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Finance

Moody’s upgrades Yes Bank rating, changes outlook to ‘stable’: Here’s why

Moody’s on Thursday said it has upgraded Yes Bank’s rating while changing outlook to ‘stable’ on the back of its equity capital raise plan announced last week. The global rating agency has upgraded the private sector lender’s long-term foreign currency issuer rating and long-term foreign and local currency back deposit ratings to ‘Ba3’ from ‘B2’. It has also changed the outlook on Yes Bank’s ratings to ‘stable’ from ‘positive’ and also adjusted the Baseline Credit Assessment (BCA) to ‘b1’ from ‘b3’. “The upgrade of Yes Bank’s BCA and ratings reflects the bank’s planned equity capital raise, which will support its credit profile and strengthen its resilience against potential asset quality risks arising from headwinds such as higher inflation and tighter global financial conditions,” Moody’s Investors Service said in a release. On July 29, Mumbai-headquartered Yes Bank announced the raising of nearly Rs 8,900 crore (about USD 1.1 billion) through a mix of shares and warrants to be issued to global private equity players Carlyle Group and Advent International. On the rationale behind the ratings upgrade, it said ‘stable’ rating outlook reflects “Moody’s expectation that the bank’s credit profile will improve” at a gradual pace. It will take time for the bank to establish its competitive strengths, it said. Under the capital raise plans, each of these two investors will acquire up to a 10 per cent stake in the bank. The capital raise comprises two parts — Rs 5,100 crore (USD 640 million) in equity shares and Rs 3,800 crore (USD 475 million) through equity share warrants which can be exercised only after April 1, 2023. “Moody’s estimates that the first part of the capital raise will result in an increase of 2.2 percentage points in the bank’s consolidated Common Equity Tier 1 (CET1) ratio from 11.9 per cent as of the end of June 2022, after including profit for the June quarter. The second part of the capital raise will add another 1.6 percentage points.” On the flip side, Moody’s said given the stable outlook, bank’s ratings are unlikely to be upgraded over the next 12-18 months. “Nevertheless, Moody’s could upgrade the ratings and BCA if the bank establishes a credible and sustainable strategy to improve profitability, without compromising its asset quality and capital.” The global rater said it can downgrade the ratings on the lender in case there is a significant deterioration in its asset quality, which can lead to erosion of profitability and capital, or even if the turnaround of the bank fails because of an aggressive financial strategy and risk management. “Specifically, a decline in the total common equity to risk weighted assets below 6 per cent and net income/tangible assets below 0.5 per cent will exert negative pressure on the BCA. Any weakening in Yes Bank’s funding and liquidity will also be negative,” Moody’s added. Yes Bank had to be bailed out in March 2020 following a coordinated action by the government and RBI — and as many as eight lender led by SBI infused capital worth Rs 10,000 crore into the bank as part of the Yes Bank Ltd Reconstruction Scheme, 2020. The lender has now come out of the Reconstruction Scheme and posted a full year profit in fiscal year ended March 2022.
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Finance

Axis Bank to wind up UK subsidiary after deal with OpenPayd fails

India’s third largest private lender Axis Bank is winding up its subsidiary in Britain after a deal with financial firm OpenPayd failed, it said in a regulatory filing on Thursday. Axis Bank first said in 2020 that it will be winding down its UK operations. Currently, the bank’s international strategy is to focus on Indian corporates that have global operations, it said in an investor presentation in the results of the quarter ended June. At the end of June, the bank had an overseas loan book of Rs 38,928 crore, a contraction from Rs 45,750 crore in March quarter. Axis in March acquired Citigroup Inc’s local consumer banking firm for $1.6 billion to bulk up its credit card and retail business in the country.

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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RBI does rate-lifting to keep India in reckoning. Key policy takeaways

The Monetary Policy Committe (MPC), the rate setting panel of the Reserve Bank of India, has unanimously decided to hike lending rates by 50 bps to 5.40%, above the pre-pandemic level of 5.15%, RBI Governor Shaktikanta Das announced on Friday. This is the third consecutive rate hike after a 40 basis points in May and 50 basis points increase in June. In all, the RBI has raised benchmark rate by 1.40 per cent since May this year. Here is a list of key announcements made ..
    • Standing Deposit Facility (SDF) rate has been adjusted to 5.15%. Marginal Standing Facility and bank rate revised to 5.65%
    • The MPC has retained its stance of ‘withdrawal of accommodation’ as it seeks to roll back pandemic-era measures against rising inflationary pressures
    • The central bank now sees inflation for Q2 at 7.1%; Q3 at 6.4%, and Q4 at 5.8%. In June policy, the central bank had forecast inflation at 7.5% for Q1, 7.4% for Q2, 6.2% for Q3 and 5.8% for Q4. The outlook:
  • Elevated risks emanating from protracted geopolitical tensions, the upsurge in global financial market volatility and tightening global financial conditions continue to weigh heavily on the outlook
  • The appreciation of the US dollar can feed into imported inflation pressures
  • Cost pressures are expected to get increasingly transmitted to output prices across the manufacturing and services sectors.
 
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