HomeNewsBusinessEarningsHDFC twins joining up is a merger of equals but beware the regulatory costs

HDFC twins joining up is a merger of equals but beware the regulatory costs

After the merger, regulatory requirements of CRR, SLR, priority sector lending and liquidity coverage ratio would increase given the combined balance sheet size. HDFC and HDFC Bank have asked the RBI for more time to meet these norms.

April 04, 2022 / 12:22 IST
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(Representative image)
(Representative image)

India’s largest housing finance company HDFC will merge into subsidiary HDFC Bank which is the country’s most valuable private sector bank through an amalgamation scheme, the stock exchanges were informed today.

On the face of it, the merger is indeed of equals and is a win-win in terms of balance sheet heft, cost synergies and market share. It will also open up space for foreign institutional investors to buy HDFC Bank shares.

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That said, there are key regulatory costs here that both the companies will need to carefully assess. The most critical of these are cash reserve ratio, statutory liquidity ratio and priority sector lending norms.

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) requires banks to set aside four percent of their net time and demand liabilities as CRR and invest 18 percent of NDTL into government bonds under SLR. Further, banks and non-bank finance companies (NBFCs) are required to maintain high quality liquid assets under liquidity coverage ratio norms.