India’s Modi creates bank giants to spur economy

Bloomberg

India announced its most sweeping bank overhaul in decades, minutes before data showed economic growth in Asia’s No. 3 economy slumped to a six-year low.
Four new lenders that result from a series of state-bank mergers will hold business worth 55.8 trillion rupees ($781 billion), or about 56 percent of the Indian banking
industry, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman said at a briefing in New Delhi. The government will inject a combined 552.5 billion rupees of capital into these entities, she said.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi is counting on larger and healthier banks to spur fresh credit and revive economic growth that came in far lower than economists expected.
A slump in domestic demand and the world’s worst bad-loan ratio had been restricting scope for a revival in investment.
“Banks with strong national presence and global reach is what we want,” Sitharaman said at the briefing.
“Scaling up will only allow them to have lot more resources and therefore the lending cost can come down.”
Punjab National Bank, Oriental Bank of Commerce and United Bank of India will combine to form the nation’s second-largest lender with loans worth 7.5 trillion rupees. Canara Bank will join Syndicate Bank; 6.6 trillion rupees. Union Bank of India with Andhra Bank and Corporation Bank; 6.4 trillion rupees and Indian Bank with Allahabad Bank;
3.5 trillion rupees.
The government will ensure that no bank employee is hurt by the decisions, Finance Secretary Rajiv Kumar said at the briefing. He added that no one lost their job when the government helped facilitate a merger of Dena Bank and Vijaya Bank with Bank of Baroda last year, creating the third-largest bank by loans in the country.
India will now have 12 state-run banks instead of 27. The 10-member S&P BSE Bankex index rose 0.6 percent in Mumbai before the decisions were announced, compared with a 0.7 percent gain in the benchmark gauge.

‘Bigger Issue’
“Just increasing the size of balance sheets and combining operations of banks will only reduce the number of state-owned lenders but asset quality stress is unlikely to be taken care of,” said Avinash Gorakshakar, head of research at Joindre Capital Services Ltd in Mumbai. “The bigger issue still remains as how risk profiling would improve banks’ bad-loan ratio ahead.”
After returning to power with a stronger mandate, Modi has been grappling with an economy still hurting from the fallout of his cash ban in 2016 and the botched rollout of a
nationwide sales tax. A bad-loan cleanup in the banking sector has contained credit to companies and a crisis among shadow lenders is denying consumers loans to buy goods like cars and refrigerators. Meanwhile unemployment is at a 45-year high as companies refrain from new investments.
Data showed gross domestic product growth slowed for a fifth straight quarter to 5 percent in the three months ended in June. That’s slower than the 5.7 percent expansion predicted in a Bloomberg survey. The rupee pared gains in the offshore market.
India’s state banks pledged that they would pass on all policy-rate cuts to their customers, which means Indian borrowers would benefit from the most aggressive monetary easing in Asia this year.
In a spate of announcements within the space of a week, the government has eased foreign investment rules and given concessions on vehicle purchases. It also secured more fiscal space to stimulate the economy with a windfall from the central bank in excess of $24 billion.
“Clearly consolidation from our perspective is not a remedy or a panacea,” Saswata Guha, director and head of financial institutions at Fitch Ratings in India, told BloombergQuint. “Those issues still need to be resolved.”

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