Dash for Cash ; with Non-Food Credit Growing at Two Times the Rate of Deposits, Fuelled by Burgeoning Demand for Housing and Personal Loans, Banks Are Scrambling to Beef Up Their Capital Base.
Business Today › December 09, 2005
Linked as:
Business Today › December 09, 2005
Linked as:Summary
The auditorium of the National Centre for Performing Arts (NCPA) in south Mumbai is often host to theatrical productions that range from the traditional to the experimental. In August, the hall was the venue for what you would normally assume to be an event completely bereft of comedy, tragedy, history or experiment-the annual general meeting (AGM) of the Indian Banks' Association (IBA). Also present at the AGM, along with the assorted head honchos of India's premier banks, was Finance Minister P. Chidambaram. Not totally unpredictably, the theatrical environs of the AGM setting prevailed over the lack of a dramatic air at the AGM, prompting the FM to hark back to a bit of Shakespearean melodrama. Picking out a couplet from Henry VI, Part II, Chidambaram thundered: "Ignorance is the curse of God; Knowledge is the wing wherewith we fly to heaven." Even as the front rows packed with by-now baffled bank ceos pondered the provocation for this rather cryptic tempest, the minister duly set out to rephrase the good bard of Avon: "Inaction is the curse of God; action is the wing wherewith we fly to heaven."
It may have been a rather drastic method of conveying a pithy message to the banking community, but it seems to have worked well enough. For, the industry is indeed in action mode, at least on the capital-raising front. Consider: ICICI Bank is expected to hit the US and domestic markets in December with a mega-issue of Rs 7,000 crore-the largest ever equity offering, second only to ONGC's 10,000 crore offer last year. Other banks too have hopped on the capital- raising wagon: Kotak Bank plans to raise a little over Rs 300 crore, Union Bank of India will mobilise Rs 600 crore, and Bank of Baroda has plans to mop up Rs 1,600 crore. The list is long (see It's Raining Equity Offerings), with most of these banks taking the plunge in a bid to raise their tier-I equity capital (banks' capital comprises two tiers, tier I and tier II. Tier I is the core capital consisting of equity capital, reserves and surpluses, while tier II refers to debt capital).See the full content of this document
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Dash for Cash ; with Non-Food Credit Growing at Two Times the Rate of Deposits, Fuelled by Burgeoning Demand for Housing and Personal Loans, Banks Are Scrambling to Beef Up Their Capital Base.
Even without Chidambaram's exhortations, bank CEOs would have had their compulsions for rushing to the markets, the biggest one being the lag between bank deposits and banks' non-food credit: Whilst the former grew by 15 per cent in 2005, non-food credit was up by twice that figure. H...
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