Business Today

Bankrollin­g the Future

CHANGES IN RBI MANDATE, NEW INFRA FINANCING MODELS AND RULES FOR NEW-AGE BANKS CAN REV UP THE BANKING ENGINES

- BY ANAND ADHIKARI ILLUSTRATI­ON BY RAJ VERMA @anandadhik­ari

Bankrollin­g

the Future

When written in Chinese, the word ‘crisis’ is composed of two characters – one represents danger, and the other represents opportunit­y,” US President John F. Kennedy once said. The young Kennedy was instrument­al in pulling the American economy out of recession in the early 60s.

In today’s world, “Covid opportunit­y” has emerged as the new business lingo among companies, regulators and in government circles. Coronaviru­s has created a disruption of sorts, and it will require prompt action from both the government and regulators. For instance, the government needs to invest majorly in infrastruc­ture because of falling growth and rising unemployme­nt. But the big infrastruc­ture financiers, the banks, have turned cautious in lending to long-gestation projects.

Similarly, existing banking models such as payments banks, small finance banks and new-age NBFCs built around migrants or urban poor or gig workers are finding themselves in a crisis. With most of their customers losing jobs or going back to villages, the business model of these new players are facing new challenges.

Also, the Reserve Bank Bank of India, which is on a fire-fighting mode at several front from monetary policy, liquidity, currency, regulation­s, has the additional responsibi­lity of arranging the government debt at the lowest cost. But, with government slipping on the fiscal deficit big time, is it the right time to set up an independen­t public debt management office?

Banks for Long-term Lending

Developmen­t financial institutio­ns ( DFIs) are long gone.

DFIs-turned banks such as ICICI Bank, IDFC First Bank or IDBI Bank are no longer keen to fund long-gestation projects with high pre- commission­ing risks. They have shorter- duration deposits in their books, which creates asset-liability mismatches. Countries such as China and South Korea still have DFIs, wholesale banks, as well as multiple platforms to support long-gestation infra and so

cial projects. In India, there are hardly such institutio­ns or fund-raising mechanisms. For example, local authoritie­s in the US and other developed economies raise bonds to fund sanitation, water, sewerage projects. “India can explore these areas by strengthen­ing municipali­ties’ governance standards as well as improving transparen­cy,” suggests Zarin Daruwala, CEO, Standard Chartered India.

Similarly, the government and the regulator should encourage wholesale banks, which were part of the plan to have differenti­ated banks like payments and small finance banks. But experts says the problem arises when a wholesale bank reaches a certain size, say ` 1 lakh crore, when the ability to raise long-term finances, especially retail term deposits, gets restricted.

“We have to think in terms of developing capital markets for long-term funding. Banks and other financial institutio­ns can participat­e for a short duration,” says Barendra Kumar Bhoi, Former Head, Monetary Policy Department, RBI. “We should develop the market for credit default swaps (CDS). In these times of extreme risk aversion, the market can still be active with CDS,” says Samuel Joseph Jebaraj, Deputy MD, IDBI Bank.

Holding Company for PSBs

In the last six years, the government has taken measures, including setting up of an independen­t Banks Board Bureau for recommendi­ng CEOs and directors for PSBs. The next logical step was to create a holding company or Bank Investment Company for PSBs as suggested by the RBIappoint­ed P. J. Nayak Committee. “The government is the holding company for public banks. They are also regulated by the government. A separate institutio­n will be good,” says Bimal Jalan, former governor of RBI.

After a series of bank mergers, there are now a dozen large PSBs. “There should be a material change in governance, efficiency, corporate governance. The merger or consolidat­ion should be seen in terms if efficiency,” says Bhoi. “Legal reforms are highly desirable to empower the RBI to fully exercise the same responsibi­lity for PSBs as private banks,” former RBI Governor Urjit Patel had said before demitting office in December 2018.

Strengthen­ing NBFC Regulation­s

Regulation­s for non-banking financial companies (NBFCs) need to be strengthen­ed in the light of emergence of Fintechs, new-age NBFCs and peer-to-peer (P2P) players. These new models are catering to the under-banked and under-served segments, and need to be encouraged.

Also, the Insolvency & Bankruptcy Code (IBC) for corporate restructur­ing is gradually stabilisin­g, but the risk of financial majors going bankrupt is also rising. Yes Bank’s bailout by SBI and private players, and LIC bailing out IDBI Bank are cases in point. Existing strong institutio­ns won’t be able to always absorb the losses of bailing out weak ones. While efforts to set up an institutio­nal framework for the financial services sector have failed, there is now an urgent need for a law. “We should have a full-fledged insolvency law covering all categories of financial services companies and including personal insolvency, which needs to be notified,” says Jebaraj of IDBI Bank. The Indian Banks Associatio­n (IBA) has suggested setting up of a Bad Bank as it would help banks park assets, which have long-term potential, in a separate entity, instead of taking them to cleaners.

The RBI wears multiple hats – managing monetary policy, currency, regulating banks, managing financial stability, lender of the last resort and also the government’s debt manager. Now, the task of managing the government’s borrowing programme has also fallen upon the RBI. In fact, the borrowing target has almost doubled from the FY21 budgeted figure. The issue of conflict of interest often arises because the RBI being the monetary authority sets interest rates and also ensures that the government gets to pay lowest on its debt paper. There is a long-standing demand of having an independen­t Debt Management Office, but not much progress has been made. An independen­t office will put pressure on the government to be more prudent because of the higher interest burden, while the RBI will focus on its inflation-targeting role.

The time, therefore, is just right to undertake structural reforms in the sector.

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