Global - Economy and Market
Gasoline pushes inflation up in January
WASHINGTON - Gasoline prices jumped in January, leading overall consumer prices higher and offering a reminder of the risks energy costs pose to the economic recovery.
Bernanke says recovery slow but small banks climbing back
WASHINGTON - The weak economic recovery has made it harder for banks to make money from loans but the financial conditions of smaller institutions appear to be solidifying, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said on Thursday.
Manufacturing, housing data flag underlying strength
WASHINGTON - U.S. manufacturing output rose in January and a gauge of factory activity in New York state hit a 1-1/2-year high in February, showing a solid underpinning for the economic recovery. Housing starts rose more than expected in January as groundbreaking on rental property surged, boosting hopes the still-weak housing sector could help economic growth this year.
Fed is open to boosting economy if recovery falters
The Federal Reserve appears willing to stimulate the U.S. economy more if necessary, according to minutes of the central bank's January meeting. Officials are worried that recent signs of a strengthening economy are short-lived, the minutes show.
Europe posts economic shrinkage for Q4
The EU and eurozone economies each contracted 0.3% in the fourth quarter, sending Belgium, Italy, the Netherlands and Portugal into recession. The gross domestic product of Germany, Europe's biggest economy, declined 0.2%. France, the second-largest, saw GDP grow 0.2%.
Greek cabinet tackles austerity, rescue hopes rise
ATHENS - Greece's cabinet tackled on Saturday how to implement austerity demanded by the EU and IMF as a 130-billion-eurorescue seemed within reach, while the euro zone considered modifying a deal with private creditors to help Athens reduce its huge debts.
China says it will invest in Europe's bailout funds
People's Bank of China Governor Zhou Xiaochuan said China will invest in the EU's rescue funds and maintain its euro investments. "China will always adhere to the principle of holding assets of EU sovereign debt," he said. "We would participate in resolving the euro debt crisis." Premier Wen Jiabao made a similar statement.
China cuts banks' reserve ratios for second time
SHANGHAI - China's central bank cut the amount of cash that commercial lenders must hold as reserves on Saturday for the second time in nearly three months, the latest step to shore up the slowing economy. The government is reluctant to give the green light to another bout of big bank lending, with inflation risks lingering and, more importantly, policymakers are determined to cool down the property sector to ward off a speculative bubble. Few analysts believe the central bank will cut interest rate cuts this year, with annual inflation staying stubbornly higher than the one-year deposit rate of 3.5 percent.
China: January New Loans
• Banks lent out Rmb738.1bn in new loans in January, less than the market's expectation of a Rmb1tn rise, although we believe this was influenced by the fewer working days in January this year due to the Chinese new year festival.
• This coincides with the government's measured easing approach, but we need to take into account the amount of new loans in February to view the whole picture. M2 growth also decelerated further to 12.4% yoy in January.
• We suspect lending must have been very slow after the robust activities during the first week after the calendar new year. Banks granted a large sum of credit to local governments and local investment vehicles in the first week of January, but that momentum might have quickly cooled off.
• We think the current credit easing is selective, with property developers being excluded. Demand from businesses for real investments is also weak. The liquidity situation has improved, however, especially among the SMEs. We think growth prospects remains biased on the weak side.
Japan slowly wakes up to doomsday debt risk
TOKYO - Capital flight, soaring borrowing costs, tanking currency and stocks and a central bank forced to pump vast amounts of cash into local banks -- that is what Japan may have to contend with if it fails to tackle its snowballing debt.
India - Economy and Market
Industrial production provided a modest downside surprise relative both to consensus and our own forecast – coming in at 1.8% yoy. This was down from 5.9% in the previous month, while we estimate that output fell 1.6% on a seasonally adjusted month-on-month basis.
What's the underlying trend? In truth, production has been even more volatile than normal in the last few months, falling very heavily in October, before bouncing back even more strongly in November and then partially correcting in December. The best guide to the underlying trend is probably given by the three month-on-three month seasonally adjusted annualized rate. This has moved up from a low of -13% in October to 3.3% in December. As such, it is beginning to look as though production has bottomed in underlying terms – a view supported by the strong improvement we have seen in India's manufacturing PMI.
India's January wholesale price inflation came in at 6.6% yoy, slightly below the market's and our expectations, and the lowest inflation rate since 2009. We estimate that WPI rose only 0.1% on a seasonally adjusted basis from the previous month.
Another piece of good news is that the RBI's measure of core inflation, the manufacturing WPI ex-food, also moderated to 6.7% yoy from 7.7% in December, and the lowest level since January 2011.
These developments further support our rate cut call. We recently changed our interest rate view, and are now expecting the first repo rate cut to come in March (rather than April), with reductions totaling 175bps by January 2013.
Although recent developments in oil prices pose some upside risk to inflation, we believe our sub-consensus 5.8% 2012-13 year average WPI forecast leaves some room for the impact of higher commodity prices.
India consumer spending set to soar by 2020: study
MUMBAI: India's consumer spending is likely to expand nearly four times to $3.6 trillion by 2020, fuelled by economic growth and rising household incomes, a new study said on Thursday.
Consumer expenditure in India is set to increase 3.6 times from $991 billion in 2010, at an annual rate of 14 per cent, the Boston Consulting Group and Confederation of Indian Industry (CII) report said.
MNREGS hinders micro enterprises in villages, says ISB study
High agricultural wages due to the success of MNREGS has hindered the development of micro enterprises in the hinterlands, says a paper by ISB.
Industrial production to grow by 7.4% in FY 13: CMIE
Production of MUVs, two-wheelers and three-wheelers is also expected to grow by around 10 per cent. This will lead to higher demand and production
Technology News (IT, Software, Hardware and Telecom)
Fresh 2G auction: Consumer may be spared large hike
The Indian mobile consumer could be spared a large tariff hike due to the mandated auction of 2G telecom spectrum.
DoT for one-time fee on excess spectrum on prospective basis
The move is expected to offer relief to the tune of Rs 10,00 crore to BSNL, while Bharti Airtel may save around Rs 8,000 crore.
2G auctions to take over 13 months to be completed: DoT
The telecom department (DoT) has told PM Manmohan Singh that the process of completing the Supreme Court-ordered 2G auctions will take over 13 months.
Telenor seeks split, alimony from Unitech
Telenor said it no longer believed that its partnership with Unitech had a future & would start the process of looking for a new Indian partner.
2G: Telcos can buy more spectrum; Vodafone, Airtel welcome move
Sibal said telcos operating in the same region will be allowed to share 2G spectrum, and all future allocation of airwaves will only be through auctions.
New Telecom Policy: Telcos allowed to share spectrum; 3G services left out, Spectrum limit enhanced up to 10MHz; licence fee uniform at 8%, M&A to be allowed under simple process, says Kapil Sibal
Sharing of spectrum would not only ease pressure on operators, but also generate additional revenues for the Govt by way of increasing subscribers. The government said all service providers would be allowed to hold higher spectrum of up to 10 MHz, a move that would help them offer quality services. A new telecoms policy will be announced in April. The sector regulator has proposed a relaxation of rules for M&A in the telecoms sector.
TDSAT to telcos: Explain ways to cover Government loss on 3G roaming
TDSAT asked private operators, who are opposing the DoT directive to scrap their 3G roaming pacts, to explain how they would compensate the govt if they lose the case.
Infosys to expand India footprint with focus on tier-II cities
The company, which has been planning a centre in Gujarat, said at present only the issues related to availability of land at fair price are being considered.
HCL Technologies to provide IT services to US insurance group GAIG
The insurance practice of the $3.9-bn HCL has been built on domain expertise with application and process optimisation capabilities across the quote-to-claim cycle.
Tata Consultancy Services sees rise in 'discretionary spending'
Discretionary spending refers to technology programmes and applications that are desirable for global companies but not critical for businesses to carry on.
HCL Technologies bags infrastructure management contract with Statoil
Norwegian government-owned energy major Statoil on Monday announced a multi-million dollar deal with India's fourth-largest technology major HCL Technologies.
TCS pips CSC for multi-year deal from Danish Telco TDC
The exact value of the deal is not known, it is likely to be worth over $100 million. TDC is one of CSC's largest private sector clients.
Cisco eyes $400 mn IT opportunity outside top six metros
These cities are Chandigarh, Lucknow, Gawahati, Jaipur, Bhopal, Indore, Ahmedabad, Vododhara, Bhubaneswar, Vizag, Coimbatore, Kochi, Kanpur and Patna.
Nasscom pegs 11-14% growth in infotech, ITeS exports in FY13
Export revenues from the infotech and IT-enabled services sector are expected to grow between 11 and 14%in US $ terms.
Eurozone crisis an opportunity for Indian IT: Expert
India's IT sector is well placed to take advantage of the current Eurozone crisis as an increasing number of companies will look at "offshoring" as a way to cut their costs, says an expert with a leading consultancy.
Cognizant bags 5 year multi-million dollar IT outsourcing deal from Future Group
Cognizant will support more than 1,000 Future Group stores-including Pantaloons, Big Bazaar, Food Bazaar, Central, Home Town.
Outsourcing revenues: TCS closing in on Accenture
In recent quarters, the revenue differential has narrowed down to about $300-400 million from about $800-900 mn three years ago.
Cognizant Technology stuns all with a 23% growth guidance for 2012
Cognizant added more incremental business than India's top three software exporters and said it expected to grow 23% to $7.53 billion in 2012.
Mahindra Satyam to buy 15% in Dion Global Solution
In the first phase, Satyam will pick up 15% stake, which may be increased depending on the achievement of some milestones, said a person involved in the deal.
Oracle to buy Taleo for $1.9 bn; cloud war brews
Taleo was to be woven into Oracle Internet "cloud" services and pitched as a tool for company's to manage human resources and employee careers.
Value for money: 5 smartphones available below Rs 10,000
As new technology hots up the competition in the mobile phone market, the older phones become more affordable.
PC market in India dips 6.5% to 2.5 mn units in Q4 2011: Gartner
Combined desk-based and mobile PC market in India totalled nearly 2.5 million units in the fourth quarter of 2011, a 6.5 per cent decline from the same period in 2010.
Chinese retailers stop Apple iPad sales as Proview dispute intensifies
Chinese retailers have stopped sales of Apple's iPad as the trademark dispute between Apple and the China-based tech company Proview intensified.
Amazon sells 3.9 million tablets in Q4 2011
Amazon.com shipped nearly 3.9 million Kindle Fire tablets in the last three months of 2011.
Apple's iPhone market share to slip from Q1: Gartner
Apple, which became the world's largest smartphone vendor in the fourth quarter, will see its iPhone market share slipping for a couple of quarters
Samsung India targets 60% of smartphone market in 2012: Source
Samsung India is targetting to capture 60 per cent of the mobile smartphone market in the country this year, a company official said.
Samsung unveils dual SIM smartphones in India
They come in three models -- Galaxy Ace Duos, the Galaxy Y Pro Duos and Galaxy Y Duos -- and are priced at Rs 16,900, Rs 11,090 and Rs 10,490 respectively.
Yeah, we had the same response as our readers when we saw that freak move in the EURUSD. Apparently, despite the fact that absolutely nothing has been resolved,Reuters just ran a headline that "Euro zone reaches deal on second Greek bailout package." And that is all it took for the EURUSD headline scanning algos to surge by 60 pips. That there nothing substantial in it, or that this is merely a rephrasing of the actual Bailout 2 announcement from before, is irrelevant. Here is what the actual Reuters report said.
Euro zone finance ministers struck a deal early on Tuesday for a second bailout programme for Greece that will involve financing of 130 billion euros and aims to cut Greece's debts to 121 percent of GDP by 2020, EU officials said.
"The financial volume (of the Greek package) is 130 billion euros and debt-to-GDP (will be) 121 percent. Now it's down to work on the statement," one official involved in the negotiations told Reuters.
Another official confirmed that the financing would total 130 billion euros with the aim of reducing Greece's debts from around 160 percent of GDP now to 121 percent by 2020.
So just the little matter of the statement, which is what has be en the actually stopping block for the past 6 months. And incidentally, the broad strokes of this announcement is a carbon copy of the second bailout deal reached back in the summer of 2011. Inother words, there is nothing substantial to this, and is merely boilerplate. But it was good enough to fool the algos. Now the only question is how long until this latest and greatest deal concoction falls apart again, and the whole farce is repeated all over.
To fund a deficit of 600,000 crores, the RBI might need to print 200,000 crores
Advance Taxes Are Not Enough
December, was when corporates (and individuals) pay another chunk of advance tax. This should have bolstered government revenues, but it seemingly has not. Total tax revenue in December, net of what was paid to the states, was Rs 99,944 crores, just 5.3% above the previous year. For the April to December time period, tax collections are just 7.5% higher.
Consider that India's Gross Domestic Product has grown 16% in "nominal" terms — that is, before inflation is removed. Government tax revenue should grow at the nominal rate (at least), but increasing inflation has eaten substantially into profits and thus, to taxes.
Meanwhile, government expenditure is growing at nearly 14%. No wonder the deficit is now at Rs 3.8 lakh crore, which is already more than 90% of the budgeted deficit for the entire year.
Lower Corporate Profits
Analyzing the December quarter results which are being announced now tells us that corporate profits, from the 400 top companies, have fallen 1.5% from the same quarter a year back. The September quarter was also a declining number. While revenues have grown 26%, expenses have grown even more at 32%. A lower corporate profit number doesn't just cut directly from government revenues, it makes valuations of their stocks lower (and the government owns a large chunk of PSUs).
The Lack of Enough Non-Tax Revenue
Last year, a bulk of non-tax revenue came from selling the 3G and BWA spectrum. This year the government expected to sell equity stakes in public sector companies like ONGC and BHEL, which has not yet happened largely because the government believes the market prices are too low.
The government has tried innovative means of revenue. It has asked government owned companies to buy back their shares with their surplus cash. Nearly 30,000 cr. worth shares of large companies like L&T and Axis bank lie with SUUTI, a special purpose vehicle that was created when US-64, a mutual fund, was bailed out by the government. These could be sold, but prices will drop if the news is public, so the idea is to sell the shares into another SPV and use accounting magic to make the non-tax number. The most innovative, perhaps, was to attempt to charge Vodafone with an income tax order of more than 8,000 cr. after they bought the telecom company, Hutch; the Supreme Court has since ruled against the government.
Bailouts and Oil Subsidies
While expenses are up 14%, they don't include certain large ticket items. The oil deficit — the under-recovery because we price diesel, LPG and kerosene below market prices — is now 97,000 crores, and is likely to grow to about 125,000 crores. A good portion of that will have to be financed by the central government. There is an increase in the acquisition prices of food from farmers, there's more fertilizer subsidy, increase in payments to NREGA, and so on. For the last quarter, there are also bailouts of Air India, additional capital to the public sector banks and the whole election process to keep expenses higher.
Borrowing Impact: Credit and Inflation
Why are deficits bad? After all, what the government can't earn, it will borrow from the markets. What it can't even borrow, the RBI will print. The RBI is using Open Market Operations to buy bonds on the same day the government is issuing new ones — effectively printing money to fund the deficit. This is also what is happening in the US with the Federal Reserve buying bonds, in the UK and Europe, and in Japan. Then why is a deficit a problem?
The often stated problem is that money-printing at this level will stoke inflation. Effectively, to fund a deficit of 600,000 crores, the RBI might need to print 200,000 crores. That is an increase of nearly 15% in our money supply, and if you add another 10-12% from other ways, we'll be expanding money supply by one-fourth every year, a sure shot recipe for higher prices as the money chases the same goods.
Those other countries would love some inflation — but we're dealing with a lot of it, with inflation in double digits as recently as October. Germany and Zimbabwe have seen events of hyperinflation, when inflation was more than 100% a day. That was largely because of the unlimited printing of currency, and the inflationary spiral acts very fast if you cross a boundary. The RBI's actions may "bailout" the government borrowing programme today, but given that they have a strong stance against inflation, RBI is equally likely to increase rates or take up other measures if inflation goes back into double digits.
Increased borrowing also crowds out private credit — if the financiers can lend to the government at a good enough rate, they won't lend to you and me. And eventually, we are a private led economy (the government is less than 25% of our GDP) so the lack of private growth will hurt everyone.
High deficits are unsustainable, as Greece and Portugal are finding out. Regardless of how things might seem, and other news that seem to be grabbing headlines, now is the time for tough decisions. We may need to increase taxes, reduce expenses or find alternate sources of government revenue. We may need to forego some of the populist measures our government pushed down our collective throats. But will this happen or will we run to the new deity in town, the printing press?
Greece ended months of uncertainty by finally securing a new bailout and debt-restructuring agreement with euro-zone finance ministers, but doubts remain over whether Greece will be able to meet the ambitious terms of the accord.
The finance ministers agreed on the long-awaited €130 billion ($171.9 billion) deal after haggling into the early hours of Tuesday morning to settle the final details.
Officials said the meeting, which lasted nearly 13 hours, produced a plan that would reduce Greece's debt to 120.5% of gross domestic product by 2020. International Monetary Fund Managing Director Christine Lagarde said that target was lowered from 129% at the start of the meeting.
Private-sector creditors agreed to take a write-down on their bonds of 53.5%—more than the 50% write-down that had been conceded before the meeting. The private-debt exchange is expected to cut Greece's debt by €107 billion, according to the Institute of International Finance, which negotiated on behalf of bondholders.
According to a statement from the finance ministers, Greece would also benefit from an arrangement in which the European Central Bank would distribute profits on its estimated €45 billion to €50 billion in holdings of bonds it bought in the secondary market in 2010-11 to euro-zone governments, which may then use them to help Greece.
Profits on an estimated €12 billion of bonds held by national central banks in the euro zone will be passed on to Greece, reducing its debt by €1.8 billion before 2020. The meeting decided against the central banks participating in the private-sector debt exchange.
The ministers also agreed to a further reduction in interest rates on the €53 billion in loans from the euro-zone made as part of the first bailout agreed upon in May 2010, saving some €1.4 billion.
"The deal is a good result for Greece, for the euro zone and for the markets, we hope," said Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti after the meeting.
Even with the agreement, economists expect the deal will leave longer-term questions about Greece's ability to pay off even its reduced debt burden. "There are downside risks. This is clear," said the IMF's Ms. Lagarde. "It's not an easy program. It's a very ambitious program."
The problem: The Greek economy must become more competitive through across-the-board wage cuts, allowing the country to export its way back to economic health. But that hoped-for export boom could take years to materialize.
After months of political brinkmanship and unrest on the streets of Athens, a deal on Greek debt may at last be in sight. Heard on the Street's Simon Nixon has the latest details. Photo: Associated Press
Meanwhile, falling wages will only deepen Greece's recession, making the government's debt burden—still large even after the restructuring—harder to bear.
The ministers agreed that the European Commission, the European Union's executive arm, would have "an enhanced and permanent presence on the ground" in Greece to better monitor Greece's economic performance.
Greece also agreed to put money corresponding to the following quarter's debt servicing bill into a special segregated account, and would agree to introduce a change in the Greek constitution to ensure priority is granted to debt repayments.
The second bailout would offer Greece €130 billion in loans on top of the €110 billion it received from the euro zone and the IMF in May 2010. The IMF, concerned about its large exposure to the euro zone, is expected to offer just a minimal contribution this time around, leaving euro-zone governments to shoulder the vast majority of the second loan package.
The IMF agreed to provide €30 billion of the first bailout, but officials last week expected its contribution to be just €13 billion this time around.
The agreement will set in motion an exchange of an estimated €200 billion of Greek government bonds in private hands for new bonds with roughly half of their face value, which must be completed by the middle of next month. That exchange could set off legal disputes with disgruntled bondholders.
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Analysts said the accord would have to be approved by some national parliaments in the euro zone, potentially causing uncertainty. A further test of the program will come in the months ahead, when the tough austerity measures Greece passed to secure the aid package are supposed to come into force.
These include yet another round of spending and pension cuts for an economy in its fifth year of recession, coupled with a 22% cut in the minimum wage.
With elections tentatively scheduled in April to replace the coalition government of Prime Minister Lucas Papademos, Greek politicians may become increasingly wary of standing behind the measures that just passed Parliament over popular outcry, analysts said
Their worries were heightened by comments from Antonis Samaras, the leader of the New Democracy party who is likely to be prime minister after the elections, who told Parliament last week: "I want to avoid the jump over the cliff today, to buy time, to restore normality and to go to elections tomorrow…. This is why I ask you to vote in favor of the new loan agreement today and to have the ability tomorrow to negotiate and to change the current policy which has been forced on us."
Marie Diron, an economist at Oxford Economics, said, "They have to satisfy the euro-zone governments while at the same time making very tough measures acceptable to their population. That is something a technocratic government can perhaps manage, but after the election it might become much more difficult for an elected government to satisfy these two goals."
Some euro-zone governments have taken a harder line with Greece. German, Dutch and Finnish officials have become increasingly skeptical that Greece will implement the painful economic policies its Parliament backed.
Dutch Finance Minister Jan Kees de Jager, speaking before the finance ministers' meeting, called for "permanent" oversight of the Greek government by officials of the so-called troika—the European Commission, the ECB and the IMF.
"When you look at the derailments in Greece, which have occurred several times now, it's probably necessary that there's some kind of permanent presence of the troika in Athens," Mr. de Jager told reporters upon arriving at the finance ministers' meeting. "Not every three months, but more permanent."
If Greece dutifully adheres to policies prescribed by the troika, the economic impact could be harsh, Ms. Diron said.
"Cuts in the minimum wage will bite very hard," she said.
Lowering the minimum wage is supposed to address some of the failures of the previous austerity packages, which focused on reducing the government's borrowing needs
SP TULSIAN.
Q: What about his potential news on Sterlite and Sesa Goa, how do you read it?
A: The background in which this news has germinated is that Vedanta group is looking to transfer stakes held by them in Cairn India to Serlite Industries. Sterlite Industries is going to become the holding company. If I move on this premise, it is a very positive move. But, ultimately everything boils down to the swap ratio because couple of years back Sterlite had moved similar proposal, which was against interest of minority shareholders. It was a bit complicated and they were forced to drop that proposal.
Cairn India holds 39% stake. I am excluding 24% stake held by Sesa Goa. So, if they transfer 39% stake into Sterlite Industries, eventually taking the current price as the base, they will be able to raise their stake in Sterlite Industries to about 75%. I am seeing this as a precursor by the group to initiate a move to purchase the residual stake of the government to the extent of 29% in Hindustan Zinc and 49% in BALCO.
Collectively, the group will require about Rs 23,000-24,000 crore for buying both these stakes. They need Rs 17,000-18,000 crore for Hindustan Zinc and Rs 4,000-5,000 crore for BALCO.
Ultimately, they will be looking to raise this kind of money based on cash flow of Cairn India. If Sesa Goa gets merged with Sterlite, this stake of Vedanta transfer to Sterlite, Sterlite will be holding 58-59% in Cairn India. Cairn India will be making a cash profit of about Rs 10,000 crore every year. So, they will be looking upon to capitalize this cash generation for buying out residual stake.
Otherwise in the present form, the balance sheet of Sterlite Industries will get stretched. There is no other point in buying residual stake in any other company because both these stakes are presently held by Sterlite Industries. So, it is a composite move and if that happens then Sterlite Industries will be the holding company for ferrous metal business, non-ferrous metal business and crude.
Apart from that, all the stakes in these three businesses will be more that 50%. So, everything will get consolidated on the top-line and bottom-line. In this background, there will not be in fear of company discounting for Sterlite valuations. If that happens, it will be very positive for Sterlite Industries overall and its shareholders, but one has to look for the swap ratio. I am presuming that swap will happen based on present market capitalization of all the companies.
All NSE Members,
Sub: Exclusion of futures and options contracts on 4 securities
Members are advised to note that based on the stock selection/exclusion criteria as prescribed by SEBI vide circular SEBI/DNPD/1/2012 dated January 02, 2012 and NSE circular No 045/2011 dated May 3, 2011, contracts for new expiry months in the following securities will not be issued on expiry of existing contract months:
1
AREVAT&D
Areva T&D India Limited
2
DHANBANK
Dhanlaxmi Bank Limited
3
MERCATOR
Mercator Limited
4
NATIONALUM
National Aluminium Company Limited
However, the existing unexpired contracts of expiry months February 2012, March 2012 and April 2012 would continue to be available for trading till their respective expiry and new strikes would also be introduced in the existing contract months.
This circular shall be effective from February 24, 2012.
Sub: Exclusion of futures and options contracts on 4 securities
Members are advised to note that based on the stock selection/exclusion criteria as prescribed by SEBI vide circular SEBI/DNPD/1/2012 dated January 02, 2012 and NSE circular No 045/2011 dated May 3, 2011, contracts for new expiry months in the following securities will not be issued on expiry of existing contract months:
1
AREVAT&D
Areva T&D India Limited
2
DHANBANK
Dhanlaxmi Bank Limited
3
MERCATOR
Mercator Limited
4
NATIONALUM
National Aluminium Company Limited
However, the existing unexpired contracts of expiry months February 2012, March 2012 and April 2012 would continue to be available for trading till their respective expiry and new strikes would also be introduced in the existing contract months.
This circular shall be effective from February 24, 2012.
India's largest lender the State Bank of India (SBI) referred three loan accounts including Bharati Shipyard (BS), ARSS Infrastructure and Vijai Electricals (VE) to the Corporate Debt Restructuring (CDR) cell. The sum total of credit exposure in these companies would be around Rs 3,430 crore by the bank, sources familiar with the development.
The SBI share of loans to BS comes around Rs 1,655 crore out of total exposure at Rs 5,650 crore by a consortium of 15 lenders. The bank lent Rs 773 crore to ARSS out of total loans around Rs 1,600 crore by eight lenders. For VE, it stood at around Rs 1,000 crore as against total Rs 2,200 crore by seven banks.
Credit exposure at a glance:
Figures are written on approximate basis.
At the time of CDR proposal submission in the third quarter (Q3), all three companies remained standard assets. Companies have been repaying the interest rate. In anticipation of defaults (before the principal payment becomes due), they were referred to CDR cell. As per RBI norms, a bank has to make provision of 2% on any restructuring of standard asset.
Under the regulatory frame work of the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), the CDR forum caters to an official platform for both the creditors and borrowers to amicably and collectively evolve policies for working out debt restructuring plans.
The CDR cell will make the initial scrutiny of the proposals received from creditors. It happens in two stages: flush stage and final report stage, all related to the economic viability study of the proposal. A loan account can be referred to the CDR cell when at least 75% of the banks (by value) and 60% of creditors (by number) agree to resolve the case under CDR system.
The asset quality concerns cast a shadow on the SBI's Q3 performance. The gross non-performing asset (NPA) ratio stood at 4.61% as against 4.19% in the previous quarter (Q2). The net NPA ratio too rose from 2.04% to 2.22 sequentially.
According to the SBI chairman Pratip Chaudhuri, as much as one fifth of fresh slippages had come from a single company (read Kingfisher Airline).
"So, if you look at the total slippages (net increase) of Rs 6,152 crore, one company alone accounted for around Rs 1,500 crore," the SBI boss said while announcing Q3 results.
However, Chaudhuri did not expect its Air India (AI) exposure turning into an NPA account. The lender has extended a fully secured Rs 1,100 crore loan as cash credit facility to AI.
The SBI share of loans to BS comes around Rs 1,655 crore out of total exposure at Rs 5,650 crore by a consortium of 15 lenders. The bank lent Rs 773 crore to ARSS out of total loans around Rs 1,600 crore by eight lenders. For VE, it stood at around Rs 1,000 crore as against total Rs 2,200 crore by seven banks.
Credit exposure at a glance:
Company
|
SBI exposure
(Rs in crore)
|
Total exposure
(Rs in crore)
|
Bharati Shipyard
|
1,655
|
5650
|
ARSS Infrastructure
|
773
|
1,600
|
Vijai Electricals
|
1,000
|
2,200
|
Figures are written on approximate basis.
At the time of CDR proposal submission in the third quarter (Q3), all three companies remained standard assets. Companies have been repaying the interest rate. In anticipation of defaults (before the principal payment becomes due), they were referred to CDR cell. As per RBI norms, a bank has to make provision of 2% on any restructuring of standard asset.
Under the regulatory frame work of the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), the CDR forum caters to an official platform for both the creditors and borrowers to amicably and collectively evolve policies for working out debt restructuring plans.
The CDR cell will make the initial scrutiny of the proposals received from creditors. It happens in two stages: flush stage and final report stage, all related to the economic viability study of the proposal. A loan account can be referred to the CDR cell when at least 75% of the banks (by value) and 60% of creditors (by number) agree to resolve the case under CDR system.
The asset quality concerns cast a shadow on the SBI's Q3 performance. The gross non-performing asset (NPA) ratio stood at 4.61% as against 4.19% in the previous quarter (Q2). The net NPA ratio too rose from 2.04% to 2.22 sequentially.
According to the SBI chairman Pratip Chaudhuri, as much as one fifth of fresh slippages had come from a single company (read Kingfisher Airline).
"So, if you look at the total slippages (net increase) of Rs 6,152 crore, one company alone accounted for around Rs 1,500 crore," the SBI boss said while announcing Q3 results.
However, Chaudhuri did not expect its Air India (AI) exposure turning into an NPA account. The lender has extended a fully secured Rs 1,100 crore loan as cash credit facility to AI.