YES Bank's total deposits increased to Rs 1.17 trillion (including
CD) as on June 30 from Rs 1.05 trillion as on March 31.
Rating agency
CRISIL has upgraded its rating on YES
Bank’s certificates of deposit (CD) from ‘A2’ to ‘A2+’ in view of an
improvement in the bank’s funding and liquidity profile. This has been possible
due to a gradual increase in its deposit base, as well as the sizeable capital
it raised recently.
The private-sector lender repaid – ahead of the earlier plan – Rs 35,000 crore
of the Rs 50,000 crore it had availed of under the Reserve Bank of India’s
(RBI’s) special liquidity facility in March 2020. Further, the bank's liquidity
coverage ratio (LCR) has improved in recent months.
YES Bank's LCR
improved to 114.1 per cent as on June 30, 2020, from 37.0 per cent as on March
31. According to the RBI norms, a bank has to maintain a minimum LCR of 80 per
cent.
As of 9:30 am, the
bank’s stock was trading 3.9 per cent higher than its previous close on the
BSE, at Rs 15.29 a share.
YES Bank's total
deposits increased to Rs 1.17 trillion (including CD) as on June 30 from Rs
1.05 trillion as on March 31, CRISIL
said in a statement.
The ratings
continue to be underpinned by the expectation of continued extraordinary
systemic support from key stakeholders and State Bank of India’s (SBI’s)
sizeable ownership. YES Bank is now an associate entity of SBI after a capital
infusion of about Rs 10,000 crore by Indian banks as part of a rescue package
hammered out by the RBI.
Further, the bank
raised Rs 15,000 crore though a follow-on public offer (FPO) in July 2020. This
helped it significantly improve its capital position (Pro-forma common equity
tier I, or CET1 ratio) to 13.4 per cent in June 2020 from 6.3 per cent in
March. The overall capital adequacy ratio (CAR) improved to 20 per cent from
8.5 per cent during the same period.
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