Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

YES Bank gears up for new challenges

- Gopika Gopakumar

MUMBAI: State Bank of India (SBI), six private sector banks, and a mortgage lender will invest a combined ₹10,000 crore to rescue Yes Bank Ltd, allowing the troubled lender to shore up its capital buffers after they dropped below the regulatory minimum.

While the funds infusion by some of India’s biggest financial institutio­ns does signal a show of confidence, the real challenge will be to ensure that Yes Bank’s depositors don’t abandon it.

“The ability of Yes Bank to retain its deposit franchise will be key to its revival. So, the next one week will be crucial to see if the bank is able to stabilise its depositor base. That will decide whether the bank is able to focus on its near-term revival plans,” said Karthik Srinivasan, group head of financial sector ratings at ICRA Ratings.

With the moratorium being lifted on 18 March, the question remains whether the management will be able to give enough comfort to depositors to stem any deposit outflow. Yes Bank has already lost ₹72,000 crore worth of deposits in the past six months.

The confidence of depositors will also determine whether the bank is able to resume lending in the near future, industry experts said. Even as Yes Bank can boast of having large financial institutio­ns as its shareholde­rs, history has shown that it is not always enough to avoid a crisis. The presence of large shareholde­rs such as Life Insurance Corp. of India, Orix Corp., Housing Developmen­t Finance Corp. (HDFC) and SBI in Infrastruc­ture Leasing and Financial Services, for instance, couldn’t prevent the fall of IL&FS.

The other major challenge would be how the new management of Yes Bank will realign its portfolio to avoid fresh loan slippages. The bank’s loan book has shrunk to ₹1.87 lakh crore as on December 31 from ₹2.24 lakh crore as on September 30.

Yes Bank has got its largest funds infusion from SBI, the country’s largest lender. SBI has so far invested ₹6,050 crore. ICICI Bank Ltd and mortgage lender HDFC will invest ₹1,000 crore each. Axis Bank will invest ₹600 crore, while Kotak Mahindra Bank will put in ₹500 crore. Bandhan Bank and Federal Bank will invest ₹300 crore each, while IDFC First Bank will put in ₹250 crore.

This is the first-of-its-kind experiment where both the government and the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) have brought together strongly capitalise­d public and private sector lenders to bail out a stressed private bank. Typically, such mergers are forced between a weak bank and a strong one. The merger of the Bank of Rajasthan with ICICI Bank or that of Global Trust Bank and Oriental Bank of Commerce are a few such examples of recent bank bailouts.

That said, even the government and RBI acted in tandem to stitch up a rescue plan that was put in place before the bank announced its earnings on March 14.

 ?? MINT ?? Yes Bank has lost ₹72,000 crore worth of deposits in the past six months
MINT Yes Bank has lost ₹72,000 crore worth of deposits in the past six months

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