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Wednesday, 10 October 2012

Government equity infusions into PSU banks

Posted on 22:16 by Unknown

Harsh Vardhan's excellent blog post on this subject made me think further about the questions.



Finance policy makers in India are often proud of the fact that India has avoided a large systemic crisis in which substantial fiscal resources have been put into rescuing financial firms. I think this optimism is overstated. If we look back into the last 20 years, there has been a steady process of government money going into financial firms. On one hand, we have big events like UTI or IFCI or Indian Bank where large sums of public money were put into financial firms. Equally important is the regular flow of government money into PS Banks.



India is in the midst of a business cycle slowdown. This has come after the biggest-ever credit boom in India's history: in 2007, year-on-year growth of non-food credit was nudging 35%. As we know well, a boom in credit is followed by a boom in NPAs when a downturn comes about. We may well be at the cusp of an upsurge of NPAs. In this case, the pressure on capital in PS banks is going to be acute. If government thoughtlessly continues on the path of putting public money into PS banks then it would involve large sums of money.



As Harsh remarks, the striking feature of this annual resource flow is the way it has become commonplace. Nobody even notices this any more. In a time where government does not put equity capital into any other PSUs, the scale at which this is taking place is quite remarkable.



When the government builds a highway, the cost-benefit analysis is straightforward. Do we want to spend Rs.5000 crore in order to get a 1000 kilometre highway? A tangible result -- the highway -- is the fruit of the fiscal labour. In contrast, capital infusions into PS banks are not animated by a clear goal. What are we doing? Why is this wise? What is the cost benefit analysis? Are there other mechanisms through which the same objectives can be obtained at a lower cost? As the approach paper of the FSLRC has emphasised, perhaps the most important element of the public policy process that we require in India is clarity on objectives, and a clear demonstration that the proposed policy initiative is the best way to achieve the objective. I would classify the annual fiscal transfers to PS banks as part of the larger problem, that the edifice of Indian financial economic policy has been grounded in inadequate analysis. I am almost certain that 1000 kilometres of highway is a better use of public money than putting it into the equity capital of a PSU.



Once objectives are articulated, it becomes possible to measure the extent to which those objectives are being achieved. Evidence can be brought to bear about the extent to which the claimed objectives are being pursued. As an example, Shawn Cole did a beautiful paper which demonstrates the extent to which PS banks are a tool for rigging elections in India [journal link, ungated pdf]. If this is what PS banks do, are we better off if PS bank assets would decline, as a fraction of GDP?



Harsh's calculations treat one key number -- 1.1% return on assets for Indian banks as a whole -- as a given. If this number is given, the average Indian bank is not generating enough retained earnings to support growth, and then there is an inexorable need for fresh equity capital. I would attenuate this discussion in two dimensions:




  • A key feature of a world where banks are required to have equity capital is that not all banks get this equity capital. Some banks do well, they build up their balance sheets, they have good prospects and are able to raise equity capital, and they are able to grow. Alongside them, weaker banks fail to grow. This is perfectly appropriate and a desirable feature of the system: a healthy banking system must be one where only some banks are able to grow. The fact that a bank with the average ROA requires capital for growth does not mean that we should be putting public money into all banks that require capital for growth. Many, many banks in India do not deserve to grow and hanging tough is the right way to deal with them. Growth is not a birthright: a bank must do well, and pass the market test, and thus earn the right to grow.

  • There are many elements of banking policy which are driving down the return on assets. Easing these constraints is a better path for policy rather than putting in public money.



Banks in India are facing a combination of swelling NPAs, and difficulties in finding capital to grow. It is not fair for private banks to face competition from PS banks that get equity capital for free. I am reminded of Kingfisher. As long as Kingfisher was around, with an artificially low cost of capital, this exerted downward pressure on air fares, and hurt all healthy airlines. The exit of Kingfisher was of essence in bringing the rest of the industry back to health. This is the story of Japan's `zombie firms': when failed firms were kept alive using public money for capital infusions, this infected healthy firms. Percy Mistry famously pointed out that Indian finance suffers from the presence of `zombie banks', who only walk the world on the life support of public money. This is a deeper consequence of easy access to capital for public sector companies that we in India should be worrying about.





Harsh is undoubtedly right in suggesting that government should be willing to accept a reduced shareholding in PS banks while retaining control under the Bank Nationalisation Acts. But this leaves the residual question: if PS banks have a low ROA, the share price that this can support is low, if investors see no possibility of true privatisation in the years to come. The amount of equity capital which will come by going down this route is limited. The real story has got to be to ask PS banks to demonstrate that their claim on public money is backed by a good possibility of using capital better than NHAI.



Suppose we suggest that the government should be stingy in giving equity capital to PS banks. In the short term, the partial equilibrium analysis suggests that this will hold back the growth of banks and thus the size of Indian banking. We should bring two different perspectives to this. First, the very absence of free capital for PS banks will increase the profitability and thus equity capital access for private and foreign banks. The overall impact for India will thus be attenuated. In addition, it's easy for government to have entry of 20 new private banks. Suppose each is asked to bring in Rs.500 crore as equity capital. Using the rough 20x leverage that's found in Indian banking, this gives us new bank assets of 2% of GDP or Rs.2 trillion.


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Posted in banking, competition, credit market, equity, financial sector policy, policy process, PSU banks, publicfinance (expenditure), socialism, the firm | No comments

Tuesday, 9 October 2012

Should government capitalise public sector banks?

Posted on 05:49 by Unknown

by Harsh Vardhan.




What would you say if someone was borrowing money at 8% and
investing it to earn around 3%? "Uninformed!", "financially
illiterate!" or even outright "foolish"! And yet this is what our
government has been doing with trillions of rupees over the last
many years and has committed to continue to do so in the future.
The process by which this is done is called capitalisation of
public sector (PS) banks. Such capitalization is not only a bad idea
economically as it puts enormous stress on the government resources,
but also one which affects that behavior of banks and hence the
robustness of the whole banking sector.




Commercial banks need capital to grow.
Capital adequacy requirements ask all banks
to keep a minimum amount of shareholder capital in proportion to their
balance sheet size. Currently,
in India this requirement is 9% of "risk weighted assets" of banks.
Roughly, it means that banks are expected to have equity capital which is
9% of their commercial loans.




As banks grow their business, their risk weighted assets also
grow. This means that banks has to increase their capital base in
line with the growth of their loan book. Such increase in capital can
come from exactly two sources - retained profits that are added to the capital
base, or fresh infusion of capital from shareholders (old or new). In
India, given the overall profitability of the banks (~1.1% return on
assets) and the amount of dividend that they pay (~20%) of post-tax
profits, banks do not have enough retained profits to
support their business growth. Therefore, every now and then, they
go to shareholders to raise fresh capital.




PS banks pose a peculiar challenge for the government. Being the
majority owner of these banks and having committed to stay the
majority owner, government has to infuse capital into these banks
proportional to its ownership stake. Since the government
wants to maintain its ownership at 51%, it has to supply atleast
51% of the fresh capital that PS banks need. RBI governor Dr.
Subbarao, in a recent speech, said that the capital infusion by
government into PS banks over the next decade will be of the order of
Rs.0.9 trillion. I have read estimates of other analysts where this
number is as high as Rs.2.50 trillion. These estimates depend on
the assumptions one makes about a number of factors - the rate of growth
of banks (which in turn depends on the growth of the overall economy),
the profitability of banks, their dividend policy, their ability to raise
other forms of capital (especially tier II capital), regulatory
requirements on capital, etc. No matter how you estimate it, the number
is very large. In other words, the government will be compelled to
invest a very large amount of capital into PS banks over coming
years.




Why is this a problem? Let’s look at the some simple public finance
issues. India is in a deep fiscal crisis, and it is not easy to find
trillions of rupees to put into PS banks. If such resources were
injected into PS banks, it is not conducive to healthy public finance,
since these injections are not a good deal for the government.
The Indian government currently
borrows long term money at over 8%. The dividend yield on PS banks
shares has been between 2% and 3% over the last decade. This means
that the government earns between 2% and 3% on its investments in PS
banks. There is a 5% “negative carry” or loss that government
bears on these investments.




A private investor also earns a low
dividend yield from investing in PS banks, but can benefit from
capital gains - a potential increase in the
value of shares which the investor can obtain when she sells the
shares. Government has never sold shares of PS banks (except when it initially
listed some banks) and will not do so if it has to maintain majority
ownership which is its stated policy. Hence, for the government, the
financial analysis of a proposal to put money into PS banks should
hinge on a comparison between the flow of dividends versus the cost of
borrowing.




Capitalisation of PS banks is, thus, bad for government finances.
It's a double whammy! On the one had government has to raise vast
resources to be invested into banks and then carries a loss of around
~5% on these investments year after year.






Ownership and behavior of banks





Government capitalisation of PS banks is not just a fiscal challenge. It also
impacts the competitive dynamics of the banking industry. Most
privately owned banks are under constant scrutiny of investors and
analysts. When they go to external investors for raising capital, they
have to satisfy these investors on number of critical aspects of the
business - profitability and its sustainability, efficiency of capital
use, quality of management team, cost efficiency, etc. In other words,
private banks face a market test; they do not get capital for
free. Only well run private banks get equity capital that is required
for growth.





None of these
questions get asked when government puts capital into a PS bank.
One has never heard a senior government official commenting on
the Return on Asset (RoA) or Return on Equity( RoE) of PS banks. The
decision to put capital into PS banks is treated as a mechanical and
administrative decision. This absence of a market test has systemic
consequences. PS
banks have ~70% share of the Indian market. When the majority owner is
asking no or very few questions on performance, and is assuring an almost
unlimited supply of capital, these banks have little incentive to
improve financial metrics such RoA and RoE. This hurts the overall
banking industry. For example, PS banks can underprice
loans compared to their private sector peers. Such behavior
would migrate the whole business to lower returns. It is hard for a
private bank to be profitable when facing rivals that are not
concerned about return on capital.






Misplaced obsession with majority ownership





The source of this whole capitalisation issue is the government's
obsession with retaining majority (over 51%) ownership of PS
banks. This is often explained in terms of the need to maintain the
"public sector character" of these banks. While there may be a separate
debate on whether we need to maintain public sector character for all
the 25 plus PS banks, the fact is that the government does not need
majority ownership to achieve this objective.




 
All PS banks are not companies under the Companies Act. The notion
of 51% giving majority control is enshrined in the Companies Act. PS
banks were created under the Nationalisation Act (SBI has its own SBI
Act). The Nationalisation Act provides the government untrammelled
control over these bank. While it does prescribe 51% government
ownership in the PS banks, the control of government is independent
of the level of its ownership. Furthermore, there is a limit of a 5% (10%
with prior approval of the RBI) stake owned by any single shareholder in
all banks. There is no chance, therefore, of any external shareholder
acquiring control in these banks. Even relatively minor changes to the
functioning of PS banks require approval of the parliament. Where is
then the question of diluting the public sector character if the
government ownership were to drop to, let's say 26%, which is the
threshold for "significant" minority stake in a company?




In the long run, therefore, it makes no sense for the government to
commit itself to the capitalisation of PS banks. Precious
government resources can be better deployed in critical areas (such
as power transmission and distribution) where private capital on large
scale is hard to come by. In the medium term, it can use tactical
measures such as merging banks where it has significantly high
ownership with those where the ownership is already down to 51%.
But these tactics will not solve the issue structurally. The only long term
solution is to give up the majority obsession, explain to all the
stakeholders the fallacy of this obsession and the resulting
pressure on public finance, build a political consensus to enact necessary
legislative changes and then dilute down to a reasonable level.



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Posted in author: Harsh Vardhan, banking, competition, financial sector policy, legal system, privatisation, PSU banks, publicfinance.deficit | No comments

Thursday, 4 October 2012

Interesting readings

Posted on 09:05 by Unknown





The
price of half-truths
by Pratap Bhanu Mehta in
the Indian Express.



Rise
of crony journalism and tainted money in media
by
R. Jagannathan on Firstpost.



Telecom,
power, oil: Guide to crony capitalism, Indian style
by
R. Jagannathan on Firstpost.



Trampling on the individual in India:

- Gagged
and Bound: Why India's `free internet' is a big, fat lie

by Danish Raza on Firstpost.

- Why
we need more blasphemy, not less
by R. Jagannathan on Firstpost

- Aakar
Patel
on FirstPost on the problems of free speech in the Indian Penal Code.

- Lakshmi
Chaudhry
on Firstpost about Aseem Trivedi's arrest.

- Salil
Tripathi
in Mint on Aseem Trivedi.

- Kian
Ganz
describes the problems with freedom of speech in Indian
law in Mint.










In
India, the music fest comes of age
by Isha Singh Sawhney
in the New York Times.










Matthew Yglesias reminds us
of the
elementary logic in favour of low taxation of capital income
.



Fear
grips public sector banks
by Dinesh Unnikrishnan, Anup
Roy and Joel Rebello in Mint.



What
drives volumes on BSE

and Why
lower trading fees may not be a game-changer
by Mobis
Philipose in Mint.



Materials from Ila
Patnaik's
blog
: Sovereign
warning
, RBI
is fighting the right
battle
, The
emerging slowdown

and Chidambaram's challenge.



Kayezad
E. Adajania
on recent developments at SEBI on moving towards
principles-based regulation
(link).



Vikram
Doctor
tells a story of coal mining in India that goes back to
Dwarkanath Tagore.










Golden Dawn -- a far-right party where goons hang out in the
streets and kill immigrants in daylight in Greece. 1936?
No, 2012.








The Apple/Samsung case has set off shock waves across the world,
about the threats to innovation that the patent system, particularly
the US patent system, poses. I have always been skeptical about how
the sanctity of property rights was invoked in the phrase
`intellectual property rights', even though knowledge is the
ultimate public good: non-rival and non-excludable. On this subject,
read: Timothy
B. Lee
on
arstechnica. Gary
Becker

/ Richard
Posner
on the Becker-Posner
blog; Jordan
Weissmann
on qz.com writing about a new working paper
by Boldrin
and Levine
. I have to confess, though, that the one thing in
this landscape that I dislike more than Apple is Intellectual
Ventures.



Poul-Henning
Kamp
in ACM Queue on the great crisis facing the world of
software today. Perhaps more poignant in India than elsewhere.



It
all began with an email
by Yanis Varoufakis: The
unexpected twists and turns of economics as a profession.



Offtopic: Read a great short
story Enoch Soames:
a memory of the eighteen-nineties
by Sir Max Beerbohm, written
in 1916, and after that read a
story A
memory of the nineteen-nineties
in the Atlantic
magazine, November 1997, by Teller, and after that read a great article
The
honor system
about Teller, by Chris Jones in Esquire
magazine.



An entry level
3-d printer at $400
! I can remember buying printers that
print on paper for more than that.




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Monday, 1 October 2012

Comments on FSLRC approach paper

Posted on 12:29 by Unknown


  • Embrace FSLRC's approach towards financial reforms, by the editorial team on taxindiaonline.

  • Dhirendra Kumar on valueresearchonline.

  • N. Sundaresha Subramanian in the Business Standard.

  • George Mathew in the Indian Express.

  • Shaji Vikraman in the Economic Times. Editorial there.

  • What is regulation for? by Ila Patnaik in the Indian Express.

  • Buyer beware to seller be responsible, by Monika Halan in Mint.

  • Editorial, Monika Halan (+video), Asit Ranjan Mishra, Mobis Philipose in Mint.

  • Editorial, Ila Patnaik in the Financial Express.



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Sunday, 30 September 2012

Approach paper released by the Financial Sector Legislative Reforms Commission

Posted on 11:36 by Unknown


The Financial Sector
Legislative Reforms Commission
(FSLRC) is rethinking the
legislative foundations of the Indian financial system. FSLRC was
setup by a
notification
on 24 March 2011 and asked to submit its findings
on 24 March 2013. FSLRC constitutes the first time in Indian history
that a large-scale re-examination of multiple laws in a sector is
being undertaken.



FSLRC has released a
compact approach
paper
showing preliminary findings about the strategy that will
be adopted. The release of this report is part of the consultative
mechanisms that have been followed within the Commission. The
Commission has invited feedback from experts and interested parties
on this document.




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Saturday, 22 September 2012

What the computer revolution has done

Posted on 07:34 by Unknown

That computing has become immensely more powerful in recent decades veers on the cliche. I recently got a few reminders of precisely how much distance we have moved.



Cory Doctorow tells us that the computation that goes into one google query is roughly the same as all the computing done for the entire Apollo program.



Jay Goldberg is astonished to discover pretty powerful no-name tablets now go for $45. One can see whole new world opening up with ubiquitous use and firm-deployment of tablets.



And most astonishing of all: the ipad (2012) matches the floating point performance of the Cray 2 supercomputer (1989). That's a gap of 23 short years. Also note the completely different slope seen on the right hand set of dots:







Source: Slideshow by Jack Dongarra and Piotr Luszczek, linked to by Michael Larabel.



This story has been going on for decades but it isn't finished yet. Just this year, my laptop got four cores, and I'm steadily shifting all my R programs to utilise parallel processing. For all X, it's interesting and useful to ask How would X change if computation, communications and storage got cheaper and better?. On this theme, you may like to read this post -- The new world of computers -- from earlier this year.



As an old timer, I always worry that we used to do Things That Mattered using the Cray 2 supercomputer, like forecast the weather or simulate nuclear explosions, whereas the bulk of the ipad's compute power is being deployed to watch cat videos on youtube. We have yet to re-imagine our world in terms of these new powers.

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Friday, 21 September 2012

Finance and law: Call for papers

Posted on 00:37 by Unknown


National Seminar on Financial Law & Policy: An
Inter-disciplinary Approach
(December 1, 2012) Organised by
National Institute of Public Finance and Policy, New Delhi in
collaboration with National Law University, Delhi



The National Institute of Public
Finance and Policy (NIPFP)
, New Delhi invites papers for a
national-level seminar titled "Financial Law & Policy: An
Inter-disciplinary Approach"
to be held at the
National Law University, Delhi
(NLU Delhi) on December 1, 2012.



Background



The financial sector in India is currently governed by more than
sixty legislations along with a plethora of rules and
regulations. This has led to a lot of ambiguity in the legal framework
applicable for doing business in the country. The problem gets
compounded by the fact that many of these legislations were enacted
more than sixty years ago, with objectives and purposes that are
largely not in sync with the realities of the present day globalised
competitive world.



Realising the need to address these issues and for formulating a
legal framework geared up to facilitate growth of the financial sector
in the future, the Government of India set up the Financial Sector
Legislative Reforms Commission (FSLRC) on March 2011 under the
chairmanship of Justice (Retd.) B.N. Srikrishna. The mandate of FSLRC
involves overhauling these existing legislations and laying down a
policy and legislative landscape geared towards creating a more
coherent and dynamic financial environment. This exercise will also
involve identifying regulatory gaps and overlaps seen in the existing
system. In this regard FSLRC is focusing towards of rewriting and
harmonizing the existing financial sector laws in the country, to
bring them in tune with the requirements of a modern financial
system.



In an evolving financial world, FSLRC intends that the new
legislations will cater to the requirements of a large and fast
growing economy. This is indeed a unique challenge not only because it
is the first time in the history of independent India that such a
large scale organised legislative reform initiative is being
undertaken but also since the work involves absolute cutting edge
inter-disciplinary research involving law, economics and finance.



For fulfilling its mandate, FSLRC has entered into a Memorandum of
Understanding with NIPFP whereby NIPFP is engaged in providing
research and technical support services to FSLRC; managing the process
of conducting the core legal, public policy, economic research for the
various working groups established by FSLRC and drafting of the
relevant draft legislation.



However, this ambitious reform will be meaningful only if a culture
of inter-disciplinary thinking and research can be encouraged in
Indian academia. In this context the NIPFP is organising a national
level seminar on "Financial Law & Policy: An Inter-disciplinary
Approach"
at NLU Delhi, on December 1, 2012.



Topics



To engage with a wider audience in a constructive debate over the
various issues of contemporary relevance raised in FSLRC's Terms of
Reference (available at http://finmin.nic.in/fslrc/fslrc_index.asp),
the broad issues from which the authors may choose are:




  1. Appropriate means of oversight over financial regulators and
    their autonomy from the government;

  2. Consumer protection as an aspect of financial regulations;

  3. Role of the Central Bank in financial market regulation and
    supervision

  4. Resolution of financial firms;

  5. Principle-based or ruled-based legislation: what will work in India?

  6. Unified regulator or sectoral regulator: which will work in Indi?

  7. Financial Regulation and competition policy

  8. Emergency powers in systemic risk situation

  9. Legal process in financial regulation



Procedure



The author(s) has to submit the completed, original and unpublished
paper with the Seminar Co-ordination Committee by November 1, 2012
(23.59 hrs). The Seminar Co-ordination Committee will be responsible
for evaluation and selection of the top 5 papers. The authors of the 5
selected papers will be invited to NLU, Delhi to present their papers
before an elite panel composing of legal practioners and members of
FSLRC.



Word Limit: The paper must not exceed 5000 words (excluding
footnotes or endnotes).



Format: The paper must be in Times New Roman font, character
size 12 and with 1.5 spacing. Footnotes or endnotes must be in Times
New Roman font, character size 10 and with single spacing. No specific
style of footnotes/endnotes is required. However, the
footnotes/endnotes must be written in a uniform style and provide
necessary information.



Submission Procedure: The Paper must be mailed to
ankur.saxena@nipfp.org.in in soft copy (pdf format) by November 1,
2012 (23.59 hrs) along with:




  • Duly filled-in attached registration form (soft copy)

  • Presentation in .ppt/.pdf format that the author seeks to use in
    the course of the presentation (optional)



Please note that the subject of the mail should be 'Paper
submission'.



Eligibility: Papers may be contributed by any person (academicians,
researchers, practitioners, students etc.) interested in contemporary
financial regulations.



Co-authorship: Papers may be works of joint authorship.



Publication of selected papers: The 5 selected papers will
be published on the NIPFP website with appropriate disclaimer.



Composition of the Seminar Co-ordination Committee



The Co-ordination Committee Comprises of:



Chairman:




  • Mr. Dhirendra Swarup, Member Convenor, FSLRC



Moderator:




  • Prof. Ajay Shah, Professor, NIPFP



Evaluators:




  • Mr. Rajshekhar Rao, Advocate, Supreme Court of India

  • Mr. Somasekhar Sundaresan, Partner, J. Sagar Associates

  • Mr. Risham Garg, Assistant Professor of Law, NLU Delhi



Contact Person:



Mr. Ankur N. Saxena, Legal Consultant, NIPFP, email id:
ankur.saxena@nipfp.org.in



Other Relevant Information



Crucial Dates




  • The last date for submission of the completed paper: November 1,
    2012 (23.59 hrs)

  • Intimation of shortlisted papers: November 15, 2012

  • The date of seminar: 1 December, 2012



Expenses:



The authors of the selected papers will be provided boarding and
lodging facilities at NLU Delhi.



Venue: National Law University, Delhi Sector 14, Dwarka, New
Delhi- 110078




REGISTRATION FORM



National Seminar on Financial Law & Policy: An
Inter-disciplinary Approach



Name of the Author(s):



Designation:



Institute/Organisation:



Title of Proposal/Paper:



Contact Number:



Email :




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Blog Archive

  • ▼  2013 (81)
    • ▼  September (6)
      • 11th Conference of the Macro/Finance Group
      • Implications of bringing commodity futures into th...
      • Interesting readings
      • Raghuram Rajan's day 1 statement
      • Implications of the Pensions Act
      • A season for bad ideas
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