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Fiscal Woes Prompt India to Raise Money From Finance Sector

Modi’s government skips bank capital injection for first time. To sell stakes in two financial firms, raise deposit insurance.

Fiscal Woes Prompt India to Raise Money From Finance Sector
Indian two thousand rupee banknotes are arranged for a photograph in Mumbai. (Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- The fiscal pressures facing Narendra Modi’s government showed through clearly in the measures announced for the financial sector, where the priority was on raising money rather than spending it.

In the budget announced over the weekend, Modi’s administration skipped injecting fresh capital into Indian lenders for the first time since it came to power in 2014. Instead, it will sell stakes in two financial firms to raise cash. It will also increase deposit insurance to reassure savers in a banking sector that’s grappling with the world’s worst bad-loan ratio.

The decisions show the limitations Modi faces as he balances a widening budget deficit with a financial industry that’s struggling to provide much-needed credit for a weakening economy. Loans to Indian companies and consumers are set to grow about 6.5% in the year through March, the slowest pace in 58 years.

“The government is trying to raise funds from financial institutions and also save on the other hand by not infusing capital into banks,” said Karthik Srinivasan, group head of financial sector at ICRA Ratings, the local unit of Moody’s Investors Service.

The S&P BSE Bankex index fell 0.3% as of 9:40 a.m. in Mumbai Monday after declining the most in almost four years on Saturday following the budget announcement.

Fiscal Woes Prompt India to Raise Money From Finance Sector

At a briefing in New Delhi after presenting the budget on Saturday, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman said her government would consider recapitalizing banks if the need arises. The sector will become more efficient and self-sufficient after a string of mergers last year, said Finance Secretary Rajiv Kumar.

The government is relying on sales of its holdings in IDBI Bank Ltd. and Life Insurance Corporation of India to meet the bulk of its record 2.1 trillion rupee ($29 billion) divestment target for the year starting April 1.

Last year, Sitharaman got state-run LIC to buy 51% of IDBI Bank when the lender was reeling under rising soured credit, leaving the government with 47%. This year, she’s looking to sell a stake in LIC itself, though the government didn’t disclose more details.

The LIC sale is unlikely to go through next fiscal year given statutory challenges, said Suresh Ganapathy, head of financial research at Macquarie Capital Securities Ltd.

The insurance behemoth is so large that the market would struggle to absorb even the minimum mandatory 10% sale, according to Aditya Cheriyan, partner at Khaitan & Co. An LIC employee union has also opposed the move, Press Trust of India reported on Saturday, citing a union spokesman.

Fiscal Woes Prompt India to Raise Money From Finance Sector
More financial-sector details:
  • In a speech lasting more than 2.5 hours, Sitharaman promised further liquidity to a weak shadow banking sector by guaranteeing their securities; she didn’t provide further details
  • She also extended by a year a debt restructuring program, where banks can continue to treat as ‘standard’ defaulted loans to small businesses
  • She increased insurance cover for bank depositors to 500,000 rupees from 100,000 rupees

The increase in deposit insurance “is to reduce risks of potential panic deposit withdrawals given recent incidents,” said Vishal Goyal, an analyst at UBS Group AG in Mumbai. Banks are likely to have to pay the extra premiums, which could prompt them to pass on extra costs to customers, Goyal wrote in a note.

Last year, depositors at Punjab & Maharashtra Co-operative Bank Ltd. swarmed branches to withdraw their savings following reports that it had extended outsized loans to an insolvent developer. The Reserve Bank of India took the rare step of limiting withdrawals at the regional lender.

While the higher deposit insurance may help to assure savers, analysts weren’t impressed by the overall measures for the banking industry.

“The budget had nothing to do to help resolve issues on asset quality, slow credit growth,” said Macquarie’s Ganapathy. “The budget does nothing for the financial services sector.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Suvashree Ghosh in Mumbai at sghosh186@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Marcus Wright at mwright115@bloomberg.net, Jeanette Rodrigues, Russell Ward

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