Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Chakrabarty for paperless, chequeless, cashless banking



RBI Deputy Governor Dr.K.C.Chakrabarty and N.Chandrasekhar, MD & CEO, TCS speaking during the Banking Tech Summit, 2011

Reserve Bank of India (RBI) Deputy Governor K.C.Chakrabarty today called up on banks to begin a journey onto the path of paperless, chequeless and cashless banking stating that the future of banking lies there. "The next big challenge for our banks is to make banking paperless, chequeless and cashless," he told the sixth Banking Technology Summit  organised by CII here. I know the answers to these questions are not easy and nobody has a readymade answer. But this should put us on the track to think differently and think big. It would definitely take time to achieve these goals but it is not impossible as it is already happening globally," he noted. Noting that technology is changing the cultural and business landscapes beyond recognition, the Deputy Governor said the world over, organisations are using transformative power of technology to create business value for today, and step-function growth for tomorrow. And the banking sector cannot be any exception, he added. With financial inclusion gaining faster currency, he admitted that role of the banker is very challenging today as at one end of his spectrum lies the demand to achieve financial inclusion as nearly 50% are yet to be covered under the formal system of banking and at the other end lies the task to fulfil the needs of the existing customer. Stating that core banking is one of the top priorities of RBI, Chakrabarty said, "the first priority is to get all banks on adopting core banking solution, including all RRBs. The next is a multi-channel approach using handheld devices, mobiles, cards, micro-ATMs, branches, kiosks etc can be used." The RBI had recently released its IT Vision document for 2011-17 that envisages transforming RBI into a knowledge organisation using IT as a strategic resource, IT governance. It also looks at banks moving from core banking to enhanced use of IT in areas like regulatory reporting, risk management, MIS, financial inclusion and CRM. On the need for curbing the rising instances of cyber fraud in banks, he said it is necessary to improve controls and examine the need for pro-active fraud risk assessments and management processes in commercial banks. "My belief is that commerce or banking to the poor is always more viable than commerce or banking for the rich. That's why corporates get money at 7-8% and MFI borrowers pay at 60%. It is viable provided you have the ability to do business with the poor. "What we are saying is that don't subsidise the poor, but don't exploit them, because so long as the rich get a thing cheaper, they will not allow that item to reach the poor. And this has to change, at least in banking," Chakrabarty said. On whether RBI is happy with the progress of the inclusion programme so far, he said, "we are never happy with anything nor are we depressed. It is not that nothing has happened on the inclusion front. Many things have happened, but we have to scale up." Stating that the real issue is not about viability, but the ability of banks to do it properly, he said, "banks are not able to do this because they don't have the capacity to do so. That is why we are asking them to build their capacities through technology and new delivery models." Comparing inclusion banking to buying a house, he said, "you have to invest first to make future profits. You will never say your are spending money on your house, but investing in your house. Banks have to look at the inclusion project as an investment and over a period of time they will get the return on their investment." Asked whether instead of each bank being pushed to do inclusion banking, should not the government set up a separate bank to handle this programme by diverting the money it annually infuses into PSU banks, he quipped, "No, the government should not get into any business as it can never be a good businessman." "Its job is to facilitate, encourage and regulate business so that is it done in an ethical and in a non- exploitative manner," he concluded.
BS

Foreign banks must improve their reporting: RBI Deputy Governor

MUMBAI: The Reserve Bank of India has expressed its dissatisfaction on the reporting standards of foreign banks operating in the country, which it says need improvement.  RBI Deputy Governor KC Chakrabarty said: "You need technology if you have a large branch network. Foreign banks don't have very large networks. So we are okay with whatever technology they have if they are not having any problem, but yes, we are not that happy with their reporting. They need to improve their reporting and that is what as a part of requirement for automated data flow is applicable to all banks and not just foreign banks."  Mr Chakrabarty was speaking at a seminar here on banking technology and its role in driving growth.  He stressed that mobile banking for the masses was not an unviable option for banks as such, but it was important for them to develop an ecosystem for mobile banking to pick up in India. He also clarified that maintaining the maximum limit of Rs 50,000 for each mobile transaction is not a deterrent. "It's not scaling up because we don't have the ecosystem in place. Mobile banking is for financial inclusion. How many people would want to do a transaction for more than Rs 50,000? Banks are preparing themselves for an ecosystem, which takes time," he said. "So you can't say it is not happening. Mobile banking is not for ultra rich people, they have many other resources for fund transactions. It has to serve the purpose of reaching out to areas and people where there are no branches," he said.  Mr Chakrabarty was of the opinion that technology will change the rules of the game in the banking sector. "Either rule will be changed due to technology or through technology for banks. When it is done through technology, banks would do it by choice and when it is done due to technology it would mean banks would do it out of competitive pressure. If neither of the two happens, banks will be out of the game," he said. He also said in order to make the business correspondent (BC) model viable, BCs have to be compensated well, since they make the frontline of the bank and bring in rural customers.
ET

Financial Literacy Drive

RBI Deputy Governor, K.C.Chakrabarty, advises investors to be cautious while investing in fraudulent schemes. Even as he underscored the need to enhance financial literacy and also expects media to play a role here. At a public address in Mumbai, he said, "It is an issue of financial awareness. When someone offers you anything more than the market rates, you have to be cautious. Giving away money to someone who claims to have got authorisation from RBI on the promise that you would get paid in return, is a foolish act.  Its like taking a thousand rupee note and putting it in fire and then complaining about losing money. This is what we are trying to do through financial literacy. First of all, literacy in this country is poor which is an issue, then on the top of it, financial literacy is a global issue. But well, media also has to play a role in making people aware of such frauds. They have to be made aware that money is not made so easily, you give 50 and you will get so much in return."
ET

Business correspondents need to be compensated adequately: RBI

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has asked banks to compensate business correspondents adequately to make financial inclusion a success. “Banks have to realise that for the Business Correspondent (BC) model to succeed the BCs, who are the first level of contact for customers, have to be compensated adequately, so that they too see this as a business opportunity,” RBI Deputy Governor K C Chakrabarty said at a banking technology summit in here on Tuesday. In order to achieve greater financial inclusion, banks are allowed to use the services of trusts, companies, post offices, co-operative societies and, more recently, retired bank employees, ex-servicemen and retired government employees as BCs. Recently, State Bank of India had to offer higher compensation to one of its BCs after he demanded more fees for his services. Chakrabarty also said the relationship between banks and the mobile service providers who work as BCs, is yet to stabilise. “Reports reaching us still suggest that the true spirit of co-operation is yet to stabilise, with each still trying to destabilise the other. The entire world is looking at this experiment in India and I would urge all of you to get your acts together.” Chakrabarty said the banks have not made significant progress on online reporting though the technology platform was launched three years before. “We are not happy with the (progress made in usage of the technology for) reporting part, we are trying to improve that.” In 2008, RBI had launched the eXtensible Business Reporting Language (XBRL) standards, a technology which would enable banks to report online to the regulator without manual intervention. This was supposed to be the next step after installing a core banking solution (CBS) in banks. So far, some banks are still to achieve the first step. According to the trends and progress report of 2009-10, about 90 per cent of bank branches are under the CBS network. Chakrabarty said public sector banks face a bigger challenge in terms of employing technology because of their sheer size, while foreign banks are better placed owing to the limited number of branches. “You require technology if you have a large network. Foreign banks do not face this problem because of a limited number of branches.” RBI had said in its annual monetary and credit policy for 2011-12 that it was in touch with banks and solution providers for implementing the recommendations over two years. The project would be implemented in a phased manner depending upon the technology and process maturity of individual banks. RBI had asked banks for a roadmap, clearly indicating the returns which can be sourced directly from the banks’ systems for submission to the central bank without manual intervention. It was also decided to prescribe a quarterly monitoring format in which banks could certify the list of returns internally generated from IT source systems without manual intervention. On banks' financial inclusion efforts, Chakrabarty said they will need another four to five years to expand services to everyone in this country. He said banks should use technology to scale up usage of mobile banking. “There has been progress in mobile banking, but it is very insignificant if compared to the total population using mobile technology,” Chakrabarty said.
BS

Bank staff plans strike against privatisation, law changes

Mumbai: Over 500 bank employees demonstrated outside the Reserve Bank of India to protest the government's policy to privatise public sector banks and to amend banking laws, among other issues. "The heavy downpour did not deter the spirit of these bank employees who turned out in large numbers to register their protest against privatising of public sector banks and issuance of new licenses to corporates for opening the new banks amongst other demands," said Vishwas Utagi, who coordinated the demonstration under the banner of United Forum of Bank Unions (UFBU). The protesters shouted slogans and held up placards opposing various amendments to banking laws currently awaiting parliamentary approval. Nearly one million bank employees and officers working in public, private and foreign banks will also join the all India bank strike July 7, called by UFBU, an umbrella organisation of nine banking unions, in support of their demands. "The strike call has emerged from a joint all India convention held at New Delhi last month, which has adopted unanimously a resolution on 20-point charter of demands," Utagi said. "In the name of banking reforms, the ownership of public sector banks is being diluted, leading to gradual privatisation of these banks," he added. The UFBU is also opposing the proposed amendment to Banking Regulation Act for removing the ceiling on voting rights for foreign investors, presently restricted to 10 percent. "This will enable the foreign capital to make inroads into Indian private sector banks," Utagi alleged. The organisation also opposes the outsourcing and contractualisation of permanent bank jobs. "The idea of banking correspondent or facilitators is another name of outsourcing the bank jobs. UFBU demands adequate recruitment in all bank branches," Utagi said. "Before observing a full strike July 7, we have also planned another massive demonstration rally in Mumbai on July 2," he added.

Braille reader makes Marathi language learning easier

It's the simplicity with which she can interpret Marathi grammar and punctuation, through a Braille reader that makes 22-year-old Siddhi Desai special. Desai, visually-impaired and an intern with the Reserve Bank of India, not only understands the syntax and semantics of the language, but is equally capable of teaching the same to other visually-impaired and even sighted individuals......

Read more........

RBI's larger goal is to set right the weak financial system


Investors queued up to buy the high-yielding bonds of Shriram Transport Finance Co, bidding three times the offer on day 1. Another set of investors are veering away from the same company's shares, leading to it losing a third of its value in just about two months.  Both reflect the emerging reality, not only for the biggest asset financier in the country, but about 12,000 non-banking finance companies (NBFCs) that face a new set of regulations once the committee headed by former the Reserve Bank of India Deputy Governor Usha Thorat comes out with its recommendations.  Risk-taking equity investors believe that new regulations will crimp financier's profitability, including higher cost of funds. The company is paying a high rate of interest to make buying of bonds attractive, validating equity investors' fear.  Few know what is in store for the industry that is both acclaimed as a saviour of the small entrepreneur, and a monster, which misleads small investors promising the moon, running many families' life-time savings. The truth lies somewhere in the middle.  The RBI probably decided to re-look at this segment not only to protect investors from losing money that has been partly achieved after a mini-crisis in the 90s, but has a broader objective now - the financial system.  There is a growing feeling that the nation's financial system which withstood the 2008 credit crisis may not be as strong when the next one strikes. The policy measures of the RBI are not as effective as they should be since the financial innovations of banks and the so-called NBFCs are overcoming various prudential norms.  Banks' funding of real estate and equity investments has been frowned upon by the regulator at all times, justifiably so. These are 'risky' sectors in RBI parlance. Despite strict vigil, there are signals that many are gaming the system. Bank loans to NBFCs have soared 55% in fiscal 2011, drawing RBI comments that it is 'lazy banking'. Gold loans at 5 lakh crore are growing at 50% annually. Securitisation of loans and assignment transactions has raised red flags. The lax bad loan recognition norms and the concentration of a few finance companies in lending to many near bankrupt state electricity boards. "While we understand the regulatory concerns, we are expecting a healthy prescription for growth and development of the NBFC sector," says TT Srinivasaraghavan, managing director at Chennai-based Sundaram Finance "Apart from the regulatory role, the regulator should play a developmental role as well and enunciate a clear-cut policy to aid the growth of the sector in a holistic manner,'' he added.  The worries of the industry may be justified given a recent round of tightening by the RBI. The capital adequacy requirements were raised to 15%, from 12% and eliminated the priority sector status to bank loans to finance companies. That hurt the most.  But the financial innovation was at work, although the cost of transactions rose a bit. Banks started buying the securitised paper from finance companies that qualified as a priority sector. Though no official word is out on that yet, bankers say that has also stopped.
ET

Lower crude prices to ease inflation firefight: Gokarn


The recent softening of fuel prices would make the fight against inflation by global monetary authorities easier, Reserve Bank of India (RBI) Deputy Governor Subir Gokarn said on Tuesday. “If this trend persists, it will provide substantial relief for global inflation management, particularly for large commodities importers,” he told a think tank conference in Washington. He pointed to the recent drop in US gasoline prices as a sign of the trend. India's ambassador to Washington, Meera Shankar, said at the conference that India welcomed actions by the US and other Western oil consumers to release oil from their strategic reserves, saying it was helping ease prices. Gokarn said a slowdown in growth due to RBI's policy tightening actions should also help ease inflation, which had been stubbornly high, in the nine per cent range. Earlier this month, India raised interest rates for the 10th time in just over a year, boosting the rate at which it lends to banks by 25 basis points to 7.5 per cent. RBI's baseline forecast anticipated India's annual growth rate slowing to around 8 per cent, Gokarn said. This compares to about 8.5 per cent for 2010-11. “From the inflation management perspective, this is not an entirely undesirable outcome,” he said. “If it results in a significant reduction in the inflation rate, it will represent a soft landing, which in turn opens up the opportunity for a reversal of the interest rate cycle,” he added. Nonetheless, Gokarn said, it was important to pay attention to evidence of household inflationary expectations that had risen with higher food prices. “Recent surveys have reinforced the perception that household expectations are moving up. Food prices play an important role in this process,” he said. However, Gokarn noted that yields on 10-year government bonds had remained steady, suggesting that investors' expectations for inflation over this time horizon remained anchored. Meanwhile, speaking at a business forum with Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee, US Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said India had outgrown its financial system and called for cooperation on reforms that would deepen India’s capital markets and allow US companies more access to them. He said India’s future growth largely depended on the “next wave” of financial reforms. The two finance ministers and their top lieutenants will participate in annual economic talks in Washington on Tuesday. “I think, from our perspective, the most important thing we would like to see is progress on financial reforms that provide a deeper, more liquid market for corporate debt for infrastructure financing, that allow a little more access of American companies and their technology in the financial area,” Geithner said. “Our interests are pretty complementary as a whole,” he added. The second instalment of the US-India Economic and Financial Partnership talks, launched last year in New Delhi, are not likely to stir acrimony. The two democracies, both powered by domestic-led growth with market-driven currencies, have many common goals.
BS

UP achieves milestone in financial inclusion

About 18 million no-frill accounts were opened for households, which previously had no such facility. Besides, the banks issued 2,60,000 general purpose credit cards to......

Continue reading.........

India can live with 6-6.5% inflation, says Pranab

"To be very frank, what shall be acceptable and what can be a tolerable level of inflation is very difficult to define. But in our economy, we feel that if we can keep inflationary pressure within 5-6%, it could be ideal, but we can live with 6-6.5%,"

Read..........

M.V.Tanksale appointed Central Bank CMD

The government on Tuesday appointed M V Tanksale, Executive Director, Punjab National Bank, as Chairman and Managing Director of Central Bank of India till July 31, 2013. Tanksale would take charge at the Mumbaibased bank on June 29.
BS

Jumping worm to keep state poll pitch warm

India's economy may have come out of the world's worst crisis in eight decades, but you should brace for a few more months of economic uncertainties. The government's bitter medicine to cure inflation has failed to keep the price worm down and cast side effects on growth..........

Click to read...........

Ain’t No Small Change: Chaar Anna Bows Out

Check all your trouser pockets. Search behind the couch cushions. Empty out the drawers in your desk. Because you have only till the end of banking hours on Wednesday to exchange your 25 paise coins for higher denomination coins and notes. As per a government notification, published in December 2010, the 25 paise coin, still called chaar anna by some, will cease to be legal tender from Thursday. “All banks having small coin depots have been directed to accept coins of 25 paise denomination and below for exchange for their face value at the bank branches up to close of business on June 29, 2011. This facility is also available at the Issue Offices of RBI,” says a RBI spokesperson. This news may come as no surprise. The 25 paise coin has vanished from our lives. A Mint official says none have been struck since 2002, but the larger reason is that inflation has rendered it useless, at least in the metros. A spokesman for BEST, which operates Mumbai’s buses and is probably the city’s last major handler of 25 paise coins since conductors were obliged to take them (though probably not without some cursing), says the decision will save them the hassle: “It will give relief not only to BEST but to the passengers too.” But perhaps the most telling comment comes from Cadbury’s, whose spokesperson says their cheapest product, Halls drops, are priced at 50 paise, and the éclairs are 1 each. When the sweets that shops give when they run short of change are worth more than a coin, you know its time is up. A finance ministry spokesman explains the other reason why the coin has been axed: “The ministry and RBI had been receiving complaints that the circulation of coins of the denomination of 25 paise and below has been stopped long ago since their metal value exceeded the face value, thus rendering them liable to melting and sale by unscrupulous elements.” This is the result of what is known as negative seigniorage, a reversal of an old privilege enjoyed by rulers and states when the value of the coins they issued exceeded the cost of making it. That difference in value accrued to the state, but this advantage could be reversed when the face value was low, and the price of the metals required was high. Soaring global prices for copper, nickel, zinc and stainless steel, the metals commonly used for coins these days, have resulted in most countries facing negative seigniorage on their small denomination coins, with the consequence of seeing large numbers of these coins disappearing. Essentially, the world’s Mints are subsidising the metal recycling business, which has led to bans on the practice, like the one imposed by the US Mint when they found that Jackson Metals, a company started by a metallurgist, was busy melting down its copper pennies.
The simpler solution is to recognise the reality of the situation and stop minting these coins. This, as an article by David Owen in the New Yorker explains, the US has found peculiarly hard to do thanks to a strong save-thepenny lobby that happens to be supported by one of the largest producers of metal blanks for coins and a company that operates coin changing machines. The result, as anyone who has been to the US can attest, is the almost ridiculous accumulation of pennies and nickels (the five cent coins which are even larger than pennies, so their negative seigniorage is really high). Despite this inconvenience, and the loss to the Mint, the US seems unable to stop the practice. In the rest of the world there is less attachment to coins, and other countries have reduced their use of lower denomination coins. New Zealand, for example, dropped its five cent coin in 2006 and reduced the size and weight of its other lower denomination coins. In India too, many of us can remember the one, two, three, five and 10 paise coins, all of which are no longer in use. Curiously, the RBI directive states that coins below 25 paise will also be accepted, which means this might be your last chance to use up any stacks of those old coins you still might have. But given their really low currency value, it will almost definitely make more sense to take them to the nearest metal scrap merchant.
Even if this link with the older low paise coins is inadvertent, it is appropriate since it signals that what ends with the 25 paise is not just the coin but also the long process that started in 1957 when India switched from the old system of rupees, annas, paise and pies to decimal currency. The first suggestion for use of decimal coins in India dates back to 1867, but it only became possible post-Independence when the government was able to ride on a general enthusiasm for modernity to overcome the many fears linked to the process. Even then, just days after the new coinage had come in on April 1, the Times of India grumbled in an edit that the introduction could have been postponed till after the onset of the Third Five-Year Plan, “but it serves little purpose to argue the opposite case now. All efforts should now be devoted to making the complete transition as smooth an event as possible”. The 25 paise coin played a crucial role in this change. Because we were switching from a system of 64 paise to a rupee (or 192 pies, if one really wants to consider the full complexity) to one of 100 paise to a rupee, the conversion was never going to be exact. Five paise, for example, was nine pies and 20 paise was 3 annas, 3 pies. The government issued tables that advised rounding off “by ignoring fractions of half a naya paisa and below and treating more than half a naya paisa as 1 naya paisa”. This sort of confusion was involved with all the lower denomination coins, except for the 25 paise which was deemed to be an exact substitute for the old quarter rupee or four anna coin (just as the 50 paise above it substituted the half rupee or eight anna coin). This ease of substitution is, in fact, probably why the 25 paise was introduced at all. Otherwise a strict decimal series should go in multiples of 10, yet retaining the old quarter value coin was a way to keep the transition simpler. This is probably why, even 54 years later, the old habit of saying ‘chaar anna’ never entirely died out. It is notable how, in the articles in the Times of India in the run-up to the change, the four anna is often used as the simplest way of conveying an argument. On March 22, 1957, for example, one reader, LR Patwardhan, used it to point to the common fear of being fleeced by traders: “A retailer buying 4 annas worth of articles, such as vegetable, may sell to 16 persons an old paisa’s worth each and collect 32 NP, thus gaining 7 NP on a capital of 25 NP.” In the event, transition was quite smooth, partly due to the preparation from the government and banks, which had been publishing ads announcing how to do the change. Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru extolled this “silent, but far-reaching revolution” which, he helpfully pointed out, was really a return of sorts to the mathematical systems of ancient India which had invented the concept of zero. In Mumbai, the railways were the first to use the new coins while, as always, enterprising street kids got in on the act by offering people the new coins at a premium. An Asian Paints ad in the Times of India declared: ‘Old coins or Naye Paise, you’ll get best value for your money with Asian Paints’. Another for Burmah-Shell started neatly with a dialogue: ‘“An anna for your thoughts?” “It will cost you 6 NP now”’. The one place real trouble was reported from was Calcutta. Bombay might have shrugged off the sort of profitable rounding up that the Times reader had warned of, but in Calcutta this caused riots. The police had to be called to protect several post offices where the staff had rounded up and were refusing to sell at the old rates. But some measure of the horror can be felt when the Times reporter wrote that at the iconic India Coffee House a cup of eight ounce coffee “which was charged at four annas till yesterday was priced at 4 annas and 9 pies, or 30 naye paise, while the six ounce mixed coffee was not served yesterday”. Of such small things are revolutions made. The fact though that a cup of coffee was priced at more than 25 paise does suggest that, at least in large cities, even then the purchasing power of the coin was never that great. The cheapest cinema ticket price in Bombay then — Guru Dutt’s Pyaasa was in its sixth week and still doing well — was 1.5 rupees (but four annas would get you entry to the Bombay Art Society’s 66th annual exhibition at the Jehangir Art Gallery). Another indication that 25 paise wasn’t seen as a particularly enduring value can be seen from the relative rarity of stamps issued by the post office at that rate. According to its list of stamps, the last large issue of 25 paise stamps was in 1974-75 (but philatelic traders MM Mukhi & Sons say that there was one more, featuring Rajarshi Shahu Chatrapati, the reformist king of Kolhapur, in 1979). Perhaps though, the fate of the 25 paise coin can best be seen in its designs. There were never many of them: several variations featuring the lions of our national emblem, commemoratives for Rural Women’s Advancement (1980), World Food Day (1981), the Asian Games (1982) and Forestry (1985). Since then there was only one last design, but it was perhaps the most striking of any modern Indian coin: the rhinoceros coin first issued in 1988. This design is something of a mystery — it is not part of a series, has no obvious explanation for use, yet it is beautifully achieved and fills the small space of the coin quite perfectly. The one sadness of the end of the 25 paise coin is that it ends use of this design and one can only wonder: given the very uncertain future of the Indian rhino, did the designer perhaps have a presentiment of the eventual extinction of this coin as well?

ET

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Regulatory Bodies Sing Different Tunes On MF Industry

When the Reserve Bank of India sought MF business details from banks,  the Deputy Governor came up with another discouraging statement for the industry last week, stating that the mutual fund industry has not lived up to expectations of promoting savings and financial inclusion in the country.  Subir Gokarn, Deputy Governor, RBI said, “The role of mutual funds to promote savings continues to be insignificant, with mutual funds contributing less than 10% of the Indian GDP, despite its popularity the world-over.“ He was speaking at the 7th Mutual Fund Conference of the Confederation of Indian Industry (CII).  “One major reason is that mutual fund penetration in rural areas is small and there is a perception that, they are only for the middle and high income groups. For the mutual fund sector to grow fast, we have to device appropriate schemes to attract the rural populace and find ways of financial inclusion for low income household.” The statements of RBI are coming when the MF industry is bearing brunt of various regulatory measures taken by the regulatory bodies in the country.  On the other hand, indicating slews of disclosure norms for the industry in the pipeline, the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) Chairman, U. K. Sinha at the same conference stressed the need for more disclosures and regulation. However, he added that the changes should be brought in a non-disruptive manner in the mutual fund industry. “SEBI is looking into distributor regulation, but not in a disruptive manner. It will be for limited number of large distributor and will be a disclosure-based system. If we set the rules of games and apply it uniformly, it will help the industry,” Sinha said.  He also said, “With the number of folios declining and small town sales reducing, there is a need to incentivise the distributor. Unless incentives are given to distributors, it will be difficult to increase penetration of the industry and help its potential for transferring gains of the economy to the remote corners of the country and its populace”.  Sinha said, “The mandate for SEBI is three fold: to protect the interests of investors, to develop the market and to regulate the market. In our view, these three are not contradictory and we work equally towards all three mandates. It is, hence, our motive to increase transparency, bring about a good level of disclosure, have uniform KYC (Know Your Customer) for all activities within the capital market, bring uniformity in the use of load balances, enhance liquidity for faulty liquidities, put up a SEBI complaint redressal system and deal with wrong or unauthorised news by intermediaries severely”.  The statements from the same dais, from the key regulatory bodies have certainly put the balls rolling in different directions for the MF industry. Though, it would take time to see the implications, there is nothing more for the industry to do at this moment.
The Afternoon

Shyamala Gopinath retires as director of State Bank of India

Mumbai: Former RBI Deputy Governor Shyamala Gopinath retires from her post of director of State Bank of India (SBI) with effect from June 20, 2011, the bank said in filing with exchanges. Gopinath was nominated on the SBI board by the RBI. Last week, she relinquished the office of RBI Deputy Governor. 

Nokia introduces Mobile Money on all devices

Global handset maker Nokia today said it had started embedding the Mobile Money client service in all its devices in India. The service is available not only on high-end Symbian smartphone devices, but also on Nokia’s Series 40 feature phones and Series 30 entry level devices. The service is supported by keyboard devices, touch devices and a combination of the two. The Mobile Money service provides access to financial services to the unbanked and under-banked population through mobile phones, ‘empowering people and their businesses’. The service eliminates the need for intermediaries. In its functions, the service is integrated with the phone and other phone services. For example, the selection of the recipient in a send-money transaction is directly integrated with the phone book. Sending money thus becomes as simple as sending a message or making a phone call. To make the service simpler, the user-interface is decoupled and separated from data transport. Therefore, the user would not need to know which transport (SMS, GPRS or wifi) is in use during the transaction. The Mobile Money service allows users to avail of multiple financial services functions such as account management, with detailed balance information, tracking and details of each transaction, payment of bills, money transfer, cash withdrawal from business correspondents cash-out outlets (registered Nokia stores) and automated teller machines and prepaid SIM top-ups. People with Nokia phones without the Mobile Money client, can simply visit a Nokia Money agent and get the application loaded on to their phones. They can also use the service through text messages, which do not require a client.  Nokia is building an open ecosystem for mobile payments in India and the Nokia Money mobile financial services initiative is already being implemented through partnerships with Union Bank of India, YES Bank, Obopay and a wide range of merchants, retailers and business correspondents. The services—Union Bank Money and YES Banks Mobile Money Services—are available in several regions and would be rolled out across India in the coming quarters. Consumers would have the option of choosing and subscribing to either Union Bank Money or YES Bank Mobile Money Services from their Nokia devices. The service can be activated at Nokia retail outlets, as well as outlets that are authorised banking correspondents of YES Bank and/or Union Bank of India. Gary Singh, general manager, Nokia Mobile Payment Services, said, “At Nokia, it has been our constant endeavour to democratise experiences, products and platforms for consumers. Mobile Money services eliminate the dependence on the physical presence of a branch or the availability of internet banking services. Embedding the Money client in Nokia devices further makes the service ubiquitous and accessible for consumers across categories.”
BS

iCreate Software announces RBI guidelines-compliant automated data flow solution for banks

Bangalore-based, iCreate Software today announced its reporting solution BizScore to enable banks comply with RBI’s Automated Data Flow guidelines. A packaged BI/analytics solution built specifically for banks.......

Read.........

Reserve Bank of India to release first quarter review of annual monetary policy on Jul 26

New Delhi: Governor of Reserve Bank of India (RBI) D Subbarao will release the first quarter (April-June) monetary policy 2011-12 review on July 26, 2011. The review statement will be made in a meeting with the chief executives of major scheduled commercial banks at 11.00 a.m. on July 26, 2011 at the central office of RBI in Mumbai, it said in a statement.  In the RBI's mid-quarter review held on June 16, it raised key policy rates by 25 basis points to tame surging inflation by curtailing demand in the country. With the latest policy rate hike – the 10th time since March 2010 – the central bank took its short-term lending (repo) rate to 7.5% and the short-term borrowing (reverse repo) rate to 6.5%.  The RBI was unequivocal in maintaining an anti-inflationary stance going forward even at the cost of affecting growth in its latest review. India's headline inflation, which is partly being impacted by high crude oil prices in the international market, has been hovering around 9%, higher than RBI's comfort level of 5%-6%. For the month of May, headline inflation accelerated to 9.06% on-year, faster than 8.66% on-year price rise recorded in April.
http://banking.contify.com/story/rbi-announce-q1-monetary-policy-2011-12-review-jul-26

Mobile money users in India to reach 10 crore by 2015

........Initiatives, such as Reserve Bank of India's (RBI) easing of stringent regulations pertaining to mobile banking via increase of cap on fund transfers from Rs.4,955.36 ($111) – Rs.50,000 ($1,113); and new interbank mobile payment service launched by the National Payment Corporation of India (NPCI), are nurturing the required ecosystem for increased ..............

Click to read....... 

Sense of collective responsibility is missing in the government – Bimal Jalan



New Delhi: Bimal Jalan, a former governor of the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), is widely credited as having successfully limited the impact of the East Asian crisis on India in 1997. Currently an honorary fellow at the National Council of Applied Economic Research, Jalan said in a telephone interview that it is time for the government to end the discretionary powers of ministers and leave the implementation of important policies to independent agencies. Edited excerpts:
What do you think is the biggest policy challenge before the government? Is it curbing inflation or preserving economic growth?
There can be no doubt that inflation has to be the highest priority. It has continued for long and despite expectations that with good rain, we will not have food prices rising and inflation would decline; it has not happened. Ultimately, if inflation is not controlled, it will become the enemy of growth.
So that means some degree of growth has to be sacrificed in the process?
No, I think this is a wrong question. Under any circumstances, growth is a process. It is not sacrificing growth but achieving long-term process of growth. So if you can achieve reduction of inflation for one or two years, how does it matter if growth rate declines from 8.5% to 7.5%? Just imagine, we spend so much of time and newspaper headlines are so preoccupied on the second digit (decimal point in the growth number), but does it matter to the people of India? Inflation matters much more.
Is high inflation becoming a structural phenomenon in India, because we are experiencing such high inflation rates for the last two years?
Yes, one has to get into the ingredients of why it is happening. Is RBI too soft? Somebody has to grapple with what exactly is happening. We had 15% inflation in the past in the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s, but that was all controlled. In the 1990s also we had a high rate of inflation. So I think it is not something which is out of control and we should be prepared to focus on that issue rather than hoping that something would happen. And you can see, just look at your newspaper headlines for last eight-nine months—there were expectations that inflation will come down from different sources, but it has not. So something has to be done.
Is monetary policy an effective enough tool to curb inflation?
Monetary policy is one of the most important ingredients of controlling inflation expectations. If everybody expects vegetable prices are going to go up, every household will buy vegetables tomorrow. So the view that RBI, the government authorities are going to get it right is important.
Then you will not buy (extra amounts) and stocks will decline, for both industries and for households.
How close do you think we are to the end of the current policy rate increase cycle by RBI?
I do not know. I can’t predict that. If inflation comes down, then naturally you would not need to hike rates. But if inflation does not come down, then something has to be done.
How do you see the impact on the global economy and India in case Greece defaults?
That is a big thing. If you go to the past history, it goes to the root of the viability of euro as a currency. If debt and fiscal deficit are not under control of the same government, so this federalism with different countries deciding what should be done and what should not be done and currency flexibility not being there is a big problem. A double-dip recession is already being talked about. But I hope it will be corrected because Europe is one of the very important components of global growth. If there is a recession, there will be direct impact on India. Fortunately, our dependence on trade is not as high as some other countries.
To what would you attribute the present state of policy paralysis and the lack of economic reforms?
It is something on which there are different voices. We all know the sense of collective responsibility, which is fundamental to the functioning of our parliamentary democracy, is not quite there. It does not need a great political scientist to say that. Every day there is something coming up. Naturally, this is affecting governance and I hope something will be done.
Does this policy paralysis have the potential to derail India’s growth story?
In the long run, it is bound to. We have been reading headlines of this whole enthusiasm becoming somewhat milder, there is concern all around.
The behaviour pattern of consumers, investors, corporate, public sector will be determined by what exactly is the expectation. When you are investing for the next four years, say in infrastructure, you are making some demand and revenue projections. If that changes, then your revenue will decline and your ability to finance investment will decline. So, of that there is no doubt.
What are the major economic reforms you would like to see?
On economic reforms, it is of utmost importance to deliver what you say I will, in the sense that on the public delivery side, food delivery to the poor, the working of the rural employment scheme, construction of power stations or delivery of power. If you say you want to do this, you have to do this. If you succeed, then people will start feeling that, yes, the government means what it says.
What about big-ticket reforms such as allowing foreign direct investment (FDI) in multi-brand retail and increasing the limit in insurance?
No, all that I don’t believe in. These are all very simple solutions, which is okay, but ultimately it is the execution of what you are saying.
Suppose I say I am increasing FDI limit in power, then if the state government, the Central government or the power development authority can’t implement it, then how does it matter. Capital is not a problem. So you have to look for execution. Ultimately, it is the real economy which matters.
So how do you think the present policy paralysis could be ended?
You have a sovereign government. If it decides to do something collectively, it will happen. We have some brilliant minds in the government also. This is the same country which has given you the freest election with the largest population in the world history. Why can’t you do what you want to do? Why can’t you appoint an agency and give it full power. Why should ministers decide? You take 2G (second-generation) spectrum allocation, why should they decide? You decide policy.
What do you think went wrong with the 2G spectrum allocation?
Once you give discretion, then today you have Mr X, tomorrow you will have Mr Y, day after tomorrow you will have Mr Z. You take the highways. Go over the ground for the last five years, each new minister has a different view. Some are very, very good. Some are good in talking and some are good in execution. For example, who does elections in India—some bureaucrats.
You decide the policy, you decide the dates, but the Election Commission is in charge. So, one, you need to decide the policy and leave it to the agency to implement, and, two, monitoring the delivery system—these are the two most fundamental reforms that you need. The age has changed.
Government would say, we are elected people, we have the right, etc. Yes, you are elected to make policy, but why is the Election Commission allowed to hold elections and not the home ministry? So we need to think about it. We need to do something about it.
So much energy is being invested on issues such as corruption and black money these days. Do you think it demands the highest priority of the government?
Obviously, but go to the root. Why is it that you have a system of corporate-government (nexus). How did this happen? Who had the discretion? The answers are simple. How did it happen that this country is regarded and applauded for its democracy and elections and the same country is regarded as one of the most corrupt. The conviction rate under corruption is minimum. Why?
So it is basically the concentration of power in the hands of a few?
Yes, it is concentration of discretionary power. Where I want to have a highway and where not, which state I come from, which is my district. Then the compulsions of coalition. The compulsions of coalition did not stop you from having a free election of the highest number of people in the world in history.
Your report on ownership and management of stock exchanges has evoked strong responses. Some of the criticism to this report is that it is not in tune with international best practices. What are your views?
There are different practices abroad. The committee consisted of representatives from Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi), finance ministry and listed companies. It engaged in a lot of consultations. It is for Sebi to decide after taking into account more opinions. This is not the last word. And we have said that you must constitute a committee after five years. I am not saying the committee may be right regarding non-listing of stock exchanges. Why it has opposed this is because stock exchanges also have supervisory power. Once you can separate supervisory power, you set up another agency and say you would be a trading platform and some other independent agency would decide what the supervisory, regulatory role of the stock exchange is, then you can list.
Mint

India's schizophrenic banks

In a move that is commendable, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has decided to continue with its recent practice of issuing periodic Financial Stability Reports (FSRs), or assessments of the strength and resilience of the financial system. Last year, reports were issued in.....

Click to read................ 

Lower oil to ease inflation - RBI Deputy

The recent softening of prices for fuel will make the fight against inflation by global monetary authorities easier, Reserve Bank of India (RBI) Deputy Governor Subir Gokarn said on Monday. "If this trend persists, it will provide substantial relief for global inflation management, particularly for large commodities importers," Gokarn told a think tank conference in Washington. He pointed to the recent drop in U.S. gasoline prices as a sign of the trend. India's ambassador to Washington, Meera Shankar, said at the conference that India welcomed actions by the United States and other Western oil consumers to release oil from their strategic reserves, saying it was helping to ease prices. Gokarn said a slowdown in growth due to the central bank's policy tightening actions should also help ease inflation, which has been stubbornly high in the 9 percent range. Earlier this month, India raised interest rates for the 10th time in just over a year, boosting the rate at which it lends to banks by 25 basis points to 7.5 percent. The RBI's baseline forecast anticipates India's annual growth rate slowing to around 8 percent, Gokarn said. This compares to about 8.5 percent for the 2010/11 fiscal year. "From the inflation management perspective, this is not an entirely undesirable outcome," he added. "If it results in a significant reduction in the inflation rate, it will represent a soft landing, which in turn opens up the opportunity for a reversal of the interest rate cycle." Nonetheless, Gokarn said, it is important to pay attention to evidence of household inflationary expectations that have risen with higher food prices. "Recent surveys have reinforced the perception that household expectations are moving up. Food prices play an important role in this process," he said. However, Gokarn noted that yields on 10-year government bonds have remained steady, suggesting that investors' expectations for inflation over this time horizon remain anchored
IBN Live

Demand for home loans set to dip: Experts

In 2011, as the housing market in the West slowly picks up, the Indian market may be in for slack. SBI withdrew its home loan scheme with effect from May, after RBI raised concerns on the borrowers' ability to repay them over longer tenures. After a period of sustained growth, bankers expect a moderation in home loan growth in the coming months......

Read more...........

Banks say time not ripe to deregulate savings rate

Banks have moved the Reserve Bank of India to defer the proposal to deregulate the interest rate on savings bank (SB) deposit till such time that interest rates don't moderate.  Unshackling the interest rate on SB deposits in the current rising interest rate regime could set-off unhealthy competition, fear bankers. This could prompt banks to jack up their SB rates in their attempt to outbid rivals, with attendant consequences for net interest margins (net interest income/ earning assets). The RBI should consider ushering in deregulation of the SB deposit rate only when the interest rate is falling as banks then will not attempt to outdo each other by quoting attractive interest rates, said a senior public sector banker. The spread between the SB rate (4 per cent) and fixed deposit rates (according to the RBI, the average of major banks for term deposits of more than one year maturity is 8.25/9.10 per cent) has widened to 4.25/5.10 percentage points over the last one-and-a-half years. Should the RBI free the SB rate when interest rates in the economy are headed north, then it will have a telling impact on banks' net interest margins, the banker said. Around this time last year, the spread between the SB rate (3.5 per cent) and fixed deposit rates (average of major banks for term deposits of more than one year maturity: 6.00/7.50) was lower at 2.50/4.00 percentage points. If the RBI allows complete deregulation of the interest rate on SB deposits at a time when interest rates are rising, then it will set off a price war, leading to banks, especially from the private sector, offering even 5-6 per cent interest on these deposits, according to a bank economist.  Bankers from the public sector have an apprehension that the proposed deregulation by the RBI could see a portion their assiduously built SB portfolio getting shifted to private sector banks as the latter typically have a proclivity to attract depositors by offering slightly higher interest rates. If the RBI ushers in deregulation then banks want a free hand to innovate as well as price their SB deposit schemes, as per the feedback given by banks to the RBI. SB depositors can expect a differential treatment in a deregulated regime. Those maintaining higher balance could earn higher interest rate and enjoy free transactions while those maintaining lower balance would earn lower interest and get charged for transactions. Meanwhile, the All India Bank Depositors Association said the RBI should determine the floor rate for SB deposit interest rate without prescribing any ceiling. To protect the small depositor and ensure healthy competition, the RBI should determine the floor rate from time to time depending on the market conditions and the prevailing inflation scenario without prescribing any ceiling rate, suggested the Association.
Business Line

Ramdev under ED scanner


...The Enforcement Directorate (ED) is investigating Baba Ramdev’s foreign assets and investments by seeking details about them from all available official sources, including the Reserve Bank of India. The probe is taking place under the Foreign Exchange Management Act (Fema). .......

Read "Yoganomics" ................

Reasons for bank strike

This has reference to the editorial “Bank unions miss the point” (Business Line, June 23).  The concerns about expansion and financial inclusion are well observed. The unions are striking work for other reasons also. In a country like India where there is adequate manpower available for recruitment and more opportunities in the banking sector for employment, outsourcing of banking jobs is exploitation of unorganised labour. These jobs can be given to regular employees by fresh recruitment, which will ensure loyalty to and involvement with the organisation.
S. Veeraraghavan, Madurai (Business Line)

Not a success mantra

It is strange that your editorial found fault with the unions that are opposing too much liberalisation in the financial sector, especially banking. Privatisation is not the mantra for success or efficiency. No one can understand the logic of allowing businessmen and industrialists to start banking services, when scams are rocking our nation with scary regularity. If financial inclusion is the reason for opening the doors of banking to industrialists and business houses, then privatisation would not serve the purpose. How many telecom giants have opted for serving the small towns and villages in our country?
S.A.S. Sarma (Business Line)

New RBI forex rate setting may cut volatility, hit arbitrage

Mumbai: The Reserve Bank of India’s new procedure for calculating reference rates for spot dollar-rupee and euro-rupee pairs may reduce the extent of volatility in the local unit but could also hurt market liquidity. The RBI has said it will poll select banks during a randomly selected five-minute window between 10:30 am and 12:30 pm on weekdays to arrive at the reference rate. This will be effective from July 1. The central bank now announces the reference rate by averaging the mean of the bid-offer rates polled by it from a few select banks around 12 noon every weekday. For Monday, the central bank has set reference rates for the US unit and for the euro at 45.10 and 63.75, respectively. The new procedure will reduce arbitrage opportunities for banks in the forward dollar market, which will deter them from making such trades, dealers said. “In my view, there will be a sudden fall in onshore/offshore arbitrage trades done against the fix since onshore banks will probably not execute spot orders at the fixing rate for a start,” said Kenneth Kan, head of emerging markets - forex trading, Credit Agricole Corporate and Investment Bank, Singapore. Under the old system, as the time-frame used by the RBI to set reference rates was public knowledge, it provided incentive for nudging the spot rupee rate in a particular direction, dealers said. Contracts in the dollar-rupee non-deliverable forwards (NDF) market use the reference rate for settlement, they said. “The other impact is there could be much more volatility on the shorter end NDF forward points since we won’t get the huge arbitrage volume that has kept the points close to onshore levels,” Kan said. Of late, concerns over portfolio outflows by foreign funds have kept the rupee in a weakening trend. So far this month, the rupee has moved in 44.84-45.14 per dollar band, with foreign funds pulling out $288 million from Indian shares. The new norms could also lower banks’ risk-taking ability in the foreign exchange market as the reference rate market may now see reduced activity, traders said. “When you don’t know what time the reference rate is frozen, you won’t know when to cover and it will be a big risk. So if there is an exactly opposing counterparty, only then can you fill a reference rate order,” said a foreign exchange dealer with a large government-owned bank. Many banks may stop taking reference rate orders from customers which could lead to a fall in trading volumes, dealers said. In a reference rate order, the bank buys or sells dollars for customers at the central bank’s reference rate, traders said. However, despite RBI’s best intentions of curtailing volatility, it may eventually hit the domestic currency market. RBI doesn’t want the activity to be concentrated at a particular time. However, instead of keeping the time for the fixing uncertain, RBI could have taken the average of, say, an hour trading to arrive at the reference rate, said a dealer.
FE

Green signal for FDI in proprietary trading

The finance ministry has decided to allow foreign direct investment (FDI) in proprietary trading, despite the Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI’s) opposition. RBI feels allowing foreign companies into this business may affect financial stability....

Read..............