Saturday 30 April 2016

HDFC Bank plans to raise Rs 50,000 crores via bonds

Private sector lender HDFC Bank today said it plans to raise Rs 50,000 crore through bonds over one year to fund business growth.

The board has accorded approval for seeking shareholders nod at the annual general meeting (AGM) for issue of perpetual debt instruments, tier-II bonds, senior long-term infra bonds up to a total amount of Rs 50,000 crore in the period of next 12 months through private placement, HDFC Bank said in a regulatory filing.
The board meeting will be held on May 19 to decide about the date for the AGM.
For the fourth quarter, HDFC Bank reported a 20.2 per cent jump in March quarter net at Rs 3,374.2 crore, helped by a healthy rise in core net interest income (NII).
The bank, which registered around 30 per cent profit growth for over a decade till 2013-14, posted a 20.4 per cent growth in post-tax profit at Rs 12,296.2 crore for the fiscal.
For January-March, NII rose 24 per cent to Rs 7,453.3 crore, while the non-interest income was up 11.8 per cent to Rs 2,865.9 crore.
On the asset quality front, gross non-performing assets (NPAs) were flat at 0.94 per cent of gross advances.
Net non-performing assets were at 0.3 per cent of net advances as on March 31, 2016. Total restructured loans were at 0.1 per cent of gross advances at the end of 2016-17.
Provisions and contingencies for the quarter ended March were Rs 662.5 crore as against Rs 576.7 crore in the corresponding quarter of the last year.

FIPB clears Rs 13K cr FDI proposals, Axis Bank cleared

Government panel FIPB today cleared Rs 13,030 crore worth of foreign direct investment (FDI) proposals, including that of hiking foreign investment limit in Axis Bank.




Government panel FIPB today cleared Rs 13,030 crore worth of foreign direct investment (FDI) proposals, including that of hiking foreign investment limit in Axis Bank.
“FDI proposals for more than Rs 13,000 crores recommended for approval. Inflow of investments continue,” Economic Affairs Secretary Shaktikanta Das said.
The Foreign Investment Promotion Board (FIPB) in its meeting today cleared 5 out of 14 proposal, a finance ministry official said.
The proposal of Axis Bank was to hike foreign shareholding limit from 62 per cent currently to 74 per cent. The proposal entails foreign investment worth Rs 12,900 crore.
At present, private banks have a total foreign limit of 74 per cent, of which FII limit is 49 per cent.
The other proposals which were cleared include that of Pharma firm Wockhardt and Aurobindo.
Inter ministerial panel FIPB can clear proposals worth up to Rs 5,000 crore. The ones above that amount go to the Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs (CCEA).
Foreign direct investment (FDI) into the country increased by 40 per cent to USD 29.44 billion during April- December of 2015-16.
The foreign investment inflows were at USD 21.04 billion in the same period of previous fiscal.

Q4 results: Dabur India hopes to sail in Patanjali’s wake

If Dabur can deliver better sales growth and maintain margins, it may be able to meet the high expectations that investors have set



Squeeze the honey out of Dabur. Now Baba Ramdev did not say this, when he recently said he will take the gate out of Colgate and coined similar fates for other foreign-owned brands. But he may well have. Dabur India Ltd said its health supplements business grew in single digits in the March quarter, as its honey sales were affected by Patanjali honey’s aggressive launch. Patanjali’s 500g honey bottle has a list price of Rs.135 versus Dabur’s Rs.199 (exclusive of discount) on bigbasket.com.
Dabur’s management says it will not compete on price (butbigbasket.com is offering the 500g bottle at a discounted price of Rs.169.15); instead it has launched a “squeezy” honey bottle and will launch value-added variants next month. The initial impact has been harsh but surprisingly, Dabur has only words of praise for its competitor. It sees Patanjali as prising open a huge opportunity for products with a herbal/Ayurvedic tilt.
Chief executive Sunil Duggal said Patanjali may actually help in products such as chyawanprash, which they have struggled to grow in recent years. Warm weather—it sells most in winter—is one reason, but he said the product also lacked the kind of “evangelism” or “disruptive influence” that Ramdev has brought.
Duggal’s logic is Patanjali may initially eat into incumbents’ markets but Ramdev’s efforts can grow the market too. In oral care, for instance, Dabur’s growth has benefited from more demand for Ayurvedic/herbal toothpastes. Though Dabur does not sell ghee, Duggal remarked that Ramdev appears to have added new consumers for this product. As disruptive change goes, there’s no knowing what will happen but Dabur’s view is one possibility, an optimistic one at that.
Dabur’s March quarter results show better sales growth, up by 8.5% in value terms and by 7% in volume. Value sales growth is better than the December quarter’s fall of 2.5%. The end of the blockade on the India-Nepal border has seen its food business come back strongly. That had affected growth in the preceding quarter.
Apart from food and oral care, the home care business did well too. Dabur’s international business saw organic growth (excluding the impact of acquisitions/divestitures) of 19.3% compared with 10.7% growth in the preceding quarter. The recovery in sales growth, some support from price increases, slower increase in costs, all contribute to an increase in its Ebitda (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization) margin, both from a year ago and the preceding quarter. A higher tax rate lowered net profit growth to 16.6% compared with a pre-tax profit growth of 20%.
Dabur’s management expects the second half of FY17 to see better sales growth, contingent on a good monsoon. It is still seeing weak rural growth and no significant support from the urban general trade channel (kirana shops). Modern trade is selling well, however. Although some input costs are moving up, the company is not expecting to see significant price increases. It’s a cautious outlook, justifiable considering that past optimism in the sector has not always played out, and what with a hungry competitor on the prowl.
Dabur’s share fell by 1.05% on Thursday. It trades at 38 times the price-to-earnings ratio for the year ended 31 March. FY16 was a tough year but the current fiscal year looks to be a better one, although not if the company’s cautious outlook proves right. If Dabur can deliver better sales growth and maintain margins, it may be able to meet the high expectations that investors have set.

Thursday 28 April 2016

Analytics firms continue to attract investments

Amidst a slowing of funds into the e-commerce and start-ups space, analytics players might buck the trend as they draw insights from raw data to help CEOs make crucial decisions.


Amidst a slowing of funds into the e-commerce and start-ups space, analytics players might buck the trend as they draw insights from raw data to help CEOs make crucial decisions. Sources say Fractal Analytics is in advanced talks to raise $100 million for a minority stake. Fractal’s performance is what will fetch it the funds; the company doubled revenues from about $35 million in 2013 to $70 million in FY15 and its operating margins are 40%.
India’s largest independent data analytics player Bengaluru headquartered Mu Sigma, raised $45 million in 2013 from Fidelity and others for around 3% stake and was reportedly valued at more than $1 billion.
The company, backed by Sequoia Capital, has been doing well; revenues crossed $300 million in 2015 and a quarterly run rate of 7% could well sustain. With the global data analytics market growing by more than 20% annually and estimated to reach a size of $124 billion by the end of 2016, analytics players seem to be on a good wicket. That’s one reason Sasha Mirchandani, who runs Kae Capital Fund, has stayed invested for more than 16 years in Fractal Analytics.
In February, 2015, Singapore’s Temasek led a $60 million investment round in Bangalore-based Manthan Software Services a provider of business intelligence and Big Data analytics solutions for enterprises in which existing investor Norwest Venture Partners ( NVP) also participated. Sohil Chand, managing director, NVP India says top players in this space have operating margins close to 50% in some segments which makes them attractive bets.
Manthan’s annual revenues are in the range of $40 million to $50 million, it is believed to be valued at $500 million. Bimal Raj, Partner, Singhi Advisors, says typically analytics firms are valued at eight times sales but a good product could result in a better valuation. Industry experts say players like Mu Sigma and Fractal Analytics, for instance are targeting Fortune 500 companies as clients. Manthan, meanwhile, is hoping to specialise in areas such as retail performance management systems.
Alokik Advani, managing director Goldman Sachs Principal Strategic Investments Group (GSPSI), the arm of the global investment bank that focusses on making long-term strategic bets in fast growing technology companies, says his firm is looking at potential investments in the data analytics space “We will invest between $2 million to $9 million in funding to promising start-ups in the fintech space,” Advani says.
In February this year, UK based Millward Brown, one of the leading global players in brand, media and communications research acquired Analytics Quotient, a Bangalore based data analytics company founded by former WNS employees. The company started as a four member team in 2008 and its team size has grown to more than 500 employees in the span of eight years with annual revenues around $30 million currently.
Earlier in January this year, Qubole which offers big data services to clients across sectors raised $30 million in series C funding from IVP Capital a US based late stage venture capital fund. Other players which have attracted investments—A series A to Cseries—include Absolute data, Latent View Analytics, Bridgei2i and Fine Analytics.

Yes Bank To Raise Over Rs 16,500 Crore Via Equity, Debt

Private sector lender Yes Bank on Wednesday said its Board has approved raising over Rs 16,500 crore through issue of equity capital as well as debt securities in one or more tranches.

"The Board of Directors...have approved raising of funds by way of issuance of equity capital up to $1 billion (Rs 6,650 crore) in one or more tranches on such terms and conditions as it may deem fit subject to approval of the shareholders," Yes Bank said in a BSE filing. 


It further said: "The issuance may be by way of qualified institutions placement (QIP) or any other international offering like global depository receipts (GDRs)/American depository receipts (ADRs), or by any other appropriate mode as decided by the Board or Committee thereof." 

The bank added that its Board also approved "raising of funds by way of issuance of debt securities including but not limited to non-convertible debentures, MTN (Medium Term Notes), bonds up to Rs 10,000 crore (in INR or FCY) by the Bank, in one or more tranches and/or series, in domestic and/or overseas market.. on private placement".

Yes Bank on Wednesday  reported 27.42 per cent rise in standalone net profit at Rs 702.11 crore for the fourth quarter ended March 2016 as against net profit of Rs 550.99 crore in the corresponding quarter of 2014-15

Wednesday 27 April 2016

After RBI push, DCB Bank lowers lending rates


Private lender DCB Bank today reduced both base rate or the minimum lending rate and the marginal cost of funds-based lending rate (MCLR), a move which will lower EMIs for its borrowers.

While MCLR has been reduced by up to 0.5 per cent, the base rate has been cut by 0.06 per cent.

MCLR for overnight lending has been slashed by 0.5 per cent to 9.32 per cent while it has been lowered by 0.2 per cent to 9.72 per cent effective May 4, DCB Bank said in a statement.

MCLR rate for other maturities has been left unchanged, it said.

DCB Bank revised its base rate to 10.64 per cent per annum from the earlier base rate of 10.70 per cent, effective May 4.

RBI had asked banks to price fixed rate loans of up to three years based on marginal cost of funds from April 1.

The lending rate based on marginal cost of funds is lower than base rate in some cases, resulting in lower EMIs for borrowers. Most banks earlier decided lending rates based on their average cost of funds.

Sun Capital

How Gujarat’s co-op bank hopes to recover Rs 240 cr to repay small depositors

How Gujarat’s co-op bank hopes to recover Rs 240 cr to repay small depositors

Gujarat-based Madhavpura Mercantile Co-operative Bank (MMCB) has announced its final settlement scheme 2016 in a bid recover dues from defaulters

Gujarat-based Madhavpura Mercantile Co-operative Bank (MMCB) has announced its final settlement scheme 2016 in a bid recover dues from defaulters. The bank hopes to recover about Rs 240 crore from nearly 600 borrowers through this scheme.

It may be recalled that thousands of small depositors got duped in the Rs 1,200-crore MMCB scam that was unearthed in 2001. A bank official, requesting anonymity, said MMCB, currently under liquidation, owes nearly Rs 100 crore to about 13,000 small depositors, and Rs 650 crore to 268 other co-operative banks.

With this scheme, MMCB is offering its borrowers the final opportunity to settle their dues. In a press note, the bank said the scheme will cover all accounts except those of Ketan Parekh, Mukesh Babu and Sirish Maniar of Maniar Group.

Chief executive officer GK Fakir said the bank had filed several civil as well as criminal complaints against “defaulter borrowers”. He hoped the final settlement would see most borrowers clearing their dues.

At a time when the Reserve Bank of India did not allow banks to lend more than Rs 15 crore to stock brokers, MMCB had fraudulently issued pay orders worth Rs 12 crore to Mumbai-based stock broker Parekh, and huge sums to Babu and Maniar.

In 2012, the RBI had cancelled the bank’s licence after its total recovery pending stood at over R1,100 crore and non-performing assets had touched 99.9% of total deposits.

Sun Capital

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