Business Today

The Fire Fighter

How new CEO Ravneet Gill is managing troubles at the new generation Yes Bank, where there is no end to asset quality surprises and capital levels are inadequate for future growth

"Is Rana Kapoor still part of the bank?," an analyst asked Ravneet Singh Gill, the MD & CEO, who succeeded Kapoor at the troubled Yes Bank five months ago. The query, during a call with investors last month, was triggered by reports that the founder professional, who had to exit the bank due to asset quality deterioration, might come back as a director. Though the report was denied by Kapoor himself, the 56 year old Gill said: "He (Kapoor) has no involvement, executive or non executive, direct or indirect." The bank has, in fact, clawed back Kapoor's bonuses for 2014/15 and 2015/16.

Kapoor may be out but his business calls continue to worry the bank. In the last one year, exposure to big troubled companies such as IL&FS, DHFL, Indiabulls, Jet Airways, Anil Ambani's Reliance Group, Essel Group and Cox & Kings has been creating huge asset quality and capital pressures for the mid sized bank. Its gross non performing assets (NPAs) rose from 0.76 per cent in March 2016 to 3.22 per cent in March 2019, while return on assets fell from 1.70 per cent to 0.5 per cent. Profits slipped to Rs 1,720 crore in 2018/19 from Rs 4,224 crore in the previous year. To top it all, the risky portfolio continues to be fairly large, creating potential for further slippages, while capital levels are barely adequate to meet the regulatory norms.

The question analysts are asking is are there more skeletons in the bank's cupboard (mainly risky/dud loans) that Gill will have to deal with on priority so that the bank does not go down under? And, more importantly, can he keep the bank growing while steadying the ship and keeping it safe in view of the slowdown challenges?

The Legacy

Gill, who joined from Deutsche Bank in India, is struggling with several legacy issues. Right now, he is studying the bank's working and hiring people, while doing firefighting as the operating environment throws up new challenges every day.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Business Today

Business Today1 min read
A Crude Awakening
Crude oil tankers off Jurong Island, Singapore SOURCE CMIE ECONOMIC OUTLOOK, INVESTING.COM BRENT CRUDE, WHICH SURPASSED $90/BBL IN APRIL FOR THE FIRST TIME IN SIX MONTHS, MAY RALLY FURTHER DUE TO IRAN-ISRAEL TENSIONS. THIS COULD LEAD TO HIGHER INFLAT
Business Today1 min read
Tough Times
1 Thierry Delaporte, Wipro’s seventh CEO who joined the firm in 2020, quit before his tenure was set to end 2 In this, he follows his predecessor Abidali Neemuchwala, who joined Wipro from TCS 3 Wipro has been hit by the exits of senior executives, a
Business Today11 min read
The Dark Side Of Gold Loans
THE RBI ASKED the company to immediately stop its gold loan operations, which accounts for a third of its business. The reason: the regulator found some major lapses in how the company handled the loans. When the regulator looked into the company’s f

Related Books & Audiobooks