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Axis Bank Joins India’s Top Private Lenders to Increase Pay

Axis Bank is joining its larger rivals in offering pay hikes to staff.

Axis Bank Joins India’s Top Private Lenders to Increase Pay
Pedestrians walk past signage for Axis Bank Ltd. outside a branch in Mumbai, India. (Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg)

India’s third-largest private lender is joining its larger rivals in offering pay hikes to staff even as the economic fall out of the coronavirus pandemic threatens profit growth.

Axis Bank Ltd. will increase staff salaries between 4% and 12% from Oct. 1 based on performance, according to people with knowledge of the plans. The Mumbai-based lender, which has about 76,000 employees, also paid bonuses to its staff, the people said, asking not to be identified because the matter is private.

HDFC Bank Ltd., the country’s largest private lender by assets, boosted salaries in April based on performance and also paid bonuses, other people with knowledge of the matter said. ICICI Bank Ltd., the second-biggest privately-held lender, gave about 80% of its 100,000 employees a bonus and pay rise from July, according to different people aware of the plans.

The pay rises come as the coronavirus pandemic forces some local and global peers to cut jobs and pay. Many Indian lenders are seeking to save costs as the coronavirus is expected to push soured assets to a two-decade high.

Executives earning more than 2.5 million rupees ($34,109) at India’s fourth-largest private lender, Kotak Mahindra Bank Ltd., will take a 10% salary cut, while senior management will take a 15% reduction.

Capital Raising

S&P Global Ratings lowered Axis Bank’s credit rating to below investment grade in June, citing concerns that the Covid-19 pandemic would challenge the lender’s asset quality and profitability.

Shares in Axis closed 1.2% higher in Mumbai on Tuesday, slightly lagging the broader banking index that ended up 2%.

The Reserve Bank of India forecasts that the capital-adequacy ratio for lenders -- a measure of available capital meant to ensure the bank can absorb a loss -- could fall to as low as 11.8% by March from 14.6% a year earlier, close to the minimum requirement of 9%.

Still, Axis Bank, Kotak Mahindra Bank and ICICI Bank are among private lenders that have raised about $9 billion by tapping equity markets to protect themselves and prepare for future business. The capital raising will also give them a greater ability to cope with bad loans even as they extend credit.

Representatives for Axis Bank, HDFC Bank, ICICI Bank didn’t immediately respond to emails seeking comments.

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.