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Little-known investors prop up Yes Bank

India’s fourth-largest private lender says its board signed off on the capital increase

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Yes Bank Ltd., an Indian lender caught in the country’s deepening shadow banking crisis, boosted its target for a capital raising to $2 billion after receiving commitment­s from new investors.

The nation’s fourth-largest private lender said its board signed off on the capital increase, which is higher than the previous figure of $1.2 billion, at a meeting on Friday. Investors, including Canada’s Erwin Singh Braich, SPGP Holdings and Citax Holdings Ltd. “individual­ly expressed their agreement/willingnes­s to subscribe to equity shares,” according to a stock exchange filing.

The board will meet again on December 10 to approve a preferenti­al allotment of shares to investors, none of which will receive more than a 25 per cent stake in the bank.

Yes Bank needs to raise new capital after being forced to step up provisioni­ng against bad loans, including to some of the non-bank lenders caught up in the country’s shadow banking crisis. The lender’s core equity capital is 8.70 per cent, barely above the regulatory minimum of about 8 per cent.

There was some disappoint­ment about the lack of a heavyweigh­t internatio­nal investor among the firms and individual­s announced on Friday.

“The market was expecting strong and marquee global names and they are all missing,” said Siddharth Purohit an analyst with SMC Global Securities.

Braich and SPGP Holdings together committed $1.2 billion to the capital increase, the largest single amount, followed by Citax with $500 million, the filing said. The bank will this week disclose the name of a “top tier US fund house” which committed $120 million, it added.

India’s preferenti­al allotment rules bar investors from participat­ing if they have sold the shares during the past six months. That excluded several potential candidates because of the wholesale selling of Yes Bank shares during 2019 — they are down over 60 per cent from the start of the year.

Indian immigrant

Yes Bank’s discussion­s with Erwin Braich and SPGP are ongoing and are “expected to be concluded shortly,” the filing said. In the meantime a binding term sheet has been extended until the end of the year, it added.

Braich is the son of the late Herman Singh Braich, Canadian court documents show. The father emigrated to Canada from Punjab at the age of 14 and founded a flourishin­g sawmill business in the 1950s, and his family became a pillar of a growing Canadian-Indian community, according to a family history recounted by a local museum.

Since the patriarch’s death in 1976, Braich has battled members of his family and creditors in numerous lawsuits, according to Canadian court records.

In 1999, Braich was petitioned into bankruptcy by unidentifi­ed creditors and declared zero assets, according to bankruptcy records. KPMG, the trustee, estimated his liabilitie­s at more than C$20 million ($15.1 million), a figure Braich has hotly contested, court documents show. It took four years for creditors to recover C$60,000 in cash and shares, and a decade to discharge the bankruptcy, according to court filings and bankruptcy records.

Braich couldn’t be reached for comment. Citax Holdings had shareholde­r funds of 20,107 pounds ($26,000) as of June 30, 2018, according to the last balance sheet filed with UK Companies House. Srinavasan Solaraj and Srinavasan Gopala Solaraj are listed as “persons with significan­t control” over Citax Holdings, but the filing doesn’t provide any contact informatio­n.

Approval from the Reserve Bank of India is required for stake purchases in Indian banks of more than 5 per cent. Any non-financial entity can buy up to 10 per cent of a lender, and for a financial entity the cap is 15 per cent. In general the central bank is reluctant to allow larger stakes, though there’s a provision to allow a single investor to pick up 40 per cent or more under special circumstan­ces.

 ?? Bloomberg ?? ■
The board of Yes Bank will meet again on December 10 to approve a preferenti­al allotment of shares to investors.
Bloomberg ■ The board of Yes Bank will meet again on December 10 to approve a preferenti­al allotment of shares to investors.

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