benefit from the amalgamati­on process is cost rationalis­ation. But since we are stateowned banks, we cannot shut branches immediatel­y or reduce staff. So in a way we have told the government about the longterm benefits of the exercise,” one of the bank executives cited above said.

One advantage of the merger cited by the banks to the government is that their capital base would go up, helping them provide big-ticket loans.

The latest financial results of Bank of Baroda, which took over Dena Bank and Vijaya Bank in April 1, 2019, came as a cause of concern for the government. The bank posted a net loss of ~1,407 crore in the third quarter, mainly because of higher provisioni­ng. The bank’s fresh slippages rose to around ~10,387 crore — the amount of loans which turned from good to bad. The credit growth was flat, as compared to a projection of 10 per cent growth in the December-end quarter. The government’s notificati­on related to the amalgamati­on scheme has been delayed, sparking concern among the boards of banks about a possible delay in the merger process, which was supposed to take place by April 1, 2020 — the beginning of the next financial year. However, Sitharaman had said in a press conference that she saw no reason for a delay in issuing the notificati­on. “You will hear on it as and when a decision is made,” the FM had said on Saturday.

On August 30 last year, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman had announced the biggest PSB merger exercise. PNB, Oriental Bank of Commerce, and United Bank of India were supposed to combine to form the nation’s second-largest lender. Canara Bank was to take over Syndicate Bank; Union Bank of India is planned to be amalgamate­d with Andhra Bank and Corporatio­n Bank; and Indian Bank was to be merged with Allahabad Bank.

The Union Cabinet is set to hold at least one more meeting in the upcoming week. In the case of BOB, the process of finalising the swap ratio, for the integratio­n of market stocks, took 49 days after the government’s notificati­on came out.

 ?? ILLUSTRATI­ON: BINAY SINHA ??
ILLUSTRATI­ON: BINAY SINHA

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