Monday, June 30, 2014

நம்மால் முடியும்: 'கிராவிட்டி' படத்தை மேற்கோள்காட்டி இஸ்ரோவில் பிரதமர் மோடி பேச்சு

இஸ்ரோவில் பிரதமர் நரேந்திர மோடி.

தி இந்து:திங்கள், ஜூன் 30, 2014

இஸ்ரோவில் விஞ்ஞானிகள் மத்தியில் பேசிய பிரதமர் நரேந்திர மோடி, 'கிராவிட்டி' என்ற ஹாலிவுட் படத்தை மேற்கோள் காட்டி, இந்திய விண்வெளித் துறையின் வல்லமையை பெருமிதத்தோடு எடுத்துரைத்தார்.

ஆந்திர மாநிலம் ஸ்ரீஹரிகோட்டாவில் உள்ள சதீஷ் தவன் ராக்கெட் ஏவுதளத்தில் இருந்து பிஎஸ்எல்வி-சி23 ராக்கெட் இன்று காலை சரியாக 9.52 மணிக்கு வெற்றிகரமாக விண்ணில் ஏவப்பட்டது.

இந்நிகழ்ச்சியை பிரதமர் நரேந்திர மோடி நேரில் பார்வையிட்டார். அவருடன் ஆந்திர மாநில முதல்வர் என்.சந்திரபாபு நாயுடு, மத்திய அமைச்சர் வெங்கய்ய நாயுடு ஆகியோர் உடன் இருந்தனர்.
பிஎஸ்எல்வி-சி23 ராக்கெட் வெற்றிகரமாக விண்ணில் ஏவப்பட்ட பிறகு, இஸ்ரோ விஞ்ஞானிகள் மற்றும் தொழில்நுட்ப நிபுணர்கள் மத்தியில் பிரதமர் நரேந்திர மோடி பேசியது:
"பி.எஸ்.எல்.வி. சி-23 ராக்கெட், பி.எஸ்.எல்.வி. பயணத்தில் மேலும் ஒரு வெற்றி. ராக்கெட் வெற்றிகரமாக விண்ணில் செலுத்தப்பட்டதற்கு விஞ்ஞானிகளுக்கு பாராட்டுகளை தெரிவித்துக் கொள்கிறேன்.

இந்த வெற்றி ஒவ்வொரு இந்தியரையும் பெருமை கொள்ளச் செய்துள்ளது. ராக்கெட் விண்ணில் செலுத்தப்பட்டதை நேரடியாக பார்வையிட்டது பெருமையளிக்கிறது. இதற்காக இஸ்ரோவுக்கு நன்றி தெரிவித்துக்கொள்கிறேன்.

நாட்டின் வளர்ச்சிக்கும், விண்வெளித் துறை வளர்ச்சிக்கும் நேரடியாக தொடர்பு இருக்கிறது. 5 நாடுகளுடைய செயற்கோள்களை பி.எஸ்.எல்.வி. சி-23 ராக்கெட் தாங்கிச் சென்றிருப்பது உலக நாடுகள் மத்தியில் நமக்கு மிகப் பெரிய அடையாளத்தை ஏற்படுத்திக் கொடுத்திருக்கிறது.
நமது தேசத்தின் விண்வெளித் திட்டங்கள் மிகவும் தனிச்சிறப்பானவை. விண்வெளித் துறையில் இந்தியாவின் வளர்ச்சி குறிப்பிடத்தக்கது. இந்திய தொழில்நுட்ப வளர்ச்சி பழங்கால தொன்மை வாய்ந்தது. பாஸ்கரச்சார்யா, ஆர்யபட்டா ஆகியோர் விட்டுச்சென்ற பணிகள் தான் இப்போதும் தொடர்கிறது.

விண்வெளி ஆராய்ச்சித் துறைக்கு மத்திய அரசு முக்கியத்துவம அளிக்கும். சார்க் நாடுகளுக்கு என தனி செயற்கைக்கோளை இந்திய விஞ்ஞானிகள் உருவாக்க வேண்டும்.

ஹாலிவுட்டில் எடுக்கப்பட்ட 'கிராவிட்டி' என்ற திரைப்படத்தை உருவாக்க இஸ்ரோ அனுப்பிய மங்கள்யான் விண்கலத்தை செலுத்த ஆன செலவைவிட அதிகமாக இருந்ததாக அறிந்தேன். குறைந்த செலவில் ஒரு மகத்தான சாதனையை நாம் செய்துள்ளோம். இது, நம் விஞ்ஞானிகளின் வல்லமையையே பறைசாற்றுகிறது.

இந்திய விண்வெளி ஆராய்ச்சி நாட்டில் பேரிடர் மேலாண்மையிலும் பெரும் பங்காற்றி வருகிறது. குறிப்பாக 'பைலின்' புயல் தாக்கியபோது அது குறித்து முன் அறிவிப்புகளை அவ்வப்போது துல்லியமாக வெளியிட்டு பல உயிர்களை காக்க உதவியது.

நமது ராக்கெட்டுகள் முற்றிலும் உள்நாட்டில் உருவாக்கப்பட்டுள்ளன. பல தலைமுறைகளாக இதற்காக கடுமையாக உழைத்துள்ள இஸ்ரோ விஞ்ஞானிகள் உலக அரங்கில் விண்வெளித் துறையில் இந்தியா தன்னிறைவு பெறச் செய்துள்ளனர். விண்வெளித் துறைக்கு மேலும் பல வெற்றிகள் காத்துக்கொண்டிருக்கின்றன.
நம்மால் முடியும்!"

இவ்வாறு பிரதமர் நரேந்திர மோடி பேசினார்.

The game has changed for gold saving schemes

Workaround Some jewellers are circumventing the rules by reducing the tenure of their schemes
Workaround Some jewellers are circumventing the rules 

by reducing the tenure of their schemes

Rajalakshmi Nirmal :BL :29 june 2014

Jewellers are closing down schemes that accept money for over a year, thanks to the new Companies Act
Did you know that Tanishq, a national jewellery retailer, has stopped accepting fresh deposits under its gold savings scheme?
This is because the new Companies Act, notified recently, has laid down certain conditions for collection of public deposits by companies (other than banks and NBFCs). And unless jewellers satisfy these conditions, they cannot run deposit schemes.
Sandeep Kulhalli, Senior VP, Jewellery Retail and Marketing, Titan Company, said: “We have written to the CLB (Company Law Board) and the Commerce Ministry for clarifications of the rules and have thus temporarily stalled the scheme.”
However, jewellers running their stores as sole proprietorships or partnership firms can still run savings schemes without having to sweat over the new regulations.
New provisions

Only jewellers registered as private limited companies fall under the ambit of the Companies Act, says Ramesh Vaidyanathan, Managing Partner, Advaya Legal.
The Companies Rules, 2014, has brought deposits taken by jewellers under its regulatory ambit. Says Deep Roy, Associate Partner, Economic Laws Practice: “Deposits taken by jewellers were previously excluded under the definition of ‘deposits’ from the Companies (Acceptance of Deposit) Rules, 1975. As per the Companies (Acceptance of Deposits) Rules, 2014, an advance in lieu of supply of goods will not be a deposit only if it is appropriated and the goods supplied within 365 days.”
The rules further state that “any amounts received by a company, whether in the form of instalments or otherwise, from a person with a promise or offer to give returns, in cash or in kind and any additional amount contributed by the company (jeweller in this case), will also be considered as a deposit.”
Thus, all private limited jewellers who run gold saving schemes for durations of more than a year, fall under the new Companies Act.
The Act also holds that any company that raises money from the public for tenures of more than 365 days has to get rated for its repayment capacity from a credit rating agency and take deposit insurance. With most of the jewellers’ saving schemes running into 24 to 36 months and falling under the definition of ‘deposits’ under the new Companies Act, the reasons for jewellers discontinuing their saving schemes are clear. However, some jewellers have worked around the new rules. They have started 10+1 and 11+1 month schemes. Here, as the duration is less than a year, they manage to stay below the regulator’s radar.
Limits on returns

But even if jewellers do run schemes for durations of over 365 days, the returns they can offer are capped. Right now, the return on gold savings schemes of most jewellers is 15-17 per cent a year, (based on the present value of cash outflows and inflows at the end of the term for a 24-month savings scheme).
Now, the Companies Act says that no deposit scheme should offer a return that is higher than what is permitted for NBFCs. Currently, NBFCs are permitted to offer an interest rate of only 12.5 per cent a year. So, there will perhaps be a redrafting of such schemes by the jewellers.
Companies which do not meet the requirements of the law but have deposits running, need to return the deposits to the public before April 1, 2015, adds Ramesh Vaidyanathan. Otherwise, they will be penalised in accordance with the provisions of the Act.
Finally, some jewellers have recently launched gold deposit schemes that collect old gold and promise to return a higher grammage of gold after a few years.
Experts are divided in their views on whether these schemes are also governed by the new provisions. It’s still wait-and-watch on that one.

A Quick Look On The Fabulous Life Of Bill Gates, The Richest Man In The World



Madeline stone BI 28 June 2014

With a net worth of approximately$78.9 billion, Microsoft cofounder Bill Gates is the wealthiest man in the world.
Gates has been a public fixture ever since he and Paul Allen started a computer revolution in the 1980s. He has all of the toys you would expect from the world's richest man, from a private jet to a 66,000-square-foot home he nicknamed Xanadu 2.0.
Yet as his wealth has grown, Gates has done more and more philanthropy work, donating billions of dollars to charity projects through the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.

Lenders feel "trust deficit" in gems and jewellery sector

Lenders feel
PTI :30 June 2014
Saddled with bad assets like the Rs 6,000 crore Winsome Diamonds account, lenders have come out strongly against shady practices in the gems and jewellery sector, stating that there exists a "trust deficit" that makes doing business with the industry difficult.
"As of today, there is a huge trust deficit within the industry, bankers, regulators and government. This is one segment where trust is most important," Bank of Baroda's Chairman and Managing Director S S Mundra said, speaking at a gathering of the gems and jewellery industry over the weekend.
His reservations included the likely diversion of funds by the players into real estate, equities and commodity market investments; an "intermingling" between gold, diamond and jewellery verticals which led to Interestarbitrage and "confusion" in working capital positions; and even a lack of trust in the trade data put out which makes it difficult to compute the net exchange earning.
Mundra, who is widely tipped to be the next Deputy Governor of the Reserve Bank of India, hinted that such practices make it very uncomfortable for a bank to do business with the sector, even though the sector may deliver benefits on employment generation and foreign exchange earning front.
State Bank of India's Chairman Arundhati Bhattacharya targeted the lack of transparency in the sector and said it is due to this that regulations governing lending to the sector are very stringent and hence, bankers are retreating from this business globally.
"At this point of time, there is very little transparency as to which part of business is utilising what Funds and what value and what margins are there in individual parts of the business," she said, affirming SBI's commitment to the sector, where it has a Rs 4,000 crore exposure.

Swiss money trail: From gold and diamond to stocks and bitcoins

Swiss money trail: From gold and diamond to stocks and bitcoins
PTI :Goodreturns Monday, June 30, 2014, 10:02 [IST]

As Switzerland commits to cooperate in India's fight against black money, a new strategy of 'layering' through gold and diamond trade has come to light at Swiss banks to thwart any attempt for identification of real beneficiary owners of funds entrusted with them.
The activities and avenues being used for such 'layering' include diamond trade, gold and other jewellery exports, stock market transactions through use of complex funds, as also the fund transfer through new-age virtual currencies like bitcoin.
At a time when Switzerland has been facing intense pressure to act on the alleged use of Swiss banks for stashing black money by Indians, the government data of the Alpine nation shows that India has become the top destination for its gold exports with trade worth close to 6 billion Swiss francs (about Rs 40,000 crore) since the beginning of this year.
According to government and Banking sources, there is a growing suspicion that a portion of gold and diamond trade is being used to route funds from Swiss banks to India and other destinations.
At the same time, the banks in Switzerland are now getting an undertaking signed by their clients, where the customer agrees to take responsibility for any possible regulatory or administrative compliance with international norms.
The development regarding alleged use of diamond and gold trade, as also stock market transactions and bitcoins, for layering of black money comes at a time when there has been an intense debate about Swiss authorities' assistance in India's fight against black money, which has been a politically sensitive issue in the country.
A senior Swiss government official recently said that Switzerland was ready to help India with data under its 'spontaneous information exchange' initiative on a proactive basis, although the European country continues to resist any information-sharing on requests based on 'stolen data'.
The statement triggered a major debate and Switzerland's Secretariat for International Financial Matters (SIF) issued a public statement on this matter. Some reports went on to suggest that Swiss authorities have already shared a list of Indians alleged to have stashed black money, but any such development was denied by both the government.
When contacted, SIF spokesperson Mario Tuor confirmed that the Swiss authorities "are in contact with the Indian government", but refused to share further details.
In reply to emailed queries, Tuor said that Switzerland is looking forward to working together with the new government in India in its fight against tax evasion.
Tuor, however, refused to comment on his reported remarks that Switzerland has not shared any list with India, neither it was preparing one for sharing with the Indian authorities.
The other routes being tapped by some Swiss bankers and their clients for 'layering' of their funds include art works, as also virtual currencies, they added.
'Layering' is generally second stage of money laundering process and this involves moving illicit Funds around the financial system through a complex series of transactions to complicate the paper trail.
This 'layering' typically takes place between the first stage -- 'placement' of blackMoney in the financial system either in cash vaults, or through a series of cash or sham financial transactions -- and before the final 'integration' stage when money is put back into the financial system through various transactions for the benefit of its final recipient.
The latest data compiled by Switzerland's Federal Customs Administration (FCA) shows that exports to India of gold, silver and coins to India has been rising consistently since January this year (981 million Swiss francs) and reached 1.2 billion Swiss francs (about Rs 8,000 crore) in May 2014.
Moreover, India accounted for over 32 per cent of entire Swiss exports of such items during May, up from just about 14 per cent at the beginning of this year. In the process, India has overtaken China as biggest destination for Swiss gold exports. Interestingly, Switzerland's overall gold export figures have fallen in recent months, but exports to India are rising.
Under global pressure, Switzerland decided earlier this year to provide country-wise breakdown of its goldtrade.
The Financial Action Task Force (FATF), a global financial crimes combating body, had also said in one of its recent reports that India is one of the five countries where instances have been found that trade accounts of diamond business are being used to launder illegal funds.
Switzerland is also in the process of easing its various regulations, including those related to sharing of information with foreign jurisdictions in cases of suspected tax evasion and other financial crimes.
When asked whether India would be a beneficiary for automatic information exchange once a revised Tax Administrative Assistance Act comes into force in August, SIF spokesperson declined to give any direct answer and said it would depend on various developments within the country.
"Switzerland is actively taking part in international efforts aimed at better combating tax fraud and evasion such as the development of a worldwide standard for automatic exchange of information. Like India, Switzerland has endorsed the declaration on automatic exchange of information..." Tuor said.
On specific query that whether India would benefit, the spokesperson said that Switzerland would first wait until the new global standard on automatic exchange in tax matters has been defined by the OECD and accepted by the G20.
"Secondly, the Swiss government will propose how to implement the new standard in Switzerland. Thirdly, the Swiss parliament will decide on the government's proposals... I can't give you any further details," Tuor said.

Sunday, June 29, 2014

Keep Eye On Shadow Banking

BS 27 June 2014


In India, shadow banking entities essentially refer to the large number of unregulated companies that act as financial intermediaries, providing credit and generating liquidity in the system
 
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) on Thursday said there was a need to monitor "shadow banking" entities, which were perceived to be regulated by the central bank, albeit inaccurately, to eliminate ambiguities related to legal, regulatory and administrative aspects of their functioning.

In India, shadow banking entities essentially refer to the large number of unregulated companies that act as financial intermediaries providing credit and generating liquidity in the system. For instance, companies engaged in multi-level marketing, offering prize chits and money circulation schemes are currently not regulated by RBI.

"(The shadow banking sector) raises concern partly because of the public perception that they are regulated," the central bank said in its financial stability report released on Thursday.

At a time when some developed economies have initiated efforts to mitigate systemic risks posed by shadow banking activities, India has witnessed a a significant increase in the exposure of its banks to shadow banking entities.

"The motivation for regulatory reforms in the shadow banking space in developed economies, especially in the US, emanated from certain dilemmas that, on the one hand, there was a need to de-risk the overgrown complex banking industry, which inevitably needs the presence of shadow banking entities to absorb those risks and the concerns over the role of shadow banking entities in consummating the financial crisis, on the other," RBI said.

The banking regulator, however, admitted that in developing markets such as India these concerns might not be entirely valid because of the low penetration of banking services, much less complex financial markets and level of regulatory oversight exercised over shadow banking activities. In fact, some shadow banking entities have been playing an important role in supporting efforts towards financial inclusion.

But with relatively lower levels of financial awareness and the misconception that all financial activities come under some regulatory framework, shadow banking entities in the country may assume systemic importance.

Hence, the central bank feels there is a need for clarity in the regulatory framework for shadow banking entities in India. "There is a need to assess the collective size and profile of activities of the large number of non-bank financial entities functioning in the organised as well as the unorganised sector (including unincorporated entities which are outside the purview of the regulatory perimeter)," RBI said.

The banking regulator is in the process of reviewing the regulatory framework for non-banking financial companies (NBFCs), based on the recent developments in the sector and also recommendations made by the Nachiket Mor committee.

"The proposed review will cover the legislative framework of the NBFC sector, asset classification and provisioning norms for NBFCs vis-a-vis that of banks - (including the need for raising tier-I capital requirement for NBFCs), corporate governance guidelines including 'fit and proper' criteria for their directors, regulation of deposit acceptance activity, consumer protection measures, present classification scheme of NBFCs and activity of lending against shares by NBFCs," RBI said.

Better days ahead for economy


BS 27 June 2014
But says supply-side concerns need to be addressed; bank capital also a challenge

















The worst might be over for the economy following the formation of a stable government, though supply-side issues needed to be solved to help monetary policy bring down inflation, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) said in its bi-yearlyFinancial Stability Report on Thursday.

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The overall tone of the report reflected optimism generated by the thumping majority scored by the Bharatiya Janata Party in the recently-concluded general elections. "Going forward, with the formation of a stable government, the prospects of recovery appear bright," the RBI said.


Know About Home Remedies for Various Diseases

The central bank drew comfort from reduction in both fiscal and current account deficits and moderation of consumer price index (CPI) -based inflation.

Finance Minister will Meet Bank Union Leaders Today

The report also said the general risks facing the Indian economy were expected to come down. However, the supply-side constraints needed to be addressed to complement the RBI's efforts to contain inflation.
Read RBI Monetary Policy At a Glance
"Markets expect more decisiveness in government policy formulation, as well as greater efficiency in implementation," RBI Governor Raghuram Rajan said in the foreword to the report.

"Further progress on fiscal consolidation, a predictable tax & policy regime and low and stable inflation rates will be the key anchors in promoting India's macroeconomic and financial stability," Rajan added.

RBI said easing of domestic supply bottlenecks and the progress on implementation of stalled projects that had already been cleared should further improve the growth outlook.
Read सौंफ, हरा धनिया,कढ़ी पत्ता , सेहत के लिए लाभदायक
The economic prospects are looking bright but the banking sector continues to face headwinds, though there was a marginal improvement in asset quality in the second half of last financial year.

The central bank added while the Indian financial sector remained stable, public-sector banks continued to face challenges in terms of asset quality, profitability, capital, and, most importantly, governance and management processes.

According to RBI data, the share of both gross and net non-performing assets in total assets declined as of March end, compared with that towards the end of September. While gross NPA's share in total declined 20 basis points to four per cent, net NPA's declined 10 bps to 2.2 per cent during the period under review. Sale of NPAs to asset reconstruction companies in March was cited as a reason for a decline, though lower slippages and higher recovery was also evident.
The report showed public-sector banks' profitability was under significant pressure as their net profit contracted 30.7 per cent during the six-month period, compared to an increase of 19.7 per cent among new private banks. The poor show by public-sector banks was mainly due to lower income and higher provisioning requirements.

So far as the capital adequacy ratio is concerned, while there was a marginal improvement during the six-month period on the back of a sharp contraction in risk-weighted assets (which fell to 12.6 per cent in March from 24.7 per cent), public-sector banks stare at raising enormous capital over the next five years.
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The report estimates that public-sector banks will require at least Rs 4.15 lakh crore of additional capital - Rs 1.43 lakh crore of that as equity capital - till 2018 for implementation of Basel-III norms.

The government's contribution to public-sector banks' equity capital to maintain the existing level of its stake is estimated at Rs 90,000 crore. It will be a challenge for the government, which has to be mindful of fiscal consolidation too, to infuse this large a sum.

The report said high inflation and the consequent low real rate of return on financial assets might force savers to assume excessive risks in their search for better returns.
Read Benefits of जौ (BARLEY) And टमाटर-
The share of households' financial savings (which includes bank deposits) in gross domestic product (GDP) has been declining. But expenditure on valuables (including gold) has risen over the past few years - though it declined in 2013-14. 
Household financial savings' contribution to GDP declined from about 12 per cent in 2007-08 to about seven per cent in 2013-14. Expenditure on valuables rose from about seven per cent to about 10 per cent. "This trend reflects financial disintermediation, with households switching away from financial savings to valuables, mainly gold," the report said.

Further, gross capital formation (GCF) declined for a second straight year in 2012-13. This decline in GCF was led by the private corporate sector, thereby adversely impacting the growth prospects of the economy.

The central bank also emphasised the need for developing the corporate bond market and said removing hindrances in this market should be "top policy priorities".

It added the central bank might choose to relax the rules for mandatory minimum holding in bonds - referred to as statutory liquidity ratio - and the proportion of bonds which need not be marked to market gradually, as banks progressively implemented the Basel III liquidity coverage rules

RBI Tightens Prudential Norms

IE 26 June 2014

The Reserve Bank of India on Thursday indicated that big banks — to be classified as domestic systemically important banks (D-SIBs) — will be asked to bring more capital and brought under stringent supervision from August 2015.
The RBI’s bi-annual Financial Stability Report (FSR) also highlighted the need to assess the collective size and profile of activities of the large number of non-bank financial entities functioning in the organised as well as the unorganised sector, including unincorporated entities which are outside the purview of the regulatory perimeter, or collectively called shadow banking.
Based on their systemic importance scores, banks will be plotted into different buckets and D-SIBs will be required to have an additional common equity Tier 1 capital requirement ranging from 0.20 per cent to 0.80 per cent of the risk-weighted assets.
“D-SIBs will also be subjected to differentiated supervisory requirements and higher intensity of supervision based on the risks that they pose to the financial system. The names of the banks classified as D-SIBs will be disclosed in August every year starting from 2015,” it said.
The RBI said a preliminary study carried out by the Shadow Banking Implementation Group (SBIG) comprising of members from all financial sector regulators, concluded that there was a high degree of heterogeneity in business models and risk profiles across various non-bank financial entities in the organised (including the entities not ‘registered’ with any of the regulators) as well as the unorganised sector.
Apart from such NBFCs, SBIG has also identified ‘exempted’ provident funds, unregulated chit funds, co-operative and credit societies and primary agricultural credit societies as groups of institutions that need a greater degree of oversight.
“Also, government-owned entities discharging the functions as special NBFCs which are exempt, by statute, from adherence to prudential regulations and given their systemic significance, are an area of concern. Certain other entities such as special purpose vehicles (SPVs) are not regulated and can cause overleveraging and risks to the financial system,” the FSR said.
While the FSR mentioned the formation of a stable government at the Centre has ameliorated political risk and has led to expectations of better policy coordination and implementation, it also said the risks to the banking sector have increased with concerns over liquidity and profitability continuing.
Despite marginal improvements in the soundness and asset quality, the level of gross non-performing advances as percentage of total gross advances of public sector banks was significantly higher as compared to the other bank groups, it said.
In his foreword to the report, RBI Governor Raghuram Rajan said, “India’s financial system remains stable, although the public sector banks face challenges in coming quarters in terms of their capital needs, asset quality, profitability and more importantly, their governance and management processes.”
While India remains committed to implement global regulatory reforms, priorities may differ as the Indian financial system faces a different set of challenges as compared to those jurisdictions which faced financial / banking crises, he said. While “the country has chosen a politically stable government”, Rajan said markets expect more decisiveness in policy formulation.

Saturday, June 28, 2014

Financial inclusion in mind, RBI turns to UID


















Surabhi Agarwal  BS
 Last Updated at 20:18 IST

Despite the uncertainty surrounding the future of the Unique Identity (UID) project, or Aadhaar, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) is testing a mobile-based payments system linked to this platform. Remittances through this platform skip the traditional banking channel and are aimed at including the unbanked into the financial system.
Pilot projects relating to this system, underway across various parts of the country, are studying whether telecom operators such as Airtel and Vodafone can successfully transfer money between their so-called pre-paid wallets linked to Aadhaar. Seven operators including Airtel, Vodafone, ItzCash andOxigen are running these pilot projects.


This is how the system works: A person with an Aadhaar number and a mobile phone can open a mobile wallet by visiting a store of a wallet operator, and load cash into his/her account. Following this, she/he gives directions for the transfer, through SMS, to a recipient with an existing Aadhaar-linked mobile wallet. The recipient goes to a store (the operator?s own or one a licensed kirana or telecom store), authenticates herself/himself through the UID number and biometrics, and receives the cash.
Sunil Kulkarni, deputy managing director of Oxigen, said an estimated 75 million migrant workers in India found it difficult to send money to their friends and families, who lived in remote villages from where bank branches were far; in most cases, banking correspondents, too, weren't present in these areas. "But the retail agent network is huge?there are over 50 million grocery stores in the country," he said.

The plan is to enable small shop owners with a biometric device attached to a mobile phone. For the receiver, the device can aid in authentication and act as an automated teller machine. Kulkarni claims the platform of his company alone has 130,000 operators, against a total 150,000 bank branches, adding the combined networks of all operators such as Airtel and Vodafone could cover the entire country.
For those who didn't have bank accounts, the only ways to transfer money were through post, the informal channel or hawala operators, said an official involved with the pilot. Also, RBI is concerned it is becoming difficult to track payments through mobile wallets, as their KYC (know-your-customer) data isn't considered adequate.
"With Aadhaar, RBI will know who is transacting the money," the official said. Linkage through Aadhaar will enable a system of cash withdrawal by the receiver, a facility currently disallowed for pre-paid wallet operators. UID will provide the required KYC and ensure an audit trail.
Airtel, which runs the Airtel Money wallet, did not respond to queries, while Vodafone declined to comment on the pilot.
In an emailed response, a Vodafone spokesperson said given the large number of mobile users in India, mobile banking had the potential to emerge as a game changer in terms of costs, convenience and reach. The company claims its M-Pesa is the largest business correspondent network in India, with about 65,000 agents and 1.4 million registered customers. Currently, a customer can only use the wallet services to pay utility bills.
Aadhaar, a flagship scheme of the United Progressive Alliance government and the pillar on which the project is based, is currently under a cloud. Several reports have said the National Democratic Alliance government wants to merge the project with the National Population Register to endure only bona fide citizens to enrol under this.
Kulkarni, however, said he wasn't concerned about the uncertainty. "The database built by Aadhaar is apolitical and too valuable to give away," he said, adding Aadhaar was likely to continue, though the government might choose a different name for it. This, he said, was because Aadhaar had already been mandated as KYC by many financial sector regulators such as the Securities and Exchange Board of India.
The pilot projects in this regard, commissioned in April this year, will run for a couple of months, after which RBI will take a decision on the matter.

Wednesday, June 25, 2014

HSBC sells $12.5 b worth Swiss assets to LGT Bank


LONDON/ZURICH,  THe Hindu :June 25, 2014

New Delhi is probing cases of alleged black money stashed by Indians through these banks

In a multi-billion dollar deal that could have bearing on India’s fight against black money, global giant HSBC, on Tuesday, sold its Swiss private banking assets worth $12.5 billion to Liechtenstein’s LGT Bank.

India is probing cases of alleged black money stashed by Indians abroad through these two banks — HSBC Geneva in Switzerland and LGT Bank.

However, lists of Indian account holders in both places were received by India through indirect channels — HSBC list came from France and LGT list from Germany. Swiss authorities have been refusing to provide any assistance or share further information in these cases.

Switzerland says that it cannot provide any help to Indian authorities as their requests are based on ‘stolen data’ as Germany and France got the secret lists of account holders after certain bank employees had stolen the data. The lists were later shared by Germany and France with India and other nations whose citizens figured on those lists.

The announcement of HSBC-LGT deal comes at a time when there is a renewed debate on Indian government’s attempts to trace alleged black money stashed by Indians abroad.
U.K.-based HSBC Holdings Plc said in a statement that its wholly-owned subsidiary HSBC Private Bank (Suisse) SA had entered into an agreement to sell a portfolio of its private banking assets in Switzerland (with assets under management of $12.5 billion as at December 31, 2013) to LGT Bank (Switzerland) Ltd, a wholly-owned subsidiary of LGT Group Foundation of Liechtenstein.

“The transaction, which is subject to regulatory and other approvals, is expected to complete in the last quarter of 2014 and it represents further progress in the execution of HSBC’s strategy,” HSBC said, while adding that it remains fully committed to Switzerland as a key international centre for its Global Private Banking business and a priority market.

In a separate statement, LGT said “it has reached an agreement with HSBC Private Bank (Suisse) to acquire a sizable private banking franchise”.

The scope of the transaction includes over 10 billion Swiss francs in assets under management (AUM) and around 70 staff.

Upon closing, the acquired business will be integrated into LGT Bank (Switzerland), which had AUM of 21 billion Swiss francs ($23.5 billion) at the end of 2013.

High net worth clients

LGT further said the assets being acquired from HSBC is “a profitable business evenly distributed amongst various teams, each focusing on high net worth and ultra high net worth clients from a specific geographic region that is key to LGT’s growth strategy, notably Central and Eastern Europe, Latin America and Western Europe.

“A smaller part of the portfolio relates to clients advised by Swiss-based external asset managers.”

The Liechtenstein bank further said the opportunity to acquire this portfolio rose after a strategic business review by HSBC to concentrate its growth on a focussed group of markets. “The assets to be acquired have undergone rigorous tax and general compliance procedures,” it added.

Upon closing, LGT Bank Switzerland’s assets under management will rise to over 30 billion Swiss francs and the LGT Group its overall AUM to increase to about 120 billion Swiss franc and staff strength to almost 2,000.

The so-called HSBC list reportedly contains names of about 700 Indians, but the details about their accounts have not been forthcoming despite repeated requests from India to Swiss authorities.

The list of about 3,000 secret bank account holders was stolen by a French employee of HSBC Geneva in 2008-09 and later found its way to the government in France.

Later, in 2011, French government shared the names with other countries, including about 700 names with India.

The LGT list was received by India in 2008 from German government.

Later in 2010, the Income-tax Department also slapped penalties on some persons figuring in this list, while names from this list were also submitted to the Supreme Court earlier this year. — PTI