Showing posts with label Accounting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Accounting. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 17, 2020

Governance back on RBI Drawing Board

Governance in Banks back on the Drawing Board of RBI




India’s emergence as a global player is imminent and so would be a strong financial sector. RBI’s very comprehensive Discussion Paper on Governance in Banks comes as a formidable effort to set the house in order and bring about the much needed reforms in Banks. Large Balance Sheets do not add so much strength as it is just a reflection of one day in a year not so much as good governance.
There is a broad realization that change in the mindset among bankers would not come about by either the dictates of the RBI or its owner but internalizing the best governance factors. In evidence is the excess liquidity pumped into the Banks during the last six months and yet credit to the needy does not flow. Risk aversion needs reversal and this can happen with good, responsible and accountable governance.

Increasing Bank frauds, cyber crimes, arrest of some top executives and Chairpersons of reputed Banks like the ICICI, failures of PMC Bank, Times Bank, Yes Bank and several in hiding have obviously triggered the RBI getting to the drawing Board on Governance. The Paper has heavy referencing to the BCBS, OECD and Ashok Ganguly Report, bringing back to the drawing board of RBI its seriousness in action and not just intention.
Contextually, it is heartening to see that what I have been articulating since 1999: Corporate Governance in Banking & Finance (Tata-McGraw Hill, 2000 with YRK Reddy) and ‘A Saint in the Board Room’ (Konark Publishers: 2011) with R. Durgadoss, finds echo in the Paper. Two decades of wait is worth it.

The Government, going by the experience so far, considers that institutions created under its fold are sacred cows and should therefore be protected at the cost of the exchequer. Hopefully, the GoI would embrace these governance reforms in PSBs and hasten corrections with a sense of urgency.
There is enough proof in India that regulation and bank supervision are interdependent and not of independent of governance in banks. Both have limitations with effective interplay among them. Viewing from this angle, the discussion now unfolded specifies the key stakeholders’ role; distinguishes the role of non-executive director from independent director and workmanship Director.  
A foundation is built for the whole house; there are not separate silos for the kitchen and bedrooms. In the same way, audit, compliance and risk management should maintain their necessary independence — but not operate in three different silos. Governance is the binding force/material and it rests on the Board. It helps all the three groups speak the same language and connect with business processes and products.

The Discussion surrounds the audit and risk processes as more proactive than reactive unlike now. Once the house is built, no one would like to go to foundation to make changes. Therefore, change management is extremely crucial. Board cannot be expected to do the change management function. Change management requires federated ownership to cite a GRC framework study.
There are two aspects needed for the actions mentioned in the discussion paper to trigger, although experts in various fields alone are taken on bank boards. Knowledge cannot be taken as something given and permanent and it requires frequent updation.

1.    Board of Directors should themselves be prepared for new responsibilities and new roles. In the first meeting of the Board, the first item of the agenda should be the series of actions ordained in the Discussion Paper of RBI and their understanding in the present and emerging context. Each Director may be asked to furnish upfront what he or she would like to contribute to the Board and the objectives of the Bank. This would be the Board’s review point half-yearly and annually. Qualitative change will become possible through this measure.

2.    Half-yearly retreats for self-renewal of Board Directors away from the traditional Board meetings has potential for a free and open discussion on the issues - both internal and external to the organization. It is not common practice to have separate budget for Board management. It is good to have Board approved budget for its own functioning and knowledge upgradation. Usually good directors will be on the learning curve and hence, wisdom lies in taking advantage of it. ‘Fresh thinking’ that the RBI advocated would be possible with such measure.

Even mega Banks, measured by their Balance Sheets, suffer from issues that they would prefer to hide, wherein lies the danger. One of the leading large PSBs in its latest balance sheet has very low net interest earnings – not just due to low credit outflow but more due to gains in the reduction in the interest rate on deposits, for 9 times in a year! Depositors are minority stakeholders. It’s profit is made up out of sale of its stake in a subsidiary and not due to core banking business where credit sale is poor and deposits rose despite and not because of its efforts.

RBI cannot be a gatekeeper of the Banks. It can only direct the Banks to take care of the interests with due concern for the economy and the various other constituents. It is here that whistle blower policy implementation becomes crucial. We have seen lackadaisical responses even on RTI questions and references to the Courts for seeking responses. Such approach will not hold validity if transparency in dealing with issues that affect the persons in responsibility.

The Paper has fully accommodated the recent statement of the FM that the Banks need not be afraid of the three ‘C’s – CVC, CBI, CAG by such references being made only on Board decision  after fully exhausting internal examination and action.

While minority shareholders’ interest may be taken care of, depositors turning a minority stakeholder, would harm the interests of banks in the long run. The correction can come from governance and the RBI’s latest approach makes adequate mention of it in its paper.

It is also interesting to find that the RBI as regulator would divest its participatory role in the Board. Hope Government of India would not raise any objection on this issue. It has been noticed thus far that the value RBI Director imparted in the Board disclosures has not been significant.

There is a thin line between the non-Executive Directors and Independent Directors and this subtlety has been well addressed in specifying their roles in the NRC Committee and Audit Committee. Risk management Committee Chair to be directly responsible to the Chairman is worthy to note. It has rightly identified Risk Appetite framework as crucial for the eventual risk measurement and management. Those who cannot risk prudently cannot get reward. It could have specified that non-performers, because of their clean slate, cannot be elevated to key management positions in the organisation and the Board should ensure this through its effective oversight.

While it has kept its banner line on culture and values, it could have also constituted Ethics Committee with an outside expert nominee of the RBI to chair it and make it responsible to the Chairman directly. Business Ethics is an oxymoron and therefore, defining it is crucial in financial institutions. Measuring Ethics has been templated by the writer in the book A Saint in the Board Room. Corporate Executives can be subjected to this test while the Board Directors are supposed to be ethical, having right values to uphold the organisational culture. The future tells it all.
*The author is an economist and risk management specialist. The views expressed are personal.



 https://www.moneylife.in/article/governance-in-banks-back-on-the-drawing-board-of-rbi/60655.html

Friday, September 7, 2018

Bet Big on MSMEs in Telangana


Bet big on MSMEs in Telangana
Low NPAs in the sector should drive financial institutions for proactive interventions rather than waiting for things to happen

The Telangana government has created efficient policy instruments around TS-iPASS, T-PRIDE, T-IDEA, RICH (Research and Innovation Circle of Hyderabad), TASK (Telangana Academy for Skill and Knowledge) and TIHCL (Telangana Industrial Health Clinic Limited) for the MSME ecosystem. The micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs) in the State today do not face power outages, voltage fluctuations and scarcity of industrial water. Tolerance to pollution is going down slowly but surely.

Digital technologies, particularly artificial intelligence and man-machine learning, are changing the way businesses are moving. Large enterprises are also making a beeline to industrial parks and clusters like never before. Credit institutions, however, are yet to match these efforts.
The questions that arise now are: Where are the entrepreneurs? Why are they not crowding in? What to do to make the ecosystem deliver?

Copability and Capability

Risk profile of the MSME sector indicates the copability and capability of the financial sector. Business risks surrounding industry, markets, operational efficiency, management risks and financial risks impact credit quality and infringe on standalone credit risks. Low NPAs in the sector should drive financial institutions for proactive interventions and not wait for things to happen. Enhanced CGTMSE (Credit Guarantee Fund Trust for Micro and Small Enterprises) threshold to Rs 2 crore is again an opportunity for the banks to move to trust-based lending from the balance sheet and ratio-based template lending platforms.

Both MSMEs and entrepreneurs are also changing the way they run their businesses. The other day I noticed as many as 60 young men and women at Cherlapally in the shoes of their parents or grandparents. The aspirations today for most of them are moving from legacy and archaic systems to newer ways of doing things; catching up with emerging technologies; setting up new systems and moving to global markets as well.

Banks should view such enterprises differently and wherever such change has been occurring; human assets should be valued and embedded into their risk profiles. This should enable better credit scoring and higher volume of credit to meet the challenges.

Cross-holding Risks
Going forward, industrial clusters should provide lenders a risk mitigation platform and for borrowers, scope for moving to value chain from supply chain management. But such clusters should have an interdependence between large enterprises and MSMEs in a seamless manner cross-holding the risks. All shall be on ERP platforms enabling easy data-based monitoring.
According to a recent report by the Planning Department, Adilabad, Gadwal, Rajanna Siricilla, Siddipet and Warangal districts require skill adaptation, promotion and skill building in textile technologies (handlooms, powerlooms, technical textiles, fabrics, apparel and readymade garments).
All other districts in Telangana, except Wanaparthy, require skills related to food processing machining, chemicals, and heat treatment. Wanaparthy district requires skillsets related to solar technology. TASK should also encompass providing for industry association interface and incubation centres in at least four key districts – Warangal, Nizamabad, Adilabad (around IIT) and scaling up the VTIs, ITI and polytechnics both in regard to technologies and faculty.

Mudra-enabled banks show more performance in the MSME sector but lending lags for manufacturing ones. Textile Mudra has extended the threshold to Rs 20 lakh at the extreme and this also provides a great opportunity for banks and NBFCs to lend for manufacturing MSMEs since the State is set to emerge as a major operator in the sector both in domestic and foreign markets. The future of MSMEs rests on embracing digital technology.

Declining growth in lending to the sector from commercial banks provided a great window of opportunity to the NBFCs. The latter are devising credit products based on GST data driven by the latest relaxations in thresholds and submission of returns and take very limited recourse to the credit rating agencies. CRAs have not been able to come up with a rating tool for new enterprises that the lenders can latch upon readily. Banks would do well to look at their lost loan book during the last five years. They should extend credit without cross-selling products like insurance and MF that led to the shortage of working capital upfront.

Competitiveness of future MSMEs comes from knowledge-based enterprises and global markets. Entrepreneur development centres in the DICs, NIMSME, and MSME-DI should work in collaboration to identify and train entrepreneurs and develop shelf of projects around the prospects within the shortest possible time. Lending institutions should tweak their products to cater to such situation providing environment for growth.

Disciplined Accounting
The MSMEs’ rate of vertical growth has not much to cheer as micro and small tended to remain in that status for decades. Product differentiation and price differentiation continue to be drawing less attention. Organisation of their sales books needs the willpower to move on disciplined accounting track. This would mean a change in the mindset of most of them. Digital training of both bank staff and MSMEs needs tools for kick-starting learning appetite within optimal costs for such initiatives.
Banks should consider failure as integral to the development. The GoI in its draft industrial policy has recognised Industrial Health Clinic modelled on TIHCL as a key intervention. Revival of a viable enterprise revives dormant fixed assets and sustains employment in the sector.
The government is also committed to seeing the MSMEs in good health. Seventy-five MSMEs through TIHCL are set to join the recently turned around Rajarajeswari Spinning Mills, Sirpur Kagaz Mills and the likes, with special support from the government.

Opportunity mapping as indicated in the infograph unfolds a large canvas for those who can take the risks and manage them well. Time and tide wait for none. Banks and NBFCs would do well to seize the emerging opportunities in the sector.

https://telanganatoday.com/bet-big-on-msmes-in-telangana