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This Article is From Nov 19, 2020

This Time, India Is Getting a Bank Rescue Right

Another Indian bank has failed, the third collapse of a major deposit-taking institution in 15 monthsĀ and the first since the onset of the coronavirus pandemic.Ā But instead of allowing a zombieĀ lenderĀ to linger after a half-baked rescue, the central bank has wisely decided to put Lakshmi Vilas Bank Ltd. out of its misery. Better still, it's called upon a foreign institutionĀ to take over theĀ assets and liabilities. ThatĀ should stokeĀ interest of other global banks.

The moth-eaten LVBĀ will cease to exist,Ā its equity completely wiped out. OnlyĀ its deposits will appearĀ on the books of the India unit of DBS Group Holdings Ltd., Singapore's biggest bank.Ā This is a much cleaner solution than how the Reserve Bank of India handled the implosion last SeptemberĀ of Punjab & Maharashtra Co-operative Bank Ltd., whoseĀ loan book was basically tied to one bankrupt shantytown developer. The scam-tainted lenderĀ isĀ trying to sell itself, though it's unclear why anyone would touch it with a barge pole. More than a year later, larger PMC depositors still remain trapped, underĀ orders from the RBI.Ā 

The refusal to giveĀ a decent burial to aĀ failed institution was visible in theĀ messy bailoutĀ of Yes Bank Ltd. in March. Without wiping out the existing equity, authorities permanently wrote downĀ $1.2 billion of Yes Bank'sĀ liabilities,Ā the first complete lossĀ imposed by any country on Additional Tier 1 bondholders. TheyĀ thenĀ leaned on government-controlled State Bank of India to injectĀ some moreĀ capital.Ā Once a major corporate lender, Yes was destroyed from within by its previous management's dubious underwriting. Whether itĀ hasĀ finally beenĀ saved may not be known before March 2022. Until then, Covid-19 has providedĀ a convenientĀ regulatoryĀ cover to delay recognizing stressed assets.

LVB was struggling to surviveĀ even before the March lockdown. The resultingĀ dislocation dragged down the Tier 1 capital ratio toĀ minus 1.83%, putting the lender beyond redemption. By swallowingĀ Ā assets and liabilities of the 94-year-lender, DBS gets 563 branches, 974 ATMsĀ and a $1.6 billion franchise in retail liabilities.

The Singapore institutionĀ was the secondĀ foreign bank after SBM Group of Mauritius to turn its India operationsĀ into a wholly owned subsidiary. Yet, DBS Bank India Ltd.Ā hasn't really expanded outside major metropolises. LVB will helpĀ it penetrate deeper into theĀ moreĀ industrialized southern state of Tamil Nadu, whereĀ Singapore'sĀ ethnic Indian minorityĀ has an ancestralĀ connection.Ā Faster growth in the country could even open up the possibility of a stock-market listing in Mumbai for the India subsidiary, says Bloomberg Intelligence analyst Diksha Gera.

The deal nixes speculation that the RBI might turn toĀ the state-run Punjab National BankĀ to rescue LVB if it couldn't find an acceptable rescuerĀ on its own. Punjab National, allegedly taken for aĀ $2.1 billion fake loan-guarantee ride by anĀ uncle-nephew jeweler duo, is hardly theĀ picture of operational strength and financial vitality depositorsĀ wantĀ to see in a white knight.

To that extent, the RBI's decision to broaden the searchĀ beyond a ā€œnational teamā€ is a good sign. ItĀ shows that the regulator wants control of banking assets to be in strong hands. If they incorporate locally, overseasĀ institutionsĀ will be considered at (almost) par withĀ homegrown ones. Ā 

DBS's rivalsĀ like Standard Chartered Plc, Citigroup Inc. and HSBC Holdings Plc have deeper India ties and bigger branch networks. But their interest in establishingĀ local subsidiaries never perked up because of the stipulation that 25% of newĀ branchesĀ in any year should be in unbanked rural areas. However,Ā now that DBS is getting to build scale in India's capital-starved banking system via an amalgamation blessed by the regulator, there may be similar opportunities in store for others, particularly HSBC.

The British bank needs to cut its excessive reliance on the Hong KongĀ market,Ā where it's caught in the middle of a financial cold war between China and the U.S.Ā DBS Chief Executive Officer Piyush Gupta has put the balance sheet of the bank's IndianĀ unitĀ toĀ use and promised to bring in an extra $336 million inĀ capital. Noel Quinn, hisĀ counterpart at HSBC, should take timeĀ off from hisĀ cost-cutting agenda and weigh the opportunity.Ā LVB was just a smallĀ private-sector bank, but the Indian government also wants to consolidate itsĀ 12 state-run lenders into four. There could be an M&A prizeĀ for becoming Indian.

LVB tried to sell itself, unsuccessfully, to non-bank financiers.

This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners.

Andy Mukherjee is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering industrial companies and financial services. He previously was a columnist for Reuters Breakingviews. He has also worked for the Straits Times, ET NOW and Bloomberg News.

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.

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