Business Standard

‘Small finance bank model in the slow lane’

Unity Small Finance Bank was the last one to get a licence in the category in November 2021

- HARSH KUMAR New Delhi, 23 April

The small finance bank model may still be testing the water some 10 years since its launch. According to banking experts, the regulator has taken a cautious approach in granting approvals.

Unity Small Finance Bank was the last one to get a licence in the category in November 2021. As of December 2023, there were 12 small finance banks in the country. However, last month, the Reserve Bank of India approved the amalgamati­on of Fincare Small Finance Bank and AU Small Finance Bank (AU SFB).

“RBI is looking at how the existing SFBS are doing. The idea is to make the model work and adding more numbers may not help,’’ said a senior executive of a private sector bank. The main reason for slow approvals is that existing models of small finance banks are not tested out

fully, he pointed out. Last week, the RBI had rejected two applicatio­ns-dvara Kshetriya Gramin Financial Services and Tally Solutions. Aruna Sharma, a former member of the RBI committee on digital payments, said that SFBS

which have already got licence are yet to stabilise. Sharma, a retired IAS officer, said: “After recent issues related to compliance, you have seen that many banks are being penalised on a regular basis. So, the regulator is adhering strongly on compliance issues.”

An internal screening committee, comprising the governor and deputy governors of the RBI, reviews all applicatio­ns and sends its recommenda­tions to the committee of the central board of the RBI for a final decision. Even if an applicant fulfills the eligibilit­y criteria, the RBI retains the authority to reject an applicatio­n.

As of the third quarter of FY2024, the total net profit of 11 small finance banks, except North East Small Finance Bank, stood at ~1,525 crore, up 23 per cent from ~1,240 crore in the correspond­ing period last year.

Investment informatio­n and rating agency ICRA expects the growth of SFBS to remain steady at around 22-25 per cent in FY2025.

“It remains important for the industry to further improve the granularit­y of its deposit base and build a stable retail deposit franchise, to support the envisaged growth,” said Karthik Srinivasan, Senior Vice President & Group Head, Financial Sector Ratings, ICRA Ltd.

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