Tuesday, October 8, 2013

Fifth of India’s forex reserves at risk if US does not up debt ceiling





India held $59.1 b of US treasury securities as of July 2013


One-fifth of India’s foreign exchange reserves are at risk if the US is unable to raise the debt ceiling and actually defaults on its debt obligations.

According to US Treasury, at the end of July 2013, India held $59.1 billion of US treasury securities. This accounts for 21 per cent of India’s foreign exchange reserves of $276 billion.
The debt ceiling is the total amount of money the US government is authorised to borrow to meet its various legal obligations, including interest payment on the national debt. Many countries, including India, have lent money to the US Government by investing in US Treasury securities.

Holding $1.27 trillion of US treasury securities, China is the largest lender to the US. Among other emerging markets, Brazil with $256 billion, and Taiwan with $178 billion, are others with high exposure.

The fallout


The wealth of all US government security holders will shrink if the US fails to raise debt ceiling, resulting in a default of the interest or even the principal on these obligations. The ramifications for global financial markets are enormous.

In May 2011, when the world faced a similar situation, the US Treasury had issued a warning saying, “If Congress fails to increase the debt limit, it would cause investors here and around the world to doubt, for the first time, whether the US will meet its commitments. That would precipitate a self-inflicted financial crisis potentially more severe than the one from which we are now recovering.”

This year, too, the US Treasury has been issuing dire warnings that “Failure to raise the debt ceiling has the potential to be catastrophic with credit market freezing, dollar plummeting and US interest rates skyrocketing with the negative spillovers reverberating around the world.”
Indranil Sengupta, in a Bank of America Merrill Lynch report, writes that if the US finally defaults, it would lead to a Lehman-type global collapse that will likely slash about 80 basis points from India’s GDP forecast for 2013-14.

Congress MAY move IN

Most economists, however, believe that US Congress will not let the situation get out of hand.
Indranil Pan, Chief Economist, Kotak Mahindra Bank, says, “Since the dollar is the reserve currency of the world, it is unlikely that this issue will be allowed to escalate. Even if the US Senate fails to raise the ceiling, the President can exercise his veto power to do so.”

Advanced/emerging

According to the IMF, as of end June 2013, a third of the global foreign exchange reserves were held in dollar-denominated assets (including bank notes, bank deposits and government securities). These assets have grown 41 per cent from the first quarter of 2009 and currently stand at $3.7 trillion.

Advanced economies appear more vulnerable as their dollar denominated holding, as a proportion of total foreign exchange reserves, stands at 56 per cent. This is double the exposure of emerging economies.

(This article was published in the Business Line print edition dated October 8, 2013)

Meet Arundhati Bhattacharya, SBI’s first woman chairperson in 207 years



Arundhati Bhattacharya joins the expanding list of women who are now leading financial institutions in the country
Arundhati Bhattacharya joins the expanding list of women who are now leading financial institutions in the country
FP Staff Oct 8, 2013


Only a few powerful women have made it to the top at Indian banks and the latest entrant to this elite list is SBI’s Arundhati Bhattacharya.
Bhattacharya has been appointed the first woman chairperson of the 207-year-old State Bank of India which is India’s largest commercial bank.
On Monday, the  government  cleared the elevation of Bhattacharya for the top job.  She was among four contenders for the top job. The others were SBI MDs – Hemant Contractor, A Krishna Kumar and S Viswanathan. But longer residual service clinched the decision in her favour.
Bhattacharya  succeeds Pratip Chaudhuri who retired on 30 September.
She will join the  likes of Chanda Kochhar, MD and CEO of ICICI Bank; Shikha Sharma, MD and CEO, Axis Bank; Naina Lal Kidwai, country head, HSBC; Kaku Nakhate, president and country head (India), Bank of America Merrill Lynch, Vijayalakshmi Iyer, CMD, Bank of India; Archana Bhargava, CMD, United Bank of India and Shubhalakshmi Panse, CMD of Allahabad Bank.
Here is all you need to know about Arundhati Bhattacharya
1. Fifty-seven year old Bhattacharya is the bank’s 24th chairperson and has a two-and-a-half-year term at the top. She joined SBI as a direct recruit officer in 1977 and in the course of her extensive service, has served in metros as well as urban and rural areas, criss-crossing the length and breadth of the country.
Earlier, she was managing director and chief financial officer of SBI. In her earlier roles, she was deputy managing director and corporate development officer of SBI.
According to SBI, she was also involved in setting up several new companies and initiatives of the bank, including SBI General Insurance, SBI Macquarie Infrastructure Fund and SBI SG Global Securities Services, as well as the launch of IT platforms such as mobile banking.
As corporate development officer and deputy managing director, she has handled large corporate credit as well as initiatives like financial inclusion and financing of self-help groups.
2. During her 36 years at SBI, she also had a stint in the Bank’s New York office where she was in charge of monitoring branch performance, overseeing external audit and correspondent relations.
3. According to the Times of India, Bhattacharya is the first woman to ever lead a Fortune 500 company in India, and the only woman banker on that list of giants anywhere in the world.
4. This is the first time that an SBI chief will get a three-year tenure —  the first time that any SBI chairperson is getting such a fixed term— irrespective of when the person will retire.
However, she is taking charge at a time when the bank is battling rising bad loans as borrowers find it difficult to meet repayment obligations in a slowing economy. Her biggest challenge will be to improve the bank’s worsening asset quality. The bank’s non-performing assets were 5.5 percent of all assets in the June quarter. Net profit in the first quarter fell 13.6 percent to Rs 3,241 crore against Rs 3,751 crore in the same quarter last year.
In an interview with Times of India, Bhattacharya had  listed capital efficiency, improvement in productivity, investor relations and overall liquidity management as her priorities.
5. “She has a collaborative leadership style, which will help her in dealing with trade unions, which the former chairman faced problems with,” an SBI official was quoted as saying about Bhattacharya by theBusiness Standard.  Still, some SBI officials  told Mint that Bhattacharya lacks the experience of working at the corporate office as she has “spent most of her career outside headquarters”. Whether she will be able to  restore the confidence of investors who have dragged down SBI’s share price in recent weeks remains to be seen. As of now, we should just welcome Arundhati Bhattacharya who joins the expanding list of women who are now leading financial institutions in the country