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சொத்து வெளியீட்டாளர்

83469885

Developments in Commercial Banking (Part 1 of 4)

 

Overview

During 1997-98 deposits as well as credit of Scheduled Commercial Banks (SCBs) recorded substantial increases as against the deceleration in credit flow in the preceding few years.  In general, banks had sufficient liquidity throughout the year.  However, in response to the effects engendered by the South-East Asian crisis and in order to curb speculative tendencies in the foreign exchange market, a number of monetary and credit policy measures were taken in January 1998.  These measures were rolled back as orderly conditions resumed.  Overall the operations of banks were relatively unaffected by these measures and these were reflected in their better financial performance during 1997-98.  The South-East Asian crisis has been a major wake up' call especially to supervisors in all countries in the region.
 
2.2   The performance of  SCBs has shown a distinct improvement in terms of their operating and net profits in 1997-98.  Besides, banks were able to reduce their level of NPAs and enhance their capital adequacy ratios.  With interest rate deregulation and consequent collapsing of rates on term deposits of shorter term maturities as also the lower credit-deposit ratios, the spread of banks declined during 1997-98.  However, as a result of lower provisions on account of mark to market of investment portfolios and relatively lower intermediation cost, banks were in general able to obtain relatively higher profits - gross and net during 1997-98.  Excluding interest income from recapitalisation bonds, the net profit ratios of nationalised banks would be only one-half of their present net profit ratios and the number of nationalised banks that would be in red would increase from two to four. Fourteen public sector banks (PSBs) out of 27 qualified for the autonomy package announced by the Union Government.
CHAPTER II
 

DEVELOPMENTS IN COMMERCIAL BANKING

2.   Liability and Asset Structure of Banks

Deposits
 
2.3   Aggregate deposits of SCBs  showed a sustained rise during 1997-98. The aggregate deposits of SCBs increased by Rs.99,811 crore (19.7 per cent) during the financial year as compared with the rise Rs.71,780 crore (16.5 per cent) in the preceding year (Table II.1). Among the components of aggregate deposits, there has been a significant growth in time deposits component during the year.
 
Chart II.1 :
Flow of bank funds to Commercial
Sector-1996-97 and 1997-98 (Sept. -March)
 
chart II.1
 
Bank Credit
 
2.4   During 1997-98, bank credit recorded an increase of Rs.45,677 crore (16.4 per cent) as compared with the rise of Rs.24,387 crore (9.6 per cent) in 1996-97 (Table II.1). Food credit also recorded a rise of Rs.4,888 crore (64.3 per cent) during 1997-98 as against the decline of Rs.2,194 crore (-22.4 per cent) in the previous year.  The increase in non-food credit at Rs.40,789 crore (15.1 per cent) in 1997-98 was far higher than the increase of Rs.26,581 crore (10.9 per cent) in the previous year. Non-food credit growth which was relatively subdued in the first half of 1997-98 started picking up in the second half.  Since conventional non-food credit alone does not give a full picture of the support of the banking system to the commercial sector, it is necessary to take into account SCBs' other investments' i.e., investments in bonds/debentures/shares issued by Public Sector Undertakings (PSUs)/private corporate sector and Commercial Paper. Together, the increase in flow of funds by SCBs to commercial sector aggregated to Rs.53,662 crore (18.4 per cent) during 1997-98 as compared with Rs.31,606 crore (12.2 per cent) in 1996-971  (Chart II.1). SCBs incremental other investments' increased from Rs. 4,370 crore in 1996-97 to Rs. 13,673 crore in 1997-98 (Chart II.2).
 
2.5   During the first six months of the current financial year i.e. April-September, 1998 aggregate deposit growth [Rs.58,595 crore (9.7 per cent)] was higher than the corresponding growth of Rs.40,949 crore (8.1 per cent) in similar period last year (Table II.1). Within the aggregate deposits, demand deposits declined during this period, while time deposits growth contributed entirely to the total growth of aggregate deposits, reflecting the contribution of Resurgent India Bonds, increasing interest sensitivity of time deposits and the liquidity preference of depositors.  During the first 6 months of the current financial year, i.e., April-September, 1998, non-food credit increased by Rs.459 crore (0.1 per cent) as compared with a meagre increase of Rs.26 crore in similar period last year.  Together with other investments' and bills rediscounted with Financial Institutions, the flow of funds by SCBs to commercial sector increased by Rs.8,386 crore up to the end of September 1998 as compared with an increase of Rs.6,929 crore during the same period last year.
 
Chart II.2 :
Scheduled Commercial  Banks' Investments in CPs, Bond, Share, and Debentures :
Sept. 1996 - Sept. 1998
 
chart II.2
 
1These figures are inclusive of bills redicounted by banks with Financial Institution

Table II.1: Important Banking Indicators - Scheduled Commercial Banks - 1996-97 and 1997-98
(Amount in Rs. crore)
                             

  Items Outstanding as on   Variations   Variations
                during the   during the
                financial   period
     
 
 
 
 
  year
  (April- September)
    March March March Sept Sept   1996-97   1997-98   1997-98   1998-99*
    29,1996 28,1997 27,1998 26,1997 25,1998*    
   
   
   
                over   over   over   over
                March   March   March   March
                29   28   28   27

1   2 3 4 5 6   7   8   9   10
                (3 - 2)   (4 - 3)   (5 - 3)   (6 - 4)

1. Total Demand and Time                          
  Liabilities @ 4,80,613 5,61,982 6,78,731 6,09,324 7,45,258   81,369   1,16,749   47,342   66,527
2. Aggregate Deposits (a+b) 4,33,819 5,05,599 6,05,410 5,46,548 6,64,005   71,780   99,811   40,949   58,595
                (16.5)   (19.7)   (8.1)   (9.7)
  (a)  Demand Deposits 80,614 90,610 1,02,513 90,267 99,513   9,996   11,903   -343   -3,000
                (12.4)   (13.1)   (-0.4)   (-2.9)
  (b)  Time Deposits 3,53,205 4,14,989 5,02,897 4,56,281 5,64,492   61,784   87,908   41,292   61,595
                (17.5)   (21.2)   (10.0)   (12.2)
2.1 Certificate of Deposits 16,316 12,134 14,296 7,795 7,886   -4,182   2,162   -4,339   -6,410
                (-25.6)   (17.8)   (-35.8)   (-44.8)
2.2 Aggregate Deposits 4,17,503 4,93,465 5,91,114 5,38,753 6,56,119   75,962   97,649   45,288   65,005
  (Excluding Certificate of             (18.2)   (19.8)   (9.2)   (11.0)
  Deposits)                          
3. Borrowings from RBI 4,847 560 395 306 3,306   -4,287   -165   -254   2,911
                (-88.4)   (-29.5)   (-45.4)   (737.0)
4. Liability to Banks 17,648 21,193 32,287 27,699 36,776   3,545   11,094   6,506   4,489
                (20.1)   (52.3)   (30.7)   (13.9)
5. Bank Credit (a+b) 2,54,015 2,78,402 3,24,079 2,79,734 3,28,132   24,387   45,677   1,332   4,053
                (9.6)   (16.4)   (0.5)   (1.3)
  (a)  Food Credit 9,791 7,597 12,485 8,903 16,079   -2.194   4,888   1,306   3,594
                (-22.4)   (64.3)   (17.2)   (28.8)
  (b)  Non-food Credit 2,44,224 2,70,805 3,11,594 2,70,831 3,12,053   26,581   40,789   26   459
                (10.9)   (15.1)   (0.0)   (0.1)
  (c)  Non-food credit 2,42,714 2,68,551 3,08,902 2,69,908 3,09,878   25,837   40,351   1,357   976
  excluding petroleum             (10.6)   (15.0)   (0.5)   (0.3)
  credit                          
6. Investments (a+b) 1,64,782 1,90,514 2,18,705 2,11,892 2,51,559   25,732   28,191   21,378   32,854
                (15.6)   (14.8)   (11.2)   (15.0)
  (a)  Government Securities 1,32,227 1,58,890 1,86,957 1,81,506 2,19,901   26,663   28,067   22,616   32,944
                (20.2)   (17.7)   (14.2)   (17.6)
  (b)  Other Approved Securities 32,555 31,624 31,748 30,386 31,658   -931   124   -1,238   -90
                (-2.9)   (0.4)   (-3.9)   (-0.3)
7. Cash Balances (a+b) 53,780 53,195 61,306 60,188 66,600   -585   8,111   6,993   5,294
                (-1.1)   (15.2)   (13.1)   (8.6)
  (a)  Cash in hand 3,113 3,347 3,608 3,417 3,805   234   261   70   197
                (7.5)   (7.8)   (2.1)   (5.5)
  (b)  Balances with RBI 50,667 49,848 57,698 56,771 62,795   -819   7,850   6,923   5,097
                (-1.6)   (15.7)   (13.9)   (8.8)
                             
  Memorandum Items :                          
A. Other Investments 15,041 19,411 33,084 26,022 40,095   4,370   13,673   6,611   7,011
B. Credit-Deposit Ratio 58.6 55.1 53.5 51.2 49.4                
C. Non-food credit 55.9 53.1 51.0 49.4 46.7                
  (excluding petroleum                          
  credit)/ Deposit ratio                          
D. Incremental Credit- 90.4 34.0 45.8 3.3 6.9                
  Deposit Ratio                          
E. Cash Balances-Deposit Ratio 12.4 10.5 10.1 11.0 10.0                
F. Investment/Deposit Ratio 38.0 37.7 36.1 38.8 37.9                
G. Investment + Credit/                          
  Deposit Ratio 96.5 92.7 89.7 90.0 87.3                

  @ Excluding borrowings from RBI/IDBI/NABARD.          * Provisional.
  Notes: 1. Figures in brackets are percentage variations.
    2. Constituent items may not add up to the totals due to rounding off.
    3. No sign is indicated for positive variations.

2.6   During 1997-98, 41 per cent (32.6 per cent last year) of the incremental non-food gross bank credit went to medium and large industry, 40.2 per cent (39.4 per cent last year) to priority sector, 2.4 per cent (1.2 per cent last year) to wholesale trade and the remaining 16.4 per cent (26.8 per cent last year) to other sectors (Table II.2). Real estate loans which is a component of other sectors received only a negligible proportion (1 per cent) of incremental non-food credit in 1997-98.  Within the industrial sector substantial increase in bank credit was evidenced in respect of Iron and Steel (Rs.4,099 crore as compared with Rs.3,186 crore in 1996-97), Electricity (Rs.1,146 crore as compared to Rs.803 crore in 1996-97), Cotton Textiles (Rs.1,278 crore as compared with Rs.461 crore in 1996-97), Chemicals (Rs.2,727 crore as  against a decline of Rs.1,057 crore in 1996-97) and Petroleum (Rs. 2,781 crore as compared with Rs.1,864 crore in 1996-97) (Table II.3). The industries which witnessed substantial decline/deceleration in bank credit included Electronics (a decline of Rs.227 crore over and above the decline of Rs.577 crore in 1996-97), other Metal and Metal products (a decline of Rs.83 crore as against the rise of Rs.1,299 crore in 1996-97).During the first quarter of 1998-99 (April - June 1998), credit to industrial sector declined by Rs.6,492 crore as compared with a decline of Rs.3,767 crore in similar period last year with significant decline in the case of Engineering , Petroleum and Iron and Steel industries.
 
Export Credit
 
2.7   The total export credit outstanding of scheduled commercial banks as on the last reporting Friday of March 1998 stood at Rs.34,430 crore forming 10.6 per cent of total outstanding net bank credit (NBC) as against the outstanding export credit of Rs.30,112 crore or 10.8 per cent of NBC as on March 28, 1997.
 
2.8   During 1997-98 (April-March), export credit refinance limits of SCBs declined significantly from Rs.6,654 crore for the fortnight ended March 28, 1997 to Rs.2,403 crore for the fortnight ended March 27, 1998, before increasing to Rs.4,925 crore for the fortnight ended September 25, 1998 (Appendix Table II.1).  Utilisation of export credit refinance was generally low during 1997-98. The average utilisation attained a peak of 86.2 per cent for the fortnight ended January 30, 1998 and declined thereafter to 2.2 per cent for the fortnight ended March 27, 1998.  The low level of utilisation of export credit refinance may be attributed to the easy conditions in the call money market reflecting the comfortable overall liquidity situation. The average utilisation for the fortnight ended September 25, 1998 rose to 93.9 per cent. This increase was mainly an account of reduction in interest rate an export credit refinance from 9.0 per cent to 7.0 per cent per annum effective August 6, 1998.

Table II.2: Sectoral Deployment of Gross Bank Credit by Major Sectors
(Amount in Rs.crore)
                               

Sectors Outstanding as on
  Variations during
      March 29, March 28, March 27, June 20, June 19,   Financial year
  April - June
      1996 1997 1998 1997 1998*   1996-97   1997-98   1997-98   1998-99*

1   2 3 4 5 6   7   8   9   10
                (3 - 2)   (4 - 3)   (5 - 3)   (6 - 4)

I. Gross Bank Credit  (1+2) 2,31,860 2,58,991 3,00,283 2,53,245 2,95,373   27,131   41,292   -5,746   -4,910
  1. Public Food Procurement                          
    Credit 9,791 7,597 12,485 10,075 16,828   -2,194   4,888   2,478   4,343
  2. Non-Food Gross Bank 222,069 251,394 287,798 243,170 278,545   29,325   36,404   -8,224   -9,253
    Credit  (A+B+C+D))             (100.0)   (100.0)   (100.0)   (100.0)
  A. Priority Sectors 73,329 84,880 99,507 84,070 98,064   11,551   14,627   -810   -1,443
                  (39.4)   (40.2)   (9.8)   (15.6)
  (i) Agriculture 27,044 31,442 34,869 31,169 34,448   4,398   3,427   -273   -421
                  (15.0)   (9.4)   (3.3)   (4.5)
  (ii) Small Scale Industries 31,884 35,944 43,508 35,289 42,374   4,060   7,564   -655   -1,134
                  (13.8)   (20.8)   (8.0)   (12.3)
  (iii) Other Priority Sectors 14,401 17,494 21,130 17,612 21,242   3,093   3,636   118   112
                  (10.5)   (10.0)   (-1.4)   (-1.2)
  B. Industry (Medium & 93,053 1,02,604 1,17,530 99,492 1,12,172   9,551   14,926   -3,112   -5,358
    Large)             (32.6)   (41.0)   (37.8)   (57.9)
  C. Wholesale Trade (Other 11,980 12,340 13,217 11,806 12,937   360   877   -534   -280
    than food procurement)         (1.2)   (2.4)   (6.5)   (3.0)    
    of  which:                          
  (i) Cotton Corporation of India 381 294 305 32 83   -87   11   -262   -222
                  (-0.3)   (0.0)   (3.2)   (2.4)
  (ii) Jute Corporation of India 0 0 33 0 16   0   33   0   -17
                  (0.0)   (0.1)   (0.0)   (0.2)
  (iii)  Other Trade 11,599 12,046 12,879 11,774 12,838   447   833   -272   -41
                  (1.5)   (2.3)   (3.3)   (0.4)
  D. Other Sectors 43,707 51,570 57,544 47,802 55,372   7,863   5,974   -3,768   -2,172
    of which :             (26.8)   (16.4)   (45.8)   (23.5)
  (i) Housing 6,303 7,773 9,057 7,384 9,020   1,470   1,284   -389   -37
                  (5.0)   (3.5)   (4.7)   (0.4)
  (ii) Consumer durables 1,476 2,297 2,527 1,940 2,679   821   230   -357   152
                  (2.8)   (0.6)   (4.3)   (-1.6)
  (iii) Non-banking financial 3,386 5,154 6,227 5,600 5,375   1,768   1,073   446   -852
    companies             (6.0)   (2.9)   (-5.4)   (9.2)
  (iv) Loans to individuals 1,933 2,066 1,904 1,662 2,603   133   -162   -404   699
                  (0.5)   (-0.4)   (4.9)   (-7.6)
  (v) Real Estate Loans 1,173 1,546 1,899 1,838 2,104   373   353   292   205
                  (1.3)   (1.0)   (-3.6)   (-2.2)
  (vi) Other non-priority sector 12,569 12,392 10,133 9,739 9,240   -177   -2,259   -2,653   -893
    personal loans             (-0.6)   (-6.2)   (32.3)   (9.7)
  (vii) Advances against Fixed N.A. 1,505 11,815 10,328 12,139   -   10,310   8,823   324
    Deposits                          
  (viii) Tourism and tourism N.A. N.A. 822 0 423   -   -   -   -399
    related hotels                          
II. Export Credit 29,590 30,008 33,947 28,307 31,671   418   3,939   -1,701   -2,276
  (included under  item I.2)                          
III Net Bank Credit 2,28,198 2,45,999 2,97,265 2,50,401 2,92,782   17,801   51,266   4,402   -4,483
  (including inter-bank participation)                        
  Memorandum Items:                          
  A. Priority Sector Credit as %                          
    to NBC 32.1 34.5 33.5 33.6 33.5                
  B. Agricultural Sector Credit                          
    as % to NBC 11.9 12.8 11.7 12.4 11.8                
  C. Export Sector Credit as %                          
    to NBC 13.0 12.2 11.4 11.3 10.8                

  * Data are Provisional.
  Notes : 1. Data relate to selected scheduled commercial banks which account for about 90-95 per cent of bank credit for all scheduled commercial banks. Gross bank credit data include bills rediscounted with RBI, IDBI, EXIM Bank, other approved financial institutions and inter-bank participations. Net bank credit data are exclusive of bills rediscounted with RBI,  IDBI, EXIM Bank and other approved financial institutions.
  2. Figures in brackets are proportions to incremental non-food gross bank credit.

Table II.3: Industry-Wise Deployment of Gross Bank Credit
(Amount in Rs. crore)


Industry Outstanding as on
  Variations during
  Mar.29, Mar.28, March 27, June 20, June 19,   Financial year
  April - June
  1996 1997 1998 1997 1998*   1996-97   1997-98   1997-98   1998-99*

1 2 3 4 5 6   7   8   9   10
              (3 - 2)   (4 - 3)   (5 - 3)   (6 - 4)

Industry (Total of Small, Medium 1,24,937 1,38,548 1,61,038 1,34,781 1,54,546   13,611   22,490   -3,767   -6,492
and Large Scale)                          
1.Coal 488 570 801 672 729   82   231   102   -72
2.Mining N.A. 65 975 733 937   -   910   668   -38
3.Iron and Steel 8,482 11,668 15,767 12,148 15,405   3,186   4,099   480   -362
4.Other Metal and Metal Products 3,977 5,276 5,193 4,778 5,302   1,299   -83   -498   109
5.All Engineering 25,621 22,684 22,833 21,452 20,832   -2,937   149   -1,232   -2,001
  of which : Electronics (5,276) (4,699) (4,472) (3,933) (4,511)   (-577)   (-227)   (-766)   (39)
6.Electricity 2,703 3,506 4,652 3,468 5,129   803   1,146   -38   477
7.Cotton Textiles 7,592 8,053 9,331 7,914 9,363   461   1,278   -139   32
8.Jute Textiles 605 543 1,089 534 1,105   -62   546   -9   16
9.Other Textiles 7,802 9,685 10,651 9,492 9,927   1,883   966   -193   -724
10.Sugar 3,299 2,547 2,959 2,596 2,824   -752   412   49   -135
11. Tea 1,313 814 1,028 839 1,035   -499   214   25   7
12. Food Processing 3,103 3,655 4,134 3,698 4,326   552   479   43   192
13. Vegetable Oils (including 1,565 1,955 2,296 1,978 2,365   390   341   23   69
Vanaspati)                          
14. Tobacco and Tobacco Products 1,009 934 1,076 934 1,007   -75   142   0   -69
15. Paper and Paper Products 2,366 2,580 2,742 2,527 2,905   214   162   -53   163
16. Rubber and Rubber Products 1,748 1,817 2,534 1,792 2,277   69   717   -25   -257
17. Chemicals, Dyes, Paints, etc. 16,450 15,393 18,120 14,742 17,610   -1,057   2,727   -651   -510
  of which :                          
    i) Fertilisers (2,108) (2,358) (2,910) (2,224) (2,994)   (250)   (552)   (-134)   (84)
   ii) Petrochemicals (1,633) (1,923) (2,956) (1,715) (3,029)   (290)   (1,033)   (-208)   (73)
  iii) Drugs and Pharmaceuticals (2,367) (3,672) (5,219) (3,703) (5,142)   (1,305)   (1,547)   (31)   (-77)
18. Cement 1,744 1,918 2,502 1,945 2,655   174   584   27   153
19. Leather and Leather Products 2,279 2,225 2,478 2,166 2,547   -54   253   -59   69
20. Gems and Jewellery 2,785 3,096 3,530 3,068 3,422   311   434   -28   -108
21. Construction 1,854 2,494 2,646 2,659 2,326   640   152   165   -320
22. Petroleum 1,510 3,374 6,155 3,154 4,318   1,864   2,781   -220   -1,837
23. SAFAUNS $ 2 0 0 0 0   -2   0   0   0
24. Automobiles including trucks N.A. N.A. 2,870 N.A. 2,827   -   -   -   -43
25. Computer software N.A. N.A. 616 N.A. 673   -   -   -   57
26. Infrastructure N.A. N.A. 3,163 N.A. 3,998   -   -   -   835
  of which :                          
  (i) Power N.A. N.A. (697) N.A. (982)   -   -   -   (285)
  (ii) Telecommunications N.A. N.A. (2,045) N.A. (2,442)   -   -   -   (397)
  (iii) Roads and Ports N.A. N.A. (421) N.A. (574)   -   -   -   (153)
27. Other Industries 26,640 33,696 30,897 31,492 28,702   7,056   -2,799   -2,204   -2,195
Memorandum Item :                          
Industrial Credit as proportion to                          
Net Bank Credit 54.7 56.3 54.2 53.8 52.8                

  * Data are provisional.
  $ Ships aquired from abroad under new scheme.

Notes : 1. Data relate to selected scheduled commercial banks which account for  about 90-95 per cent of bank credit of all scheduled conmercial banks. Gross bank credit data include bills rediscounted with RBI, IDBI, EXIM Bank and other approved financial institutions.
  2. No sign is indicated for positive variations.

Bank Credit to Sick/Weak Industries
 
2.9   There has been a perceptible fall in the number of sick/weak units financed by banks (from 2,64,750 at end-March 1996 to 2,37,400 at end-March 1997) (Appendix Table II.2).  As a proportion of industrial credit, bank credit locked up in sick/weak units declined from
11.0 per cent at end-March 1996 to 10.2 per cent at end-March 1997.  The bank credit locked up in Small-Scale sick industries and Non-SSI sick units also showed a perceptible decline during 1996-97.
 
Flow of Credit to the Small Scale Industries Sector
 
2.10   The flow of credit to small-scale industries has been a major area of interest.  The one-man committee set up by the Reserve Bank in December 1997 under Shri S.L. Kapur (Chairman) to review the working of the credit delivery system for small-scale industries (SSIs) with a view to making the system more effective, simple and efficient to administer, submitted its report on June 30, 1998. The main recommendations have been discussed in Chapter I.

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