http://www.moneyspidery.com/2012/02/02/nhai-bond-helps-banks-expand-current-account-deposits/
The
euphoria over the National Highways Authority of India’s (NHAI) bond
issuance not only allowed the public sector entity to raise money for
financing its operations, but also benefited banks by helping them
expand their low-cost deposit base.
While mobilisation of CASA (current
account savings account) deposits has been challenging for banks in the
current environment of high-term deposit rates, the current account
balances of top lenders like ICICI Bank, HDFC Bank and Axis Bank
increased in the last quarter — primarily because of flows related to
NHAI bonds.
For ICICI, the country’s largest
private-sector lender, the growth in current account deposits in the
third quarter nearly doubled from a quarter ago. In October-December,
the bank added Rs 7,042 crore deposits in the current account compared
with Rs 3,220 crore in the previous three months.
In comparison, the growth in the bank’s
savings deposits in the last three months has been slower. It added Rs
3,349 crore savings deposits in the previous quarter.
“The increase in current account
deposits included the impact of greater float on account of NHAI bond
issuance related flows,” said a senior executive of ICICI Bank after the
lender announced its third quarter earnings yesterday.
It has also helped ICICI Bank improve
its CASA deposits’ share in total deposits to 43.6 per cent as of
December-end, from 42.1 per cent a quarter ago. For 2011-12, the bank
expects to maintain the average CASA ratio at about 40 per cent. Rival
HDFC Bank, too, has benefited from the exuberance related to NHAI bonds.
The bank is believed to have received around Rs 4,000 crore of current
account deposits that were related to NHAI bond issuance.
The bank in its third quarter earnings
release had said core CASA deposits “adjusted for one-off current
account balance of approximately Rs 4,000 crore was at 47.7 per cent of
total deposits as at December 31, 2011”.
Even for Axis Bank, the NHAI bond
issuance appears to have aided the lender’s current account deposits.
The private-sector bank’s current account deposits rose 47 per cent
year-on-year last quarter, while savings deposit growth was only 21 per
cent. The CASA ratio of the bank improved to 42 per cent as of
December-end.
Analysts and bankers said other large
lenders, including State Bank of India (SBI), are likely to have
witnessed growth in current account deposits primarily because of NHAI’s
bond issuance. SBI is yet to detail its third quarter earnings.
It was in December last year that the Rs
10,000-crore bond issuance of NHAI opened for subscription. The bonds
were oversubscribed by 2.5 times. In other words, investors put Rs
25,000 crore in banks to subscribe these bonds. The banks will now
refund Rs 15,000 crore to investors.
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