The challenges behind BoB, Vijaya Bank & Dena Bank merger


When an experiment begins, the scientist hardly knows what the outcome will be. In a moment of adventure or necessity, the government put three men — PS Jayakumar, RA Sankara Narayanan and Karnam Sekar — in a boat and set them on sail into uncharted territory. 


These men who head Bank of Baroda, Vijaya Bank and Dena Bank may face many a storm and choppy waters in a journey that could in a few years make them either look like Christopher Columbus who found the new world, or land in no man’s land like Robinson Crusoe. 

When the numbers are put out on an Excel sheet, the easiest way to analytical glory, the merged entity is the second-largest by assets. But life on the integration ground is the opposite of what appears on the Microsoft Excel file. Mergers are probably the most glamorous in the world of business, but history is as much about bitter divorces like Chrysler-Daimler as they are about romantic rides like Procter & Gamble’s with Gillette. 

As with most marriage proposals, there’s optimism about this too. “I look at the merger positively,” says Aditya Puri, chief executive officer of HDFC Bank, the most valuable lender. “I think it will lead to cost, product and technology efficiencies. It is easier to manage.” 


MAMMOTH TASK
The task at hand for the three men is of monstrous proposition. In any merger, the biggest challenge is that of personnel. While in the private sector, the easiest action for the management is to lay off people to derive cost savings, that option does not exist for the three CEOs. There are 90,000 staff whose future has to be protected and concerns addressed.



“There are three top reasons for the failure of any merger, one of them is the way HR gets integrated,” says PS Jayakumar, CEO of Bank of Baroda, the biggest of the three. “We are very conscious of this. But there are some commonalities as well… like interview processes are similar, owner is similar, organisation structure is the same kind, so there are a lot of things that are common as well.” 

There are multiple data centres that handle more than 10 crore customers across three banks that need to converge. For the moment, the three banks operate on three different technology platforms which appear to be easy to integrate but difficult to execute. “Technology integration in theory is easy to achieve but in practice it will require a lot of hard work like just getting a new account code for all customers and communicating that will not be a simple thing,” says Jayakumar. 

“Replacement of cheque books will not be simple. RTGS, NEFT details and net banking interface will take time to change.” The merged entity will have about 9,489 domestic branches which looks like a great leap forward, but of this nearly 10%, or 941, branches are in the same pin code, which needs to be reduced without much staff resentment. 


THE SYNERGIES
One of oddities of Indian banking was a single owner, the government, dominated nearly 80% of the industry which is near monopoly, but the problem was it was spread over 21 different entities that neutralised the advantages, the dominance would have brought it. “Why do you need so many banks with the same parentage competing against each other, killing each other in terms of under cutting etc.?’’ says Ravneet Gill, CEO, Deutsche Bank, India. 

Because of the single owner, the incentive for different entities to compete strongly and innovate did not exist either. Whatever each bank achieved, it was more an enterprise of individuals rather than any institutional vision. While the mixture of personnel with different cultures from Dena, Vijaya and Baroda could cause some friction, the advantages that would flow are many. 

“It will give them more job opportunities so that there is no shortage,” says HDFC Bank’s Puri. “Given the retirement that is coming, there is going to be a shortage of manpower. If you merge these three, then you don’t have to have layoffs and it automatically brings in cost efficiency.” Handling of staff would determine whether they become an asset or a liability, but the existence of so many overlapping branches like BoB’s first Mumbai branch in Horniman Circle, a century old, that sits opposite sprawling Dena’s. 

These could be merged and allocate excess staff to suburbs, probably closer home. In Maharashtra alone, the merged entity’s branch network would rise by 400 to 950. Cost-cutting could be huge. In fact, BoB has already proven by reducing the number of auditors to just about 30 from nearly 1,400. In the merged entity, the procurement of technology, telecommunication could bring down costs. 


“We just need to ensure these synergies get captured,” says Jayakumar. “We have to have a clear plan on how to do it but also some patience. There may be short-term pain but the long-term gains will not take far long to manifest themselves.” State Bank of India’s merger of five associates with itself and ING Vysya’s merger with Kotak Mahindra Bank are recent examples that these three could draw from. 

While the size of integration of SBI associates was mammoth — almost merging ICICI Bank with SBI — the combination of ING Vysya with Kotak shows the challenges. A top Kotak executive involved with the integration then, Mohan Shenoi described the process best. “The merger process, according to me, was like servicing and upgrading an aircraft while it is flying,” Shenoi told ET in an interview last year. “So, we had to ensure that business as usual should go on, not on one side but on both sides.” 

Kotak faced issues of staff integration and had to create a bad bank to dispose off the defaulted loans. It also had to take a knock on pension provisions. 

DIFFERENT STROKES
It is a merger of banks from the same stable, but there are strengths and weaknesses that would play out and complicate as well. “A lot is riding on the success of this merger because a failure will mean that this whole consolidation process will be put on the back burner,” said Gopal Jain, managing partner at private equity fund Gaja Capital, which was one of the earliest backers of RBL Bank. 

Over the past three years, Jayakumar along with former chairman Ravi Venkatesan had initiated a lot of changes, including lateral hire, changes to human resources policies that prioritise merit. Its leadership programme focused on enabling technology absorption along with refurbishment of branches into paperless offices and ending the steel cupboard culture are a welcome relief to both staff and customers. 

“BoB has gone through a transformation,” says Vikramaditya Singh Khichi, executive director at BoB and a former Dena Bank executive. “The systems and procedures have been set to lay out a path going forward. This integration part is now going to move in only the direction BoB is moving.” Vijaya and Dena are small and saddled with bad loans, but they come with strengths too. Vijaya is retail focused and profitable and was the only state-run bank that paid dividends last fiscal. 


Dena though in Prompt Corrective Action with restricted lending, has a portfolio of small and medium enterprises that could be coveted. “Bank of Baroda will remain on course with the strategy set in the last three years… it’s working well and we have to do more to accomplish the goal,” says Jayakumar. “As we get our programmes together, there will be good success- transfer opportunities so that we will end up with an institution that is more than the sum of its parts.” The government’s experiment has just begun. 

Source - Economic Times
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BoB, Dena, Vijaya to decide on organizational structure of merger in next week



Chief executives of Bank of Baroda, Vijaya Bank and Dena Bank will meet next week to discuss a plan to increase the number of organizational layers in the entity resulting from their merger, said a senior banker aware of the talks. This, he said, will be done to accommodate the larger workforce of the merged bank. The three banks put together have 85,675 employees, 9,489 branches and generate a total business of ₹14.8 trillion.
One of the proposals to be discussed is to change the current two-tier structure of Dena Bank and Vijaya Bank to a three-tier structure of Bank of Baroda or even to a four-tier set-up that the State Bank of India (SBI) has, the banker said on condition of anonymity.
The banker explained that while Dena Bank and Vijaya Bank have a two-tier set-up of zonal offices and a head office, Bank of Baroda has regional offices, zonal offices and a head office. SBI has regional offices, zonal offices, local head offices and a corporate centre of its head office—a four-tier structure.

“We are weighing the pros and cons of this structure and while a leaner set-up accelerates decision-making, a more elaborate set-up will help an organization the size of the merged bank,” he said.
The person added that a central steering committee has been formedand it comprises three CEOs and the executive directors of the three banks. Fourteen functional groups have been formed, comprising general managers. Some of the functional groups include human resources, information technology, stressed assets, corporate advances and retail advances.
According to the person cited above, the banks plan to retain only one head office of the three they have currently, but plan to distribute some departments among the three of them. “The merged bank will not be able to retain all the regional offices as well and employees working there will be transferred to other locations. However, at present, there is no plan for a voluntary retirement scheme,” he added.

In September, the government decided to merge three banks it owns—Bank of Baroda, Dena Bank and Vijaya Bank—in a move expected to reduce the amount of capital it needs to pump into these lenders. The merged entity, comprising two relatively stronger banks and a weak one, will be the third-largest lender in India after State Bank of India and HDFC Bank. The bank merger will take 4-6 months to complete, BoB CEO P.S. Jayakumar had said on 17 September.
This is the third major restructuring in the public sector banking space undertaken by this government. The first was the merger of the five associate banks of SBI with itself. The merger had resulted in a sharp jump in the combined entity’s bad loans portfolio, crimping its profit. The associate banks reported a loss of ₹5,792 crore for the March quarter of 2016-17 and ₹10,243 crore for the entire year. This resulted in the consolidated net profit of SBI going down to a ₹241 crore when the stand-alone net profit was ₹10,484 crore.
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Vijaya Bank Q2 profit falls 24%

State-owned Vijaya Bank Monday reported 24.54 per cent fall in net profit at Rs 139.94 crore for the quarter ended September 30, 2018. The bank had registered a net profit of Rs 185.46 crore in the corresponding quarter last year.


Net interest income was up 15.6 percent at Rs 1,165.5 crore against Rs 1,008.4 crore, YoY.
The gross NPA of the company fell at 5.86 percent versus 6.19 percent, while net NPA at 3.81 percent versus 4.10 percent, QoQ.

In the absolute figure the company's gross NPA was down at Rs 7,557 crore against Rs 7,579 crore. The net NPA was down at Rs 4810.2 crore against Rs 4,903.9 crore, QoQ.
Provisions were down at Rs 588.6 crore against Rs 659.4 crore, QoQ and Rs 458.1 crore, YoY.
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BoB-Dena-Vijaya Merged Bank to get growth capital


The government will provide an additional capital cushion to the proposed merged bank to be formed by amalgamation of Bank of Baroda, Dena Bank and Vijaya Bank to start the new bank on a stronger footing, a senior government official told ET. 

“We will like to have a cushion of at least 50-100 basis points above the existing regulatory capital requirements. The bank will be provided with that growth capital,” he added. The actual capital infusion requirement in money terms will be available only after financials of the July-September quarter are available. 


In September, the government had proposed a merger of the three banks to create the country’s third biggest lender.Capital adequacy ratio (CAR) will reach 11.5% in 2019 under Basel III norms, and according to government data, the proposed combined entity had CAR of 12.25% by the end of June 2018. 

“This may be further impacted as these banks finish their due diligence and make provisioning for other requirements. If we want the combined entity to have a credit growth of 15%, we will need growth capital,” the official quoted earlier, said. 

The amalgamation will be the first three-way consolidation of banks in India, with a combined business of Rs 14.82 lakh crore. The government expects synergies to lead to larger distribution network and more business for the new lender. The government has started the exercise to look at capital requirements of all PSBs and has been holding meetings with their top deck. 

“We may have to give some support to Dena Bank in this fiscal if it falls short of regulatory requirements. For now, the other two lenders look good in terms of provisioning requirements,” said a finance ministry official. 


Last year, the government had announced a Rs 2.1 lakh crore bank recap plan of which Rs 1.35 lakh crore was to be given through re-capitalisation bonds, and the balance Rs 58,000 crore was to be raised from the market by the banks. 

So far, the government has infused Rs 70,000 crore through recap bonds, and the balance Rs 65,000 crore will be given in this fiscal. In July 2018, Rs 11,336 crore was infused in five PSBs to help them maintain regulatory norms. 

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BoB, Vijaya Bank, Dena Bank set up panels to merge operations

Bank of Baroda (BoB), Dena Bank and Vijaya Bank have decided to set up internal committees, which will help integrate their functions before the merger happens, said a person familiar with the development. In a meeting on Wednesday, the bankers also decided to appoint three separate valuers to arrive at share swap ratios, the person said, adding that the valuer appointed by one bank will also evaluate the other two banks, before a common ratio is arrived at and sent to the government. This was the second meeting after the merger announcement.

The committees will comprise the chief executive officers (CEOs) and executive directors of the three banks. “We have decided to form a few internal committees to integrate functions in the three banks. They include committees on credit, human resources (HR) and information technology (IT),” the person said, requesting anonymity.
Mint had reported on 3 October that although the three banks use the Finacle core banking solution developed by Infosys Ltd, they have different versions of the software. While Dena Bank and Vijaya Bank are on Finacle 7.2, Bank of Baroda had recently upgraded to Finacle 10.2.
On 10 September, the government had proposed the merger of the three state-owned banks. The merged entity, comprising two relatively stronger banks and a weak one, will be the third-largest lender in India, after State Bank of India and HDFC Bank Ltd, with a total business of ₹14.82 trillion.
Following the merger announcement, the managements had assured the staff that the government has decided to retain the banks’ individual identities even after the bank merger.
Analysts were wary of the human resource complications. A research report by Kunal Shah of Edelweiss Securities said challenges on human resources, process integration, branch rationalization and management bandwidth, will pose integration risks. “Roadblocks, for example, due to agitation from employees cannot be ruled out.”

A Kotak Institutional Equities note said that the merged entity will have 2,205 branches in western India, while the south and north will have 846 and 713 branches, respectively.
This is the third major restructuring in the public sector banking space by the government. The first was the merger of the five associate banks of SBI with itself. The merger had resulted in a sharp jump in the combined entity’s bad loans portfolio, crimping its profit. The associate banks made a loss of ₹5,792 crore for the March quarter of 2016-17 and ₹10,243 crore for the entire year. This resulted in the consolidated net profit of SBI going down to a mere ₹241 crore, while the stand-alone net profit was ₹10,484 crore.
Source - Livemint
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Govt announced merger of Bank of Baroda with two banks to form India's 3rd Largest Bank


The government has announced that Bank Of Baroda, Vijaya Bank and Dena Bank will be merged into a single bank which will become India's third largest bank. Rajeev Kumar, Secretary Department of Financial Services, said in a press conference today that employees interest would be protected in the merger process. 

The merger of five SBI associate banks was done without any job losses, he said. The three banks will continue to work independently till the merger. 

Kumar said the merger would help improve operational efficiency and customer services. He said it was time for the next generation of strategic banking reforms. 


The government had initiated numerous reforms over the last four years, especially with respect to banking and to ensure clean lending process, he said.


He said the stock of non-performing assets (NPAs) had reduced by Rs 21,000 crore in last quarter. Banks recovered Rs 36,551 crore in the first quarter of FY19. There was a need to increase scale and synergy for growth momentum to continue, he said.



Kumar talked about various steps the government had taken to clean banking including the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC). He said now people knew that if they had taken loan, they would have to return it. He said the IBC was fundamentally changing the creditor-debtor relationship in India. He said all loans over Rs 150 crore would be monitored by a separate vertical in each bank.

"The government is keen to take steps so that history isn't repeated as far as NPAs are concerned. The government approach is to make the banking sector’s fundamentals strong," he said.  
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Vijaya Bank Recruitment for Assistant Manager Posts 2018


Vijaya Bank has published Advertisement for below mentioned Posts 2018. Other details like age limit, educational qualification, selection process, application fee and how to apply are given below.


Posts: Probationary Assistant Manager (Credit) in General Banking Stream

Total No. of Posts: 330 Posts


Educational Qualification: (from a University/ Institution/ Board recognized by Govt. of India/ approved by Govt. regulatory Bodies)
(1) A Degree (Graduation) in any discipline with minimum 60% marks.
(2) MBA/ PGDBM/ PGDM/ PGBM/ PGDBA – (with specialization in Finance) – through full time course from a reputed institution (two/three year programme) / Post-graduation degree in Commerce/ Science /Economics /Law (OR) Chartered Accountant (OR) ICWA (OR) Company Secretary.
(3) Minimum 60% marks at graduation level is for candidates applying under general/ unreserved category, candidates belonging to reserved category (SC/ST/OBC/PWD) applying for reserved vacancies (SC/ST/OBC/PWD) will be entitled to relaxation of 5% i.e. they should have minimum 55% marks at graduation level.

Age Limit: 21 to 30 years as on 1st August 2018

Pay Scale: JMGS-I ₹ 23700 - 980/7 - 30560 - 1145/2 - 32850 - 1310/7 – 42020

Application Fee: A Non-refundable fee made through online payment mode on or before 27th September 2018.

For SC / ST / PWD: Rs. 100/- (Intimation Charges Only)
For General and Others: Rs. 600/- (Application Fee + Intimation Charges)


Structure of Online Exam: (Composite Time – 120 Minutes)
Name of the Tests
Maximum Marks
English Language
50
General Awareness with special reference to Banking Industry
50
Financial Management
50




Selection Process: Candidates will be selected based on Online Examination and/or Personal Interview.


Important Dates:

Starting Date of Online Application: 12-09-2018

Last Date to Apply Online: 27-09-2018


How to Apply: Interested Candidates may Apply Online Through official Website.

Apply Online: Click Here
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Vijaya Bank Q1 profit falls 43% on higher provisions, but asset quality improves


Public sector lender Vijaya Bank's June quarter profit declined 43 percent year-on-year to Rs 144.3 crore, dented by higher provisions.
Profit in corresponding period last fiscal was at Rs 254.7 crore.

Net interest income during the quarter grew by 27.9 percent to Rs 1,207 crore compared to Rs 944 crore in same period last year.

Asset quality was better in Q1FY19. Gross non-performing assets as a percentage of gross advances were lower at 6.19 percent against 6.34 percent in previous quarter and net NPAs also declined at 4.10 percent against 4.32 percent QoQ.


Provisions for bad loans for the quarter stood at Rs 659.4 crore, which increased 18.5 percent compared to March quarter and shot up 55.8 percent compared to same period last year.

In absolute terms, gross NPAs were up 0.7 percent sequentially at Rs 7,579 crore but net NPAs declined 2.3 percent to Rs 4,904 crore for the quarter ended June.


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