Early last year, officials from a Mumbai-headquartered conglomerate,
weighed down by its massive debt, sent a top finance executive to
Chennai, to work out a big-ticket loan from Indian Bank.
The bank weighed the proposal of the highly leveraged company, and said
a straight no. The clout of the group’s high-profile promoter did not
faze the bank officials.
This unrelenting clarity in its approach to lending is one of the
factors that has scripted an unlikely turnaround for Indian Bank, the
111-year-old Chennai headquartered institution. Just two decades ago, it
was mired in a corruption scandal and needed a government bailout to
survive. Its then MD was jailed. Now, the story has dramatically
reversed. It’s one of the only two nationalised banks, out of a cohort
of 19, which made a profit last fiscal year. It has the lowest
non-performing assets (NPAs) in the industry at a time when spiralling
NPAs have become a threat to many banks. Its exposure to sectors prone
to scandal or business failure, such as gems and jewellery or power, is
very low.
It’s an instructive tale about sticking to the fundamentals in business.
One of the secrets in Indian Bank’s lending arsenal is to demand
collateral with sentimental value, such as a promoter’s ancestral home,
in addition to primary securities such as the deed of the project land
and so on. When a loan turns bad, the bank has an additional leverage in
negotiations.
Remarkably, Indian Bank has no exposure to a number of companies
that have recently lost banks a lot of money, including Vijay Mallya’s Kingfisher Airlines
and companies such as Essar Steel, Jaypee Infratech, IVRCL, which were
referred last year to National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) under the
Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, for a timely resolution.
Indian Bank’s NPA ratio is one of the lowest in the industry. Gross
NPA is at 7.37% of gross loans and net NPA is at 3.81% for 2017-18. Low
NPA means the bank doesn’t have to set aside money to provision for it
in its books, allowing it to declare greater profits. In FY17-18, as
many as 17 out of 19 nationalised banks were in the red, with only two
banks — Indian Bank and Vijaya Bank — bucking the trend. Indian Bank
made a net profit of Rs 1,259 crore whereas Vijaya Bank’s net profit was
Rs 727 crore.
These results must be against the carnage in the profit and loss
statements of their peer group during the same time period. The net loss
of Punjab National Bank, for instance, was Rs 12,283 crore in 2017-18 whereas for Union Bank of India, Bank of India and Central Bank of India,
the net loss during the fiscal year was over Rs 5,000 crore each. Even
the flagship SBI, which is a large PSU bank but not a nationalised bank,
took a hit after five of its associates — State Bank
of Bikaner and Jaipur, State Bank of Mysore, State Bank of Travancore,
State Bank of Hyderabad and State Bank of Patiala — merged with it last
year. The bank registered a net loss of Rs 6,547 crore last fiscal year.
Amid this gloom in the banking sector, how could then a little known
bank with a presence largely in south India, deliver stellar results? ET
Magazine met the bank’s top management at its headquarters in Chennai
to understand the lender’s approach. MD and CEO Kishor Kharat, CFO PA
Krishnan, executive director AS Rajeev, general managers S Chezhian and M
Nagarajan were among those we interviewed. Here are some of the
takeaways.
Safe Exposure
First, Indian Bank’s conservative tag, something for which the bank
was ridiculed in the past, has suddenly turned into its key asset. While
the Reserve Bank of India’s February 12 circular that laid down strict
timelines on insolvency proceedings came as a shocker to most banks,
Indian Bank breathed easy thanks to its lower NPA burden. Secondly, it’s
not that the bank has no exposure to companies struggling to pay off
debt. Where it does, in companies such as Bhushan Steel, ABG Shipyard,
Alok Industries, etc, the loan amounts are relatively small. Thirdly,
the bank’s share of advances in the RAM sector (retail, agriculture and
MSME) is high at 57%, which means its exposure to corporations is lower
than many of its peers.
In power, a sector that has piled bad news on lenders, Indian Bank’s
advances as on March 31, 2018, were `10,148 crore, or 6.5% of its gross
advances, which is lower than those of its peers. The management of the
bank insists that they are not shying away from lending to corporations
and are willing to extend big credit, but only to those time-tested
companies. Some of its clients such as JK Tyres or Tamil Nadu’s Nalli
Silks have been among the bank’s favourite borrowers. Fourthly, the bank
managers insist that they don’t lend in sectors where they have no
in-house expertise. The gems and jewellery sector, for example, is a
no-go area for the bank. The total exposure is a mere 0.05% of the
bank’s domestic advances.
Sankara Narayanan, the MD and CEO of Vijaya Bank, the only other
nationalised bank to remain in the profit zone during the last fiscal
year, also emphasised the virtues of caution in lending. “Our strength
is retail with an average growth of 25% and also the lower risk-weighted
assets. We entertain only viable corporate accounts with appropriate
collateral and do prompt follow-ups on recoveries.”
Vijaya Bank has continued its winning streak, registering a net profit
of Rs 144 crore in quarter ended June 30. Indian Bank’s results for the
period are expected next month.
Clearly, being conservative is the new mantra in the banking sector.
For Indian Bank, set up in 1907, the journey has not been without turbulence though.
A major scam hit the bank in the mid-1990s when M Gopalakrishnan,
the then chairman and managing director, extended loans to undeserving
politicians and corporations. The bank ended up making a loss of Rs
1,727 crore in 1995-96, something that wiped out its capital base,
forcing the government of India, its major shareholder, to infuse
capital and somehow keep the bank afloat. In 2009, a special CBI court
sent Gopalakrishnan to jail for 14 years, on the charges of cheating on
loan disbursals.
Business Growth
The aftershocks of this scam were so intense that the bank
management for the subsequent decades decided to lend very cautiously,
even sacrificing its business growth. By March 2017, the bank was ranked
14th in terms of total business among nationalised banks. The bank
realised that it needed to do something.
In May last year, about a hundred key officials of the bank were taken
to Kodaikanal, a hill station in Tamil Nadu, to brainstorm the road
ahead. And the consensus that emerged was that the bank, which was
losing its market share mainly to new smart private players, must reboot
and choose a rapid business growth path. The Kodaikanal offsite ended
up preparing a five-year plan to take its businesses (advances and
deposits) to a level of Rs 6 lakh crore by 2022. The recurring sentiment
at the brainstorming session was this — if Indian Bank, with its sound
financial health and low NPAs, could not take on the might of the
private banks, who would?
Achieving the Rs 6 lakh crore target in the next four years will be a
tall order. The figure currently is Rs 3.71 lakh crore. Can the bank
grow rapidly without compromising caution and conservatism? We’ll find
out in 2022.
Source- Economic Times