New pvt banks in overseas push

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| Indian residents can invest $25,000 annually overseas. These banks want to tap this business. |
| Talks are on between the RBI and the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) to permit banks to offer more than just global deposit products. |
| The central bank had earlier limited banks to offering just foreign currency deposit-based products, barring them from hawking foreign mutual funds and global derivative products. |
| "It does not matter where we get a branch licence, be it Hong Kong, Singapore, or Bahrain, so long as we have a presence outside the country, which will enable us to mop up global deposits," said the vice president of a private bank that has applied to the regulator. Having an offshore balance sheet in terms of overseas branches also help in raising funds from abroad. |
| "There has been interest from our customers to invest abroad, with the pressure on the rupee, on the back of net foreign exchange outflows," said Moses Harding, executive vice-president treasury, international operations and investment banking, IndusInd Bank. |
| Citibank, HSBC, Standard Chartered Bank, ICICI Bank and Bank of Baroda were the first to push global deposits. Without an overseas branch, Indian banks cannot hawk foreign currency deposits. |
| Private banks are planning to set up branches in tax havens to ensure that these deposits will have no tax issue or double taxation. |
| IDBI Bank and IndusInd apart, a few other banks are also seeking board approval before they seek the central bank's approval. Among the new private banks, only ICICI Bank has an overseas presence now. |
| Citibank proposes to launch private banking services some time in October to cater to high net worth individuals with wealth in excess of $ 5 million. |
| It had not offered private banking services in the country as it could offer little value addition unless Indians were allowed to invest in overseas markets. |
| "We need to be ready with our product offering before the change in the guidelines," said the managing director of a private bank which is ready to apply to RBI for a global branch licence. |
| Interest among smaller private banks has picked up as there has been an increased demand for global deposit products. |
| "With rising global interest rates, interest in global deposits is picking up," said Amit Sah, marketing director, retail bank and global consumer group, Citibank. |
First Published: Sep 10 2004 | 12:00 AM IST