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HDFC Bank's Rs 1,500 crore ex-gratia a gesture of employee appreciation

The one-time ex-gratia payment is a way to motivate the young workforce, said HDFC Bank CEO

Sashidhar Jagdishan, MD And CEO Of HDFC Bank
Sashidhar Jagdishan, MD And CEO Of HDFC Bank
Manojit Saha Mumbai
5 min read Last Updated : Apr 21 2024 | 7:49 PM IST
Following an impressive Q4FY24 performance, HDFC Bank announced an ex-gratia payment of around Rs 1,500 crore to its staff. The bank’s decision came as a gesture of appreciation for the employees’ dedication during the merger with HDFC Ltd as well as address attrition, said Sashidhar Jagdishan, the managing director & chief executive of the largest private sector lender.

The lender, which announced its January-March earnings on Saturday, reported a 37.1 per cent growth in net profit, boosted by a one-time gain from selling a majority stake in HDFC Credila – an education loan company. At the same time, the bank decided to make floating provisions to Rs 10,900 crore, which nullified the impact of the stake sale gain.

“There was a lot of hard work that happened in the run-up to the merger and subsequent to that on a much larger balance sheet and led by a complex and adverse liquidity situation in the system. I think the team has rallied to adjust to the new norms; they worked hard after being battered from all fronts at the ground level,” Jagdishan said during an analyst call.

“In the last couple of years, we have had heightened attrition as well. We endeavour to ensure that our large ground workforce, which is 90 per cent of our total manpower, is motivated and this is a way of trying to say thank you to them,” he said.

Jagdishan clarified that such expenses are not recurring in nature. “This is a one-time ex-gratia that we have provided for, and why not, we have a one-off gain and a nice way to motivate the young workforce on a one-time basis.”

ALSO READ: Credila stake sale, healthy deposits to aid HDFC Bank Q4 earnings: Analysts

Q4 turnaround

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The lender, which faced heat from investors after their third-quarter earnings for poor show on deposit mobilisation, produced a much better performance in the fourth quarter. The bank mobilised Rs 1.66 trillion in deposits in the January-March period, of which retail deposits were Rs 1.29 trillion. As a result, the bank has gained market share in deposits in the fourth quarter.

“Ever since our famous – you may call it infamous – third-quarter results earnings call, we have received a lot of feedback from several of you. With all humility, we have incorporated many of the feedback,” Jagdishan said.

He reminded that deposit flows are typically higher in the January-March period and some of the flows were transitory, unexpected during the period. “While the fourth-quarter mobilisation is healthy, I must upfront tell you that there are some transitory flows that have come in which is more than what we have anticipated. Even adjusting for that, retail growth was rather healthy,” he said.

“Will I be able to maintain this kind of momentum? If we take a long-term average of six years or so, there is a certain proportion of total deposits that come in the first quarter, which is probably the lowest proportion. The second and third quarters are more similar in terms of proportion, and the largest part of the proportion comes in the fourth quarter,” Jagdishan said.

He said the bank has to improve on customer service to keep up the good show on deposits. “The key to this sustainable momentum is our enhanced customer engagement and elevated service-first culture,” he said.

Liquidity improvements 

The fourth-quarter deposit mobilisation helped the bank lower its credit-to-deposit ratio to around 105 per cent and liquidity coverage ratio to 115 per cent as of March end. Both were at 110 per cent in December.

Jagdishan said meeting the priority sector targets, particularly some of the sub-targets like small and marginal farmers and economically weaker sections will not be easy and the bank would look at inorganic opportunities to meet the targets.

“We have organically achieved our overall priority sector and most of the sub-sector targets. There are two particular sub-targets – the small and marginal farmers and weaker sections. These are not easy to achieve. These are the two areas that we have to ride on inorganic ways to meet the target,” he said.

He said the bank is aware of the fact that one-third of the erstwhile HDFC book will be added to the bank in October, and it has to meet priority sector targets on the expanded loan book.


HDFC Bank board gives nod to Rs 60,000 cr bond renewal for FY25

HDFC Bank’s board has approved the annual renewal of bond issuance, totalling up to Rs 60,000 crore over the next twelve months through private placement. This marks an increase from last year’s approval of Rs 50,000 crore.

As per its regulatory filing, the HDFC Bank intends to raise funds through Long-Term Bonds for Infrastructure and Affordable Housing, Perpetual Debt Instruments (as part of Additional Tier-I capital), and Tier-II Capital Bonds.

Anjali Kumari

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Topics :HDFC BankIndian companiesEducation loansfinance sector

First Published: Apr 21 2024 | 5:43 PM IST

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