Bank of Baroda tops the BT-KPMG Best Banks Survey of 2011
Even as we raise a toast to the winners of the BT-KPMG Best Banks Survey
of 2011, we need to take note of the many challenges that lie ahead. FULL COVERAGE ALSO SEE: Videos | Winners in pics
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IN NUMBERS List of Best Banks in India |
In fact, even France-based BNP Paribas, the world's largest bank in term of assets at $2.72 trillion, joined the downgrade bash this October when S&P cut its rating by a notch. The threat of downgrade is also looming large over marquee names such as Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan.
The Winners BEST LARGE BANK Bank of Baroda BEST MID-SIZED BANK IndusInd Bank BEST SMALL BANK JPMorgan Chase MOST CONSISTENT LARGE BANK Axis Bank GROWTH, QUALITY OF ASSETS (LARGE BANKS) YES Bank PRODUCTIVITY & EFFICIENCY (LARGE BANKS) IDBI Bank GROWTH (MID-SIZED BANKS) Dhanlaxmi Bank QUALITY OF ASSETS (MID-SIZED BANKS) Karur Vysya Bank PRODUCTIVITY & EFFICIENCY (MID-SIZED BANKS) City Union Bank PRODUCTIVITY & EFFICIENCY (SMALL BANKS) JPMorgan Chase GROWTH, QUALITY OF ASSETS (SMALL BANKS) Mizuho Corporate Bank QUALITY OF ASSETS (SMALL BANKS) Bank of America |
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In India, the country's largest bank, State Bank of India, or SBI, came under Moody's scanner, which downgraded its perpetual bond ratings by a notch. The downgrade indicates that India's banking sector is not in the best of health. There are growing concerns on deteriorating asset quality, capital challenges and issues such as financial inclusion as 50 per cent of the Indian population has no banking access.
Let's take the capital challenges first. There is an estimate that Indian banks will require more than Rs 10 trillion (one trillion equals 100,000 crore) over the next 10 years to fund growth requirements. That's a tall order, especially for public sector banks - which control 75 per cent of the Indian banking system - where the government is a reluctant partner when it comes to pumping in capital. In an interview with BT a few hours after announcing the 13th interest rate hike in the past one and a half years, Reserve Bank of India, or RBI, Governor D. Subbarao said that India, being a rapidly transforming economy, will require more credit than it did in the past. "The capital requirements of banks are going to be more than we would project from previous history," he said.
The government is also mulling a holding structure for PSU banks - that saves them from diluting its stake - for allowing them to raise capital. On the asset quality front, nonperforming assets, or NPAs, are creating a headache with gross NPA figures closing in on Rs 1 trillion (see In Default Mode, page 84). In this challenging environment, banks have to make efficient use of capital, write good quality assets, reward shareholders, and play an integral role in India's economic development.
It is in this context that the 2011 edition of the Business Today-KPMG Best Banks study was conducted. And not surprisingly, the study has thrown up some, um, surprises. Private sector major HDFC Bank was the undisputed leader in the BT-KPMG study from 2003 to 2008, but when it pounced on Centurion Bank to acquire size, it lost out on many performance parameters and the top slot. A public sector bank - Bank of India - rose to the top in 2009 when the global financial meltdown affected many a bank in the country. A year later, Axis Bank came out tops.
MUST SEE: Winners in pictures
This year, the country's fifth largest bank, Bank of Baroda, has galloped like a dark horse to the peak. The bank's rise is made unique by the fact that it did not top in any of the 27 parameters in its group, yet emerged overall winner. Another surprise winner is the Hindujas owned IndusInd Bank in the mid-sized category .
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The aspiration is not just size. It is a robust, innovative banking system: Chanda Kochhar
Does that mean India's banks will also have to bulk up? "Size and scale are important, but we should not forget that Indian banking has done remarkably well despite difficult global conditions," says M.D. Mallya, Chairman of Bank of Baroda. In fact, when it comes to transactions, SBI claims to be the biggest bank in the world. "We have 250 million accounts and about 170 million customers," says SBI's Managing Director A. Krishna Kumar. "We have about 40-45 million transactions daily. The peak was 52 million in March this year." But these transaction values, when converted into dollars, remain insignificant.
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We have about 40-45 million transactions daily. The peak was 52 million in March: A. Krishna Kumar
Ergo, size should be seen together with growth, productivity, efficiency, quality of earnings and capital adequacy. How well Indian banks are doing on this front is what the BT-KPMG study captures every year.