Business Standard

Banks’ overseas biz grows in FY20

In FY19, lenders had seen a contractio­n in global loan book after letters of comfort were discontinu­ed

- ABHIJIT LELE

Indian banks, after witnessing a flat rate of growth or contractio­n in overseas advances in FY19, reported an increase of 7.5-43.1 per cent in global lending in FY20, with emphasis on local businesses and external commercial borrowing (ECB).

In FY19, internatio­nal business received a blow after letters of comfort (Locs) were discontinu­ed in the wake of the uncovering of the fraud at Punjab National Bank in February 2018.

In March that year, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) discontinu­ed issuing letters of undertakin­g (Lous) and Locs for trade credit in import.

Bankers said businesses linked to India (corporate and NRIS) had a dominant share in the pie. But there has been an effort in FY20 to broad-base activities by growing the share in local syndicated loans and retail markets.

State Bank of India (SBI), the country’s largest bank, said it had facilitate­d Indian companies by including greenfield ventures and arranging for debt in foreign currencies through ECBS via syndicated deals in conjunctio­n with other Indian and foreign banks, and through bilateral arrangemen­ts.

The bank has sanctioned foreign-currency loans of $9.2 billion to companies related to India and $11.35 billion to overseas entities.

In the field of energy, the bank has provided $1.82 billion to petroleum companies for augmenting India’s energy security amid unstable crude oil prices and forex volatility.

Dinesh Khara, managing director, SBI, said the situation was fluid and business volumes would depend on trade flows and economic activities in local markets.

Much of the business is generated in the US, the UK, Hong Kong, Singapore, and Bahrain. The bank has an enabling provision to raise up to $1.5 billion in global markets. The priority will be optimising the cost of funds while choosing the mode of fund raising (bonds, loans, or multilater­al agency assistance), he added.

A K Das, managing director and chief executive, Bank of India, said the exposure of banks to internatio­nal business had grown. Also, oil-marketing companies have raised money abroad.

As a strategy, the bank is putting emphasis on growing local businesses. This has worked in the UK and Kenya. This approach will be spread to other geographie­s as well.

In the case of Bank of Baroda, its emphasis has been on building the credit book by funding local clients and non-indian entities in their respective regions. Loans to local clients have grown from ~33,987 crore in March 2019 to ~41,415 crore in March 2020 and to non-indian entities from ~8,830 crore to ~10,364 crore.

During FY20, SBI consolidat­ed its overseas operations to achieve capital conservati­on, cost efficienci­es, and synergies in overseas markets.

It rationalis­ed overseas operations by closing down four branches: Nassau (Bahamas), Paris (France), Jeddah (Saudi Arabia), and Tianjin (China), and merged the branches in Gulshan (Dhaka) and Verdun Road (Singapore).

During this period, a sub-office was started in Melbourne to increase share in remittance­s and trade finance businesses.

SBI has sanctioned foreign-currency loans of $9.2 billion to companies related to India and $11.35 billion to overseas entities

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