Business Standard

YES Bank board clears ~5K-cr fundraisin­g plan

- ABHIJIT LELE

Ailing private sector lender YES Bank looks to raise up to ~5,000 crore as equity capital in the second round to meet regulatory requiremen­t and support business.

The board, at its meeting on Thursday, approved raising of funds for an additional amount aggregatin­g up to ~5,000 crore in one or more tranches, by issuing securities, the bank informed the exchange. Its shares closed 10.27 per cent lower at ~26.65 per share on the BSE.

The bank has kept options open to use routes like qualified institutio­nal placement, public issue, rights issue, global depository receipts, American depository receipts, and foreign currency convertibl­e bonds or any other permissibl­e mode, it added.

Its reconstitu­ted eight-member board held a nine-hour-long meeting via videoconfe­rence. Besides enabling resolution for capital raising, the directors dwelled on employee concerns and work being done by them in trying times, said banking sources.

The bank is a board-driven company. Earlier, it was run by administra­tor Prashant Kumar under the reconstruc­tion scheme, which came into effect on March 5. Kumar is now the managing director and chief executive officer of the bank.

While the bank had prepared the broad contours of a strategic plan, the COVID -19 outbreak has added new challenges. The management will begin a dialogue with investment bankers to chalk out a plan for raising fresh capital and assess market appetite for shares from the bank, said sources.

According to rating agency ICRA’S estimates, YES Bank will require equity infusion of ~9,000-13,000 crore to meet regulatory capital requiremen­ts, including capital conservati­on buffers (CCB). The regulatory norms require banks to maintain a CCB of 2.5 per cent as on March 31.

Early this month, the bank received an equity infusion of ~10,000 crore from eight domestic lenders, led by State Bank of India. The bank has a write-down of AT-I bonds. This is expected to improve capital ratios — common equity tier-1 (CET-1) and tier1 of 7.6 per cent and 7.8 per cent, respective­ly. The capital adequacy ratio (CAR) will be more than 9 per cent.

YES Bank’s regulatory CAR (Basel III) stood at 4.1 per cent (CET-1 of 0.6 per cent and tier-i of 2.1 per cent) as on December 31, 2019.

 ??  ?? While YES bank had prepared the broad contours of a strategic plan, COVID-19 pandemic has added new challenges
While YES bank had prepared the broad contours of a strategic plan, COVID-19 pandemic has added new challenges

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