Real Estate India – Property Discussion Forum – Gurgaon – Delhi – Noida – Mumbai – Pune – Chennai and more. Property listing, Buying or Selling of Properties strictly prohibited!
Real Estate India Property Forum –Gurgaon, Delhi, Noida, Mumbai –No Buy, Sell or Rent Properties here! Real Estate India

Go Back   Real Estate India - Property Discussion Forum - www.iref.in > Property Finance > Banks and HFCs

Banks and HFCs Banks & Housing Finance Institutions (HFCs) can be regarded as the pillar of the present realty boom in India. But is the increasing interest rates dampening the spirits of the great Indian Middle Class owning a piece of property?

Create descriptive Thread ‘Titles’ for better visibility and more responses – Visit Q&A Section for Tips!
Reply
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Old 01-12-07   #1
Expresso
New Member
 
Join Date: Oct 2006
Posts: 16
New Private Sector Banks - Potential Trouble Ahead?

Hello Friends,

I'd like to share this Article I read today in desicritic. Do you agree to this? What is your analysis of the banking sector as presented in the article.

Quote:
RBI recently published a report on trend and progress of banking in India (2006-07). This has information on the entire banking industry (scheduled commercial banks, co-operative banks, regional rural banks) as well as NBFCs.

There are a total of 82 scheduled commercial banks(SCBs) and the RBI categorises them into four broad categories - public sector banks(28), old private sector banks(17), new private sector banks(8) and foreign banks(29). Some of the salient features of the report are (data for scheduled commercial banks only):
  • Aggregate advances grew 30.6% as compared to 31.8% in 2005-06 and 33.2% in 2004-05.
  • Aggregate deposits grew by 24.6% as compared to 17.8% in 2005-06
  • Lending to sensitive sectors (defined by RBI as capital market, real estate, commodity) : Exposure to sensitive sectors was 20.37% of advances as compared to 18.84% last year. 20.37% is broken down as 18.71% to real estate sector, 1.55% to capital market and 0.11% to commodities.
  • Net NPAs as a % of net advances declined to 1.0% from 1.2% in 2006
  • Net profits increased by 27% as compared with 17.3% in 2005-06
  • CRAR of all SCBs remained at 12.3% as it was the previous year despite a significant increase in risk weighted assets, well above the minimum RBI
  • requirement of 9%
  • Tier I CRAR ratio declined to 8.3% from 9.3% of 2005-06 (due to slower growth in reserves and surplus) but Tier II CRAR increased to 4.0% from 3.1% of 2005-06. Still, Tier I CRAR is above the minimum of 6% prescribed by RBI
The report looks good in an overall sense but if we just focus on the section of new private sector banks (essentially comprising of Centurion Bank of Punjab, DCB, HDFC Bank, ICICI Bank, IndusInd, Kotak Mahindra Bank, Axis Bank and Yes Bank), there are some serious issues that crop up. Let me just point out a few facts in this regard with respect to new private sector banks:
  • CRAR of new private sector banks, which had improved in 2005-06 to 12.60%, declined to 12.00%, below the industry average of 12.30% in 2006-07
  • Lending to real estate is highest among new private sector banks at 32.30% of their advances. This is quite a high figure - imagine that 1/3rd of the bank's lending is to real estate sector
  • Net NPAs as a % of advances increased from 0.8% in 2006 to 1.0% in 2007
  • Provisions made for NPAs increased by a whopping 39.43% in new private sector banks as compared to a 6.23% decrease for all SCBs
  • Spread on assets for new private sector banks was 3.2% against 3.3% for all SCBs - lowest among all bank categories
  • Operating profits of new private sector banks jumped by 46.7% as against 21.2% for all SCBs, the highest increase % among all bank categories
What does the above imply? How do we reconcile the fact that the net profits are growing, spreads are not really that great, NPAs have risen and lending to sensitive sector is very high for new private sector banks?

The answer is simple but not comforting - all deals done by private sector banks have a component of upfront fees in addition to the regular interest that is charged on the loan. These upfront fees are usually structured in such a way that they are a significant chunk so that this income can be booked for the quarter in which the deal is done.

If the interest rate were higher, the money would come in over the life of the loan and structuring rates with a heavy upfront fee ensures higher incomes booked at the time of deal initiation. And this is a structure that is accepted by a lot of real estate developers and they are willing to pay the higher upfront. The core interest rate charged to real estate developers would also be higher due to the fact that there is a higher risk weight attached to the asset.

So what is the outlook? RBI is heavily coming down on lending to real estate and these banks would be forced to prune their real estate exposure and this would surely impact their bottomline. The real estate prices have marginally softened in the last six months due to lesser demand from individuals but has not seen a significant dip due to the fact that the developers are not willing to cut prices, even though the sales figures have gone down.

And RBI is in no mood to cut interest rates and hence sooner than later, these developers would have to cut prices. And that would affect their repayment capability and this could create more NPAs for these new private sector banks in the coming months.

Stock prices of the new private sector banks are hitting all time highs - but it is time to be cautious on these names.
Expresso is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 18-02-08   #2
deyk123
New Member
 
Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: SURAT
Posts: 3
Default

Very Informative Post. I do agree that the rampant fuding to Real estate developers by Banks & NBFC need to be controlled.
deyk123 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 17-08-09   #3
jimjonesjj
New Member
 
Join Date: Aug 2009
Posts: 1
Default does any one know how to download utube?

I need help trying to download YouTube movie to my my computer?
jimjonesjj is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply


Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Private placement to be treated as FDI in realty amitroy Foreign Direct Investment 1 17-06-09 08:04 AM
Realty claims one-third of private bank loans Tanuj Banks and HFCs 0 29-11-07 09:31 AM
Fixed rates land PSU banks in trouble mohit Home Loans 0 25-07-07 03:59 PM
India offers strong investment potential arun Real Estate Updates 0 01-05-07 12:55 PM
Delhi Master Plan runs into trouble vikas Delhi 0 09-02-07 03:31 PM

Text Link Advertising


Text Link Ads | Real Estate Authority Links | Paid Link Advertising | Buy Text Links
CONTACT ADMIN TO ADVERTISE HERE

All times are GMT +5.5. The time now is 06:37 PM.



Home | Terms and Conditions | Disclaimer | Defamation Disclaimer
Copyright © 2006-10, www.indianrealestateforum.com, All Rights Reserved.
Forum Software Powered by vBulletin Copyright © 2000-2007 Jelsoft Enterprises Limited
Bookmark and Share