Kumar told media that investment in Yes Bank will not hurt SBI's balance sheet. The focus now shifts to Yes Bank earnings, scheduled for March 14
SBI chairman Rajnish Kumar said that allowing Yes Bank to fail would have a huge contagion effect.
State Bank of India sees the bailout of Yes Bank as a step that was necessary to prevent a contagion effect on the banking system. “SBI is a national institution of importance, with size and credibility. Where there is any banking institution, where its survival is a must, otherwise there is a huge contagion effect…SBI will have to step in,” SBI’s chairman Rajnish Kumar told media on Saturday.
Once the RBI’s reconstruction scheme is approved by SBI’s board, it plans to initially invest Rs 2,450 crore for a 49 percent stake in the new bank. Kumar said he was open to making an additional investment in the new, reconstructed bank, once it has got out of administrator-rule and the moratorium. “RBI’s contribution, I believe, will not exceed Rs 10,000 crore,” he said.
The additional capital infusion would be under Sebi-approved norms. But Kumar insisted that he would prefer to have co-investors, besides State Bank, in the reconstructed bank. “There are several investors who have shown interest,” he said, declining to offer names.
Being India’s largest lender, SBI has total assets of Rs 37,49,192 crore and capital of close to Rs 2,75,000 crore, this investment into a reconstructed Yes Bank would not impact its balance sheet in a major way, analysts said. Kumar said: “The investment will not be against the interest of shareholders of SBI. All capital ratios will remain healthy for SBI.”
Analysts do not see the fresh investment as a negative for SBI, which will see a re-rating now that the SBI Cards IPO is complete. SBI Cards IPO was oversubscribed 26.4 times and the company raised Rs 10,340 crore through the issue, which closed for subscription on March 5, in a very weak and volatile stock market.