The 21st meeting of the State Level Security Committee (SLSC) was held on Tuesday at Reserve Bank of India, Jammu, under the chairmanship of B.R.Sharma, Financial Commissioner (Home), and Government of Jammu and Kashmir to deliberate upon the security scenario in the banking industry. The meeting was attended by Dr. B. Srinivas IGP (CID), Arnab Roy, Regional Director, Jammu and Kashmir, Reserve Bank of India and senior officers from police department, Airport Authority of India, Railways, Fire and Emergency Services, BSNL, and controlling heads of all the banks. In his keynote address, the Chairman B.R.Sharma called upon all the stakeholders to address the security concerns of the banks and emphasized the need for proper functioning of security gadgets installed at banks. He regarded fake notes to be a major threat to the economy and urged all the stakeholders to intensify necessary actions to curb the menace. Arnab Roy, Regional Director, Jammu & Kashmir, RBI in his opening remarks highlighted the latest developments in the area of currency management.
Wednesday, February 16, 2011
SLSC Meet at RBI Jammu
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The Daily Rising Kashmir
Axis Bank launches everywhere teller machine service in Vijaywada
Axis Bank has tied-up with 120 merchants to offer everywhere teller machine facility. Axis Bank has launched its everywhere teller machine (ETM) service in India at Vijaywada, Andhra Pradesh. Debit card holders in Vijaywada, using this service, can now withdraw up to Rs1,000 in cash per day from a point-of-sale (PoS) terminal at select merchant outlets. Axis Bank has over 180,000 PoS terminals deployed across India. In the first phase of roll-out, Axis Bank has tied-up with 120 merchants to offer this facility and plans to tie-up with 500 merchants across Andhra Pradesh by the end of March 2011. The bank plans to roll out this service in Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, Kerala, and Gujarat in this fiscal and expects to cover all states by the end of next fiscal year. As of now the facility of cash withdrawal using plastic cards is available only at automatic teller machine (ATMs) and certain EDC terminals installed at financial institutions exclusively for cash withdrawal. ETM's will ease the process of withdrawing cash for the customers when an ATM facility is not available nearby. The ETM service will initially be available at Axis Bank EDC machines installed at select merchant outlets. All customers holding a debit card issued in India, as per Reserve Bank of India guidelines can avail this service for which they would be charged up to Rs10 per transaction.
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Moneylife
Do Not Pay Money to receive Large Funds from Abroad : RBI Advisory
The Reserve Bank has today once again issued an advisory cautioning the members of public against responding in any manner to offers of moneys from abroad. It has stated that such offers are fraudulent and has advised the public to immediately register a complaint with the local police/ cyber crime authorities when they receive such offers or become a victim of any such fraud. Members of public have also been cautioned against making any remittance towards participation in such schemes/offers from unknown entities since such remittances are illegal and any resident in India collecting and effecting/remitting such payments directly/indirectly outside India is liable to be proceeded against for contravention of the Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999. They are also liable for violation of regulations relating to Know Your Customer (KYC) norms/Anti Money Laundering (AML) standards. The Reserve Bank has further stated that it does not undertake any type of money arrangement, by whatever name called, and it does not take any responsibility for recovering moneys remitted in response to such bogus communication. For any further clarification in the matter, the Reserve Bank has advised the public to contact the officials of the Foreign Exchange Department at its various Regional Offices or at its Central Office, Foreign Exchange Department on telephone numbers 022- 22610589 / 22610618 or 2260 1000 extn. 2772 / 2732 during office hours (9.45 hours to 17.45 hours Monday to Friday) or seek clarification by e-mail . The public may also refer to the cautionary advices hosted on the home page of the RBI website (www.rbi.org.in) as a ticker for more information. The Reserve Bank has stated that it has urged the Indian Banks’ Association and banks to educate their customers to be extra vigilant with regard to such fictitious offers. Banks have also been advised to take up with law enforcing agencies whenever accounts of their customers are misused for such fraudulent activities. The Reserve Bank of India has, on several occasions in the past, cautioned the members of public not to fall prey to fictitious offers / lottery winnings / remittance of cheap funds in foreign currency from abroad by so-called foreign entities/ individuals or to Indian residents acting as representatives of such entities/individuals. Describing the manner in which the fraudsters operate, the Reserve Bank has stated that the fraudsters send attractive offers to gullible public through letters, e-mails, mobile phones, SMSs, etc. To lend credence to such offers, the communication is often sent on/ from letterheads /websites that appear to be like that of some public authorities like the Reserve Bank of India. The offers are apparently signed by top executives/senior officials of such authorities. However, only the names of the officials may be correct but their signatures are faked. The offer document would contain contact details of a so-called RBI officer working in some department in the Reserve Bank. The fraudsters initially ask potential victims to deposit small sums of money for different official sounding reasons, such as, processing fees/ transaction fees/tax clearance charges/conversion charges, clearing fees, etc. The victims are asked to deposit the money in certain accounts in banks. The fraudsters often have multiple accounts in the name of individuals or proprietary concerns in different bank branches for collecting such charges. Often gullible genuine account holders are persuaded by the fraudsters to lend their accounts for such fraudulent activities on the promise of receiving some commission. Once the initial amount is deposited, demands for more money follow with more official sounding reasons. After accumulating a sizeable amount in these accounts, the fraudsters withdraw or transfer the money abroad and vanish leaving the victims in a lurch. Many residents have already become victims and have lost huge sums of money by falling for such fictitious offers.
Banks likely to get subsidy of`Rs.140 for each no-frills account
Banks will likely get a subsidy of Rs.140 from the government for each so-called no-frills account they open, according to top bankers and finance ministry officials. The move will make banking accessible to many of India’s unbanked and help banks meet their target of opening, by 2012, 50 million such accounts in 73,000 villages with a population of at least 2,000. The target was set by finance minister Pranab Mukherjee last year; subsequently, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) had asked banks to submit reports on how they planned to achieve the target. An official at the Indian Banks’ Association, a banking lobby group, said the government could give banks a subsidy of Rs.140 for every account. “It may come in this budget; that’s what we have been made to understand by finance ministry officials,” added this person, who did not want to be identified. Two finance ministry officials said that the issue was being seriously considered as recently as December. The officials couldn’t be reached this week because they have been quarantined in the run-up to the presentation of the Union budget on 28 February. To be sure, the government doesn’t make any promises on budgetary provisions, so there’s no certainty that Rs.700 crore (for 50 million no-frills accounts) will be earmarked for banks. Mint had first reported the possibility of such a subsidy on 2 October. No-frills accounts allow customers to have zero balance, and also offer limited facilities. They are targeted at first-time customers whose banking needs are rudimentary. Between November 2005—when RBI introduced them—and March 2010, at least 50 million such accounts were opened. Bankers say just around five million of these accounts are active, and that the low volume of transactions on some other accounts—sometimes, a mere Rs.10 is transacted—makes maintaining and servicing them unviable for banks. They have repeatedly asked the government to chip in, at least with the initial cost of Rs.200-300 they incur in opening an account. While the subsidy, if it happens, will help, banks will also benefit from the Unique Identification Authority of India’s Aadhaar programme that is seeking to give every Indian a unique ID. This number is good enough to meet the know-your-customer norms of banks, thereby making opening accounts easier for the unbanked. The agency is also working with several government departments to see whether wages under the job guarantee scheme, or subsidies can be directly transferred to the bank accounts of the beneficiaries. This could ensure that more no-frills accounts remain active. Financial inclusion remains one of the United Progressive Alliance government’s focus areas. Last week, it launched a campaign to help small farmers borrow low-cost funds from banks—a move that will prevent them from falling into the clutches of moneylenders, who lend at usurious rates. Banks have been asked to cover all unbanked areas of the country, either directly or through agents. Bankers say the task is a challenging one. In a speech in November, RBI Deputy Governor K.C. Chakrabarty said that out of 600,000 villages in India, only around 50,000 have access to finance and that India has 145 million unbanked households, the highest in the world.
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Mint
Pre-payment penalty should go forthwith : Subir Roy
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) is reportedly engaged in active discussion with commercial banks to try and bring within reasonable limits, if not stop entirely, the practice of banks charging a hefty penalty, often going up to as high as 2 per cent or more of outstandings, from borrowers seeking to take their housing loans elsewhere. While this is clearly the right thing to do, it is about time RBI got moving a little faster. It is now clear that in at least one other instance, microfinance, many of the sector’s present troubles would have been avoided had RBI discharged its regulatory role with greater speed. It is also a bit disingenuous in letting it be known that we do not approve these things and players are advised to change their ways, but leaving matters there indefinitely. The attempt to use moral suasion can be produced as evidence to counter the charge of inaction but if no firm action is eventually taken, then the brazen can get away with continuing to do what they want even though everybody agrees that this is not the right thing to do. Commercial banking is already a restricted market in the sense that you need a licence to run a bank and accept deposits, something that you do not need if you were to, say, manufacture a motor car. If on top of that the incumbent players engage in something which is clearly anti-competitive, then it is the customer who gets the short end of the stick and the overall efficiency of the sector suffers. The fact that the Competition Commission does not think the practice is anti-competitive says more about the Commission than the wisdom of its reasoning. At a time when there is mobile number portability and health insurance portability is round the corner, it is absurd that in a sphere which attracts the most amount of the lifelong savings of a middle class family, housing, restrictive market practices are allowed to continue. Like mobile telecom service providers and health insurance firms, banks have to live by the quality of their service and not anti-competitive practices. If State Bank of India offering teaser rates has not caused HDFC to go out of business, there must be a reason why people are willing to pay more to still develop a long-term relationship with HDFC. Two reasons are cited by banks for charging penal rates for pre-payment of a housing loan by a borrower seeking to change bankers. One is the original lender loses on the processing expenses that it had incurred on sanctioning the loan. This is fair and refund of the processing cost should certainly be in order in case a loan is prepaid soon after its disbursal. But this is a finite cost — how many man hours do you really need to process a loan, what with technology reducing costs? — which is independently computable and can be levied according to norms laid down by the regulator. But it is likely to be far lower than the Rs 40,000 that a borrower will have to pay if she pre-pays an outstanding of Rs 20 lakh which can be taken to be a rough median figure. The second argument holds even less water. Banks claim that they will land in asset-liability mismatch if a long-term borrower, say someone who has taken a 20-year housing loan, walks away as the bank will lose the asset against which it will have created a liability of similar tenure. The fact is, long-term lending by commercial banks which live mostly by taking short-term deposits, invariably leads to asset-liability mismatch. Banks are living with this and the regulator is allowing them to do so. It is for this reason that earlier there were term lending agencies in the shape of development financial institutions which lent long term and banks lent at most medium term. The situation will change when there is an active long-term debt market where pension funds can park their corpuses and banks float paper to access those resources. There is one other reason why levying of exorbitant pre-payment penalties should be outlawed. This practice makes for a lethal combination with another unhealthy practice — teaser rates. The current position is that a bank can induce a borrower to take a long-term housing loan by offering a teaser rate and then slap a sharp pre-payment penalty on anyone seeking to go elsewhere later when interest rates start going up. Both of these practices should be disallowed. Instead, RBI is allowing both to prevail even while making noises that it does not approve of them. In fact, the banking regulator can go a step further and take some innovative measures that will give retail customers of real estate a better deal and, what is systemically more important, spread a superior culture among real estate companies that makes for better health in the sector. Realty firms that give their ordinary customers a transparent and fair deal are likely to have greater integrity, be sounder and make for a more stable industry. RBI can well say that its primary job is to worry about the banking sector and not the real estate sector, but it does have a developmental role and can take a legitimate interest in the health of an asset class with a long life. It can, for example, tell banks that they should encourage realty firms that borrow from them to ensure two sound practices. One, mention the carpet area along with whatever else they want to like super built-up area while selling an apartment. Two, offer a warranty for a reasonable period, indemnifying the buyer against manufacturing defects. This will be as revolutionary as feasible.
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Business Standard
Students visit RBI Kanpur
A group of students from a school visited the Reserve Bank of India on Tuesday to study its functioning as part of the bank's financial literacy programme. Shri N.K. Sethi, General Manager, RBI, Kanpur inaugurated the financial literacy programme. Bank officials gave an overview of the functions of RBI and insights of currency management and foreign exchange management to the students. Short films on working of RBI were also shown to the students. The youngsters got the opportunity to visit the exchange counters and coin-vending machines, which was a memorable experience for them. The financial literacy campaign is organised by RBI for different target groups like students, women, rural populace and senior citizens to impart knowledge about RBI.
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TOI
No cap on MFI interest rates
Amidst hue and cry over micro-finance institutions (MFIs) charging the rural poor exorbitant interest rates, Reserve Bank of India norms continue to allow these entities a free hand in determining their charges. The banks lending to MFIs too continue to have full discretion in fixing their rate of interest. RBI has issued a latest master circular reiterating its earlier stand on micro-credit on February 14. Master circulars are like ready-reckoners on RBI rules related to a particular aspect. MFI sources said the latest circular removes doubts whether a cap on their rates was in offing, hinting there was a chance of upward revision now. Farm activists of the region, on the other hand, are crying foul, saying finally MFIs were replacing the usurious moneylenders in villages. The circular said the interest rate applicable to loans given by banks to micro-credit organisations or by micro-credit organizations to self help groups (SHG) or their members would be left to their discretion. At the same time, the circular said competing MFIs were operating in the same area trying to reach out to the same set of poor. This had resulted in multiple lending and overburdening of the rural households. MFI lending is divided into loans to SHGs mainly run by women and having a common bank account and joint liability group that need not have a common account. D Sathiah, head of strategic services of Basix, a NBFC engaged in micro-lending, said with this circular there were chances of the rates going up by 2% as even the banks might be now charging more. He said the circular amounted to reiteration of the earlier status while the Malegham Committee on micro-finance had recommended MFIs should charge up to 24% though not directly mentioning a cap should be imposed. However, he also said that there was negligible lending by the banks to MFIs that also meant there might not be much change. Moin Qazi of Asia Pragati, also a MFI, said that a cap should have been imposed on lending rates. MFIs get funds at around 12% from the banks but lend at around 24%. The rates were as high as 32% before the issue came into limelight. Even as a higher rates were needed to cover defaults, a spread of almost 100% of the cost of the funds was too high, he added. Farm activists say that the move would only add to the farm distress. States were preparing laws to control MFIs with Andhra Pradesh already having put in a place a regulatory body, the circular would shield the MFIs, said Kishore Tiwari of Vidarbha Jan Andolan Samiti. He said, "there is an urgent need to appoint a regulator for this sector."
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TOI
9.5% interest on EPFO may get nod
The Employees Provident Fund Organisation ( EPFO) stood its ground on offering 9.5% interest to over 4.71 crore subscribers with Labour and Employment Minister Mallikarjun Kharge expressing hope that the finance ministry will shortly give its concurrence to the proposal. The Finance Ministry has to give concurrence to the rate of return decided by CBT and notify allowing tax exemption on the entire such earnings on PF deposits. Downplaying the ongoing tussle between the two ministries over hiking the interest rates on PF deposits, Kharge said there was " no tussle between the two ministries over giving 9.5 per cent interest rate." Following discovery of Rs 1,731.57 crore in suspense account, the EPFO trustees favoured raising the rate of interest on provident fund deposits to 9.5 per cent for its 4.71 crore subscribers from 8.5 per cent which is being paid by EPFO since 2005- 06.
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Free Press Journal
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