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RBL Bank Ltd
NSE:RBLBANK

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Price: 248.15 INR 0.26%
Updated: May 9, 2024

Earnings Call Analysis

Q3-2024 Analysis
RBL Bank Ltd

Steady Growth and Solid Profitability Despite Provisions

The company experienced a credit cost of 47 basis points this quarter, a decline from 54 bps previously, reflecting improved credit policy. A one-time provision of INR 115 crore was made following regulatory guidelines, affecting net profit, which would have otherwise shown a stunning 53% year-over-year growth to INR 319 crores. Net Interest Income (NII) and other income showed strong growth, up 21% and 26% year-over-year, respectively. Despite increased operating expenses, the Pre-Provision Operating Profit (PPOP) rose by 35%. Additionally, the company is investing in digital enhancements and expects a future advances growth rate of 20%, largely driven by retail credit expansion.

Growth in Net Interest Income and Other Financial Metrics

The company's financial performance shows a positive trajectory with a 21% year-over-year (Y-o-Y) increase in Net Interest Income (NII), reaching INR 1,546 crores. Other income rose by 26% Y-o-Y to INR 778 crores, while core fee income climbed by 23% to INR 729 crores. The total income also saw a substantial boost, marking a 23% increase Y-o-Y.

Advancements in Digital Infrastructure and Services

Significant strides were made in the company's digital offerings, with new customer journey enhancements, payment infrastructure advancements, and cross-selling strategies. Notably, the development of an in-house UPI switch aims to bolster fee income considerably. Additionally, innovative services such as WhatsApp-based OTP for Non-Resident (NR) customers position the organization as a leader in digital banking initiatives.

Robust Profit Growth Despite Provisions

Profit after tax (PAT) would have observed a dramatic 53% Y-o-Y increase if it weren't for a sizeable provision of INR 115 crores for Alternative Investment Funds (AIF) as per regulatory guidelines. The company fully provided for this provision, which is not associated with impairment and is redeemable. Even with this provision, reported net profit still increased by 11% to INR 233 crores.

Solid Capital Position

Capital ratios remain healthy post-adoption of new regulatory changes in November. The total capital ratio is reported at 16.42% with a Common Equity Tier 1 (CET1) ratio of 14.58%, showing a decrease from the previous quarter, likely due to the regulatory changes and strategic balance sheet management. Nevertheless, the company considers itself well-capitalized to support short and medium-term growth.

Future Outlook – Continued Growth and Customer Focus

Expectations are firmly set on continued growth, with an anticipated 20% increase in advances driven by the retail sector. The focus remains on scaling new retail asset products and enhancing the retail liability franchise. A commitment to customer-centric approaches and platformizing products and services stands central to the company's strategy, with high internal team morale contributing to optimistic operational outcomes.

Earnings Call Transcript

Earnings Call Transcript
2024-Q3

from 0
Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, good day, and welcome to RBL Bank's Q3 FY '24 -- I'm sorry, sir. Ladies and gentlemen, good day, and welcome to RBL Bank's Q3 FY '24 Earnings Conference Call. [Operator Instructions] Please note that this conference is being recorded.

I now hand the conference over to Mr. R. Subramaniakumar, MD and CEO, RBL Bank. Thank you, and over to you, sir.

R
R. Subramaniakumar
executive

Thank you, ma'am. Good evening, ladies and gentlemen. And thank you for joining us for a discussion on our bank's financial results for the third quarter financial year 2024. We have uploaded the results along with the presentation on our website, and I hope you have had the chance to go through it in detail ahead of this call.

I'm, as always, joined on this call by Mr. Rajeev Ahuja; Buvanesh Tharashankar, our CFO; and other members of our management team, who, along with me, will address any questions that you have.

First of all, I'm happy to share with you that this quarter's operating performance has been in line with our guidance. I would like to highlight some of the key points from our performance this quarter.

Advances grew 20% Y-o-Y and 5% sequentially. Retail continues to grow faster given our focus on granularity. Similarly, on deposits, small-ticket deposits have grown 23% Y-o-Y and 5% sequentially. So continued granular growth on both sides of the balance sheet, and we continue to see good momentum for the same. The credit quality is generally holding well, and focus remains on ensuring better collection efficiencies and recoveries from slippages and written-off cases.

ROA and ROE expansion on track, and profitability continues to improve. I will separately explain the contingent provisioning on the AIF and the resulting profitability ratios. While our bank has maintained its trajectory on ROA and ROE, the reported ROA and ROE has been reset due to adherence to the regulatory guidelines on AIF investments. Our growth in retail secured products and the expansion into the new geographies is also progressing well.

In summary, our broad direction of deposits, of loan growth, of profitability, of asset quality, all of them are quite stable and as per our plan. Our initiatives on going from product focus to the customer focus is progressing well. The significant progress has been made on housing loans and business loans being originated through branches, the early success seen in savings accounts to cards, cards from branches, et cetera. We now also have our 100% subsidiary, RBL Finserve, also actively sourcing leads for products relevant to that market, namely the tractors and the liability accounts. We have also commenced the sourcing of 2-wheeler loans as well as affordable housing loan and MSME.

In our quest to grow secured retail advances, in this quarter, we have expanded our direct sourcing locations from 68 to 185 locations with 54 hubs for processing these advances. We plan to add another [ 51 ] locations in the next 2 quarters. Our plan, [ of course ], to leverage the customers base by making the branch to anchor retail asset lead generation is picking up. On advances. As I said earlier, our advances grew 20% Y-o-Y and 5% sequentially. Retail advances have grown at a faster pace than the overall advances at the rate of 33% Y-o-Y and 5% sequentially. The secured retail grew at 53% Y-o-Y and 13% Q-o-Q. Our wholesale advances grew 6% Y-o-Y and 4% sequentially. Within this, the Commercial Banking, which is a sweet spot for us, has grown 19% Y-o-Y and 7% sequentially.

We also saw expansion into new geographies in West and North India for our Commercial Banking operations during this quarter. We continue to focus on strategic products and client segments to grow our wholesale business. We went live with eBG, with NeSL and direct integration with the GST portal for tax payments. We are already live in TIN 2.0 and expect to go live on ICEGATE, which is the portal for customers, in the coming quarters. We believe these are the use cases which will benefit our customers and help us add to share in the customer wallet. This will also more to help us in improving the current account balances.

Our disposals across all our retail businesses, ex cards, was approximately INR 6,000 crore this quarter as compared to INR 5,000 crore in the previous quarter and INR 3,400 crores in the same quarter last year, clearly demonstrating our execution capability. Microfinance disposals were at INR 1,989 crore this quarter, flat sequentially. We went a little slow in this quarter, given the risk perception due to elections in the various states, but we will look to ramp this up in Q4. The book growth was flattish sequentially for the same reason. We continue to see opportunities to monetize surplus PSL, which we generate in microfinance, which we have been doing selectively.

Housing saw a disbursal of approximately INR 1,400 crores, and secured business loans of approximately INR 585 crores. These 2 products have been an important focus area for cross-sell through our own branches as it, one, it reduces the cost of acquisition; two, improves the engagement with our liability base; and three, gauge new liability customer acquisition. Over the next few months, in the new sourcing locations, we will focus on expanding the teams, and we hope to start seeing the benefits in the new sourcing in the coming quarters.

On the business loans, that is, mortgage loans, we saw a reduction sequentially as we ran down a pool of loans with the intent to have direct sourcing for better revenue. We are now seeing a steady disbursal run rate of INR 585 crores on a quarterly basis, and it will increase with the new locations, which I said earlier.

Our rural vehicle business, tractors, also crossed INR 400 this quarter in disbursements, which is the highest ever for this business. Our rural vehicle finance, we today have an approximately 4% to 5% of the market share in the areas where we operate, and we will continue to selectively expand the newer states. We have expanded from 9 to 12 states in this year. The 2-wheeler businesses has started disbursals this quarter, and we expect to see critical mass in coming quarters.

In cards, we saw an issuance of 5.75 lakhs this quarter. As part of our strategy, we continue to focus on diversifying our sourcing engines, and we expect to add few more partners in the coming weeks or months to further broaden our sourcing base. We're already doing approximately 20,000 plus cards per month through direct sales and branches. We have deployed 2,000-plus DSTs, and they source directly from the market. This will increase as we progress.

In a nutshell, we continue to see broad-based retail growth this quarter as well. We have expanded our retail asset footprint from major states in this area -- in this year. Scaling of the retail advances will be achieved as planned, with the digital platform created for this purpose with the necessary sourcing, risk underwriting and collection teams on the ground.

On deposits, we saw a 13% Y-o-Y growth in the overall deposits and a 3% sequential growth. We, as planned, saw a 23% growth Y-o-Y and 5% sequentially in deposits below INR 2 crores, which now forms 45% of the total deposits. Our expectation is to continue increasing this proposition to get this closer to 50% in the coming quarters. We have focused consciously on the quality of sourcing, making sure our cost outsourcing translates into large wallet share of our customers.

While we continue to invest in the traditional banking by sourcing deposits through branches, a large part of our effort is also directed towards acquiring accounts to cross-sell in digital channels and partnership, et cetera. We will continue to drive incremental deposit growth from granular sources to fund our advances growth. We are enabling the 800 BC branches of our subsidiary and other partners to source liabilities, that is, savings account and TD from the geographies where we don't have a presence. And this will be executed through the digital journeys. We will be driving sourcing from 1,300 touch points in total, including our own branch.

On asset quality. On asset quality, the GNPA is flat Q-o-Q at 3.12%, and NNPA is 0.80%. The PCR is up Y-o-Y and marginally lower sequentially and stands at 75.1%. The net slippages during the quarter were INR 466 crores as against INR 375 crores last quarter. Of this, the net slippage is negative for the wholesale, signifying recoveries are higher than the new slippage; INR 97 crores pertains to microfinance; cards is INR 324 crores; and other retail credit is INR 49 crores. Our net restructured advances stood at 0.63%, down from 0.89% in Q2 FY '24. On provisions. I need a little extra attention on this particular paragraph. We took a total provision on advances of INR 435 crores in these quarters. We had recoveries from written-off accounts of totaling INR 81 crores. So the net provision on advances, therefore, was at INR 354 crores. The credit cost for the quarter was 47 bps as compared to 54 bps in the last quarter on a like-for-like basis, including the change in the policy we had done in the cards in Q2 FY '24.

Now separately, additional part. We took a provision of INR 115 crores on AIF as per the recent RBL circular. Our investments are primarily in -- these AIF investments are primarily in venture debt funds, and these are investments which have been made over years for building inroads into new-age digital businesses. We have worked with these venture debt platforms very widely held for nearly 10 years and do not see any issue in realizing our principal and the returns in the normal course. For context, against our investment value of INR 115 crores, we have NAV currently at INR 161 crores. I will reiterate that this provision is not against impairment and can be redeemed.

On profitability. In the context of AIF provision, our reported net profit was INR 233 crores, up by 11%. Since this AIF provision has been enforced with the clear direction of -- I mean can be redeemed within 13 days or provide for. We have chosen an option for providing it fully. That's the reason that the PAT has come down. Without this AIF, clearly indicates the profitability of the organization emanating from the operations.

Without AIF-related provision, our PAT would have been -- seen an increase of 53%, which is actual increase and 9% sequentially to INR 319 crores from INR 294 crores last year. Similarly, the ROAs without this provision were 1.03% this quarter, up 1% from the same quarter last year. From the operations, we were able to achieve a PAT of INR 319 crores and an ROE of 1.03%. However, it gets restated because of the AIF contingent provision, which has been made by us.

Our NII was up 21% Y-o-Y and 5% sequentially at INR 1,546 crores. Other income was INR 778 crores this quarter, higher by 26% Y-o-Y and 10% sequentially. The core fee income grew 23% Y-o-Y and 7% sequentially to INR 729 crores. Our total income was up 23% Y-o-Y and 7% sequentially at INR 2,323 crores. It can be observed that all the profitability parameters have been growing consistently as we projected earlier.

Our NIM this quarter was at 24 bps Y-o-Y -- up by 24 bps Y-o-Y at 5.52%. We saw an increase of 10 bps in the cost of deposit this quarter. We saw marginally lower NIMs sequentially because of the lower disbursals in some of the asset businesses, namely microfinance.

Despite the costs have risen across the market and are likely stickier for the longer, and conservatively, we estimate our NIMs to be in the same range in Q4 as well. Our OpEx was up by 17% Y-o-Y and 8% sequentially at INR 1,558 crores. Our cost-income ratio was 67.1% this quarter against 66.5% in Q2. Increase was driven by the business acquisition cost, marketing spends and on products and expansion of teams. We saw a healthy increase in the PPOP this quarter at INR 765 crores, up 35% and 5% sequentially. It can be observed that the PPOP is equivalent to -- almost equivalent to the top of our other income.

Our total capital was 16.42%, and our CET1 ratio was 14.58% as at December end as against 17.07% and 15.15% as of the last quarter end. We had a net impact of 57 bps in CET1 and 65 bps in total CRAR this quarter. Taking into account the regulatory change in November but had some capital efficiencies, which we could take out in this quarter, had it been a simple application of the regulatory changes, our impact on Tier 1 and CRAR would have been 65 bps and 75 bps, respectively. However, due to efficiency in management of the balance sheet, we were able to reach the net of 57 bps in CET and 65 bps in total CRAR. On cross-sell, technology and digital. We have made several shifts in our digital orchestration on customer journeys, payment infrastructure, channel availability and cross-sell. Various assets and liability journeys have been made live during this quarter, including savings account for credit cardholders, co-origination of liability accounts with a few asset products, upgraded and personalized digital liability and savings account journeys.

We are building our in-house UPI switch with a capacity to handle INR 1 crore plus transactions per day, this providing a big opportunity to increase our fee income. We have already introduced e-sign and e-stamp for our retail products, which has shown a good result in improving the customer experience. Pioneering the innovation, we have become the first in the industry to provide WhatsApp-based OTP to our NR customers, enhancing our [indiscernible] delivery.

I already spoke of our GST integration and eBG launches. The unified KYC, which we have spoken about in the past, has shown early success in facilitating co-originations of assets and liability products together. We continue to invest in our digital [ repertoire ] while exploring the symbiotic partnerships to leverage the digital public infrastructure and the newer initiatives such as [ OMBC ], CBDC, account aggregator, et cetera.

Lastly, on technology, we continue to drive operational efficiency, optimization of the cost with the consolidation of multiple systems into fewer advanced solutions and enhancing system availability.

In summary, we continue to see steady growth and improving profitability and remain on track to achieve our metrics outlined. We expect to see a steady growth in advances in range of 20%, with the retail driving the credit expansion. This, we believe, will continue to be well supported by the granular deposit growth, which will outpace the overall deposit growth.

Our focus remains on scaling up the new retail asset products, continue to improve our retail liability franchise, platformize products and services for our customers, have a customer-first approach and, most importantly, keep the customer services at the heart of everything we do. There is a high degree of motivation in our internal teams. Morale and the excitement of the team is leading to a better operating outcome.

On capital, we have absorbed the regulatory direction of November. Our capital ratios continue to be healthy, and we believe we remain well capitalized for the growth in short and medium term. In last word, without that AFI provision, which is a contingent nature, our PAT growth was 53% Y-o-Y.

Thank you very much. We open the session for question and answer.

Operator

[Operator Instructions] The first question is from the line of Rikin Shah from IIFL.

R
Rikin Shah
analyst

I had 2 questions. First was on the credit card business. So we issued 5.75 lakh new cards in the quarter. Would you be able to give a sense of what would be the breakdown of this between co-branded partnership, internal sourcing either directly or via the DST? And how do you see this kind of panning out over the medium term? That's question number one.

And question number two is on asset quality. Of course, the slippages have inched up, but if you could provide some color as to what's driving the increase in the slippage between the segments because there have been industry reports that MFI delinquencies have started moving up. So is that more of a precursor to sustain increase or it's kind of a one-off in some of the states?

R
R. Subramaniakumar
executive

Yes. I'll just give a broad number of the credit card. Then I'll ask our team to mention about it.

Our total sourcing of the card is just divided into one major partner, rest of the partners plus internal and which include the branches and other partners and direct sourcing. And now it was the major partner. We were doing it to the tune of 1 year before, around 85% of total sourcing was with them. Now that has come down to 65%. So around 35% of it is being sourced by other sources. And we have around 20,000-plus is being done by the branches as well as by our DSTs on the floor.

And the other details, I'll ask our team to give it.

U
Unknown Executive

So on the -- so that is how we split. So Rikin, just to answer your question, this quarter, we are at about 5.7 lakh, 5.8 lakh cards. That's broadly 65-35 within Bajaj and non-Bajaj. Over the next 3, 6 months, you'll see us keep taking the share up from 35%, closer to 50%. And I'll ask Bikram to add on a few partnerships we are looking to explore across various platforms and sectors.

And so that's our broad strategy. So the idea would be that they are an important partner. We want to continue growing with them. But also to be more prudent, we would like to derisk by looking at our own sourcing as well as expanding our co-brand.

So Bikram, do you want to give a flavor of our co-brand that we are going with...

R
R. Subramaniakumar
executive

Are you able to hear us, Bikram?

Operator

Sir, give me a moment. Yes, he's there.

B
Bikram Yadav
executive

Yes. So as I have been informed by Mr. Kumar, we have been working on derisking. One of the large co-brand partner that we have for last 2 quarters now. We have been reaching out to multiple consumer and other co-brand partners, and we have got into some advanced stages of closure on that, and between next 30, 35 days, we'll be announcing a couple of partnerships, which will derisk from the largest co-brand partner that we have.

In addition to that, we are also augmenting our own field sales force. Currently, we have already taken it to about 2,000. And in another 3 to 6 months, it will continuously grow at around 10% to 15% quarter-on-quarter. We have been doing about 25,000 cards from this field sales force, and it will continue to -- we aim to take it to over 25% to 30% of our total sourcing. Rest of that 25% to 30% sourcing would come from other co-brand partners, and the largest co-brand partners that we have today will contribute to about anywhere between 40% to 50% of the sourcing.

R
R. Subramaniakumar
executive

Coming to a second part of the question, that is, with regard to asset quality and the credit cost, what we have been [ selling ] it well within our guided range. We don't see any change as far as that credit range is concerned. However, there was some impact of the lower recoveries, but we are confident that it can be [ clawed back ]. How we are saying is that the recovery percentage of MFI got impacted in a few states where there were elections. Now those states, we have come back to that collection efficiency of 99.41% which is, in fact, all India average is 99.41%. Previously, these states were [ under ] 99%. They have also come back to 99.5% stage.

So we don't see any impact as we move forward in MFI. And as far as the credit card is concerned, we saw some small blip in sales during the same period. We were able to claw back in the month of December, and we are confident that going forward, we'll be able to maintain that momentum of higher efficiency in collection, and we don't see more problem as we move forward.

Operator

The next question is from the line of Jai from ICICI Securities.

J
Jai Prakash Mundhra
analyst

I just have a couple of questions. So first is our yield this quarter was flat or actually a few basis points has declined...

Operator

I'm sorry to interrupt. Sir, may we request you to kindly use your handset, please? Your audio is not clear.

J
Jai Prakash Mundhra
analyst

Sure. Is this any better?

Operator

Yes, sir. Please continue.

J
Jai Prakash Mundhra
analyst

Sure, yes. So sir, first question on the yields. So it looks like the yields have dropped or declined marginally. You mentioned that there are a few MFI disbursements were a little bit weaker or flattish. But it looks like still we have done fairly well in other of the higher-yielding segments, right, such as affordable housing, retail, agri, et cetera, and [indiscernible]. So what could explain the adverse yield movement? Is it competition? Or is it something else? If you can elaborate a bit.

R
R. Subramaniakumar
executive

Yes. See, one of the reasons what we saw was the cost of deposits are higher by 10 bps, okay? We had some benefit of liquidity utilization, but we were a little prudent on some of our segments like microfinance. Given the state election, this is a flattish, which you really said about it.

The NIM number, as supposed, to be slightly higher in Q-o-Q. For Q4, given the dynamics around the deposit cost, conservatively, we will be able to maintain the NIM at the same stage. I'll ask team to add up.

U
Unknown Executive

So Jai, just to add, while growth has been very, very good, a large part of the growth in the quarter is also back-ended across some of these products. So you should see this yield improvement happen in the next quarter. So a lot of the translation will flow into Q4.

J
Jai Prakash Mundhra
analyst

Okay. Understood. And sir, our ROA improvement trajectory is -- in part, is predicated on favorable NIM outcomes, right? So maybe given your stance on the interest rate, maybe fourth quarter could be flattish, as you said. But how confident are you on improving NIM for FY '25?

R
R. Subramaniakumar
executive

There are 2 more -- I mean, like pointers, which will enable us to achieve this. One is the cost efficiency, which we'll be able to achieve it. That is one which will add up to that.

The second is the provisioning part, which we are working on. And both will also add up to it. Now today, the operating leverage has started, and you would have seen that we -- just as a point, the operating profit for 12 months increased by 33%, whereas the advance grew by 20%. So that the resulting benefit will also flow into the next quarter, which will help us to achieve this number.

U
Unknown Executive

And also on NIMs, Jai, you should see some -- so to be very candid, in the near term, given the dynamics of cost of deposits and all of that, we are being conservative. But sustainably, as the mix shifts more and more to retail, you'll see a benefit come through.

J
Jai Prakash Mundhra
analyst

And sir, on your deposit growth, right? So in the framework of FY '26 vision, I mean we have been doing fairly well in almost all of them, but the deposit growth is now 13%-odd, which is slightly slower than loan growth. So what are the levers to accelerate the growth from here onwards considering the competition is going to be -- competition is going to remain competitive? And in that context, do you sense any need to tweak deposit rates?

R
R. Subramaniakumar
executive

We don't find a reason for tweaking the deposit rate right now because of the 4, 5 points. First point is that we are increasing our ability to source the deposit from the current 500-plus branches to 1,300 touch points, which we have just started it with our 800 branches going to do that liability to our digital journey. Digital journey was [ later ] to not available. Now it is available. It is already put under pilot in few 50, 60-odd branches, and we will be creating the liability desk at every touch points. That's one.

The second, we have started the cross-sell in respect of our customer base or from the credit card, RVF. Already, We have just launched a product called GO, I mean, like the GO account, which has been integrated with our LOS of our [ freight ] and the tractor RV finance, and the pilot has been successful. So we are going to expand it to the asset team, which is on the sales team. On the floor, we have 1,000-plus people working on the respective individual products like housing loan, LAP loan and RVF and things. All these people will also be sourcing our sales front.

So by -- and the third would be that the credit card, which is we thought we are not having a journey. Now the journey for the credit card to co-originate, we need to open a savings account and funding the account through that is also going to start. So there is a team which has been set up at the bank, which we call it as a [ small ] branch or a virtual RM who -- the people who have been onboarded to these channels are going to be engaged based on the strong analytics which our supply team is working on. So we'll start engaging. We saw some early benefits also. Some of the customers who have around 30%, 40% of the people will be enacting in their actuation. We are reaching them out. We -- in the early signals to this virtual RM is that it's pretty positive. And we are able to see that increase in the balance that is being maintained by these accounts.

With all these initiatives, we are confident that we'll be able to maintain our -- the forecast, especially that retail deposit, less than INR 2 crores, which is healthily growing at the rate of around 28%, 26%. Going forward, it will continue to grow at that pace.

J
Jai Prakash Mundhra
analyst

Right, sir. And sir, in that context, how should one look at LDR ratio? I mean, of course, there have been some chatter about -- I mean keeping the loan-to-deposit ratio in some prudential limit. We have increased the LDR steadily. And now -- right now, we are at around [ 86% ]. How should we look at the idea?

R
R. Subramaniakumar
executive

Yes. See, we've set the initial forecast as well as in our vision document that we are comfortable in the CD ratio in the range of 83% to 85%, which we'll be able to maintain. However, I just want you to appreciate one fact, that is, the CD ratio is not to be seen only in the credit [indiscernible] deposit. You have to see from funding of the advances is the way I do look at it.

We feel that refinance is also one of the very good method or opportunity available for funding advances, which we started leveraging is, which is definitely beneficial in terms of the cost also. If I try to merge the deposit as well as the refinance facility available to us, our CD ratio -- the ratio -- I [ don't ] follow the CD ratio, the ratio which we are measuring it now will drop down to 73%.

So we feel with this combination, and we have sufficient headroom available, which is that to see, our housing loan is increasing, but we have a headroom for getting a refinance, which we have not been able to leverage or repeat so far, which we will try to do that combination. It is for the purpose of effectively ensuring the cost of the funds and the cost of our deposits to be [ effect ] at a reasonable level.

U
Unknown Executive

Just to add, Jai. There, we will look to keep the CD ratio in this ballpark only. And so on the margin, now pretty much incremental advances will probably be funded by 1.1 -- or 1.2x deposits. So that's broadly how our plan is in terms of growth.

J
Jai Prakash Mundhra
analyst

Understood. Sir, last clarification, this AIF investment, we have done the entire amount, whichever was needed, right? We did not -- I mean we have taken the entire [indiscernible].

R
R. Subramaniakumar
executive

Correct, correct. That's correct. We have done [ INR 91 crores ]. Our entire investment is INR 120 crores, out of which, INR 115 crores is impacted by the circular, we provided for. Of course, it is not against any impairment, and you know that it is redeemable, right? So the options have opened. And we will take a calculate -- yes. Thanks.

Operator

The next question is from the line of Kunal Shah from Citi Group.

K
Kunal Shah
analyst

Yes. So again, the question on retail sales in particular. They are down like 20-odd basis points. But I think structurally, the movement towards housing loans, that would pretty much continue away from, say, what we have seen with respect to the -- even on the business loan side. So then should we see that maybe overall yield improvement might not be there going forward? Okay, would there be a clear stance maybe because this quarter, again, there was decent growth on the Commercial Banking plus maybe -- and maybe housing, which might continue as such?

R
R. Subramaniakumar
executive

Just a couple of points, then I will ask Ramesh to give you the data points. So first one is that now we are just housing loan all along, if you see that, the focus was the prime housing loan where that yield was relatively lower. Now I just told you in my speech that we are expanding [indiscernible]. We have already put the people. There are 54 hubs underwriting schemes are ready -- underwriting teams are ready. So these teams will be looking at S-LAP, we got it as a small LAP whose average yield is much higher than that off to a regular LAP. And we are also putting efforts on AHL, we couldn't do that. So these 2 will be in a position to trigger our additional yield on that. Then coming to the data points, I will add Ramesh to...

U
Unknown Executive

So Kunal, broadly, we'll be in the [ 17-30, 17-60 ] range. So you will see Y-o-Y simply because there would be some interest reversals, there would be some mix change that would have happened, the growth in advances have been back ended and all of that. So it will be a combination of a few things that will happen. Like we said earlier, we went a little slow in micro finance, just to be prudent given elections in a few states. So you will have these Y-o-Ys, but broadly, we should be in the [ 17-50 ] handle give and take in terms of retailing on an ongoing basis.

K
Kunal Shah
analyst

Okay. And we have not increased any rate -- was the risk rates, has there been [indiscernible] in any of the unsecured consumer credit or...

U
Unknown Executive

We only have 2 real unsecured businesses, cards and micro finance. This quarter, we started disclosing the breakup of personal loans to our card customers, which we could show earlier as card receivables. So that is purely a function of how you onboard the customer, what is the behavior of the customer and therefore rates are what they are. We don't do any real open market sourcing for PL or any other unsecured product. So not so much of a rate change because of the regulations that come through.

K
Kunal Shah
analyst

Okay. And this housing, if we look at it, overall disbursements are almost INR 1,400-odd crores and the portfolio is also up, there is hardly any rundown which is there. So is there a bot portfolio or something which is there?

U
Unknown Executive

We did. In this quarter, we selectively bought a small portion through our bot portfolio. But yes, on an ongoing basis, we are now averaging close to INR 300 crores to INR 400 crores of disbursals on a monthly basis, and that run rate should continue. You will start seeing the shift happen more towards the smaller ticket housing loans. We are today in the INR 50 crores, INR 60 crores monthly run rate. I think we start -- our first benchmark will be to take it to INR 100 crores and then take it up from there.

K
Kunal Shah
analyst

Sure. And a couple of points on asset quality. So 1 is, if I hear you till last time, we were saying that our credit cost will continue to be high, and that might not be the lever on the RoA improvement. But now maybe you highlighted that there are efforts being made to just try to contain the credit cost which can also help the RoAs as such. So maybe why is that the change in stance what has been done? And second, if you can just provide the breakup of the gross slippages because that has also gone up. So just want to look at it in terms of the incremental delta of INR 120 crores, INR 130 crores, where is it coming from?

U
Unknown Executive

Sorry, what is the last one, Kunal?

K
Kunal Shah
analyst

Breakup of the gross slippages 666 exactly if I have to look at it -- INR 120 crores, INR 130 crores, where is it coming from, yes.

U
Unknown Executive

So in terms of gross slippages, we had cards at 370. We had micro finance at 100, retail asset was at 150. But within retail [indiscernible] quarter meant that the net slippage indicated was only about INR 50 crores.

Operator

I'm sorry to interrupt you sir, your audio broke just now.

R
R. Subramaniakumar
executive

Yes. I'll just repeat it again. So Kunal, I'll just repeat again. So cards, we are about 370, micro finance about 100. Retail assets, we had a total of approximately 150, but within that we also had recoveries and upgrades so our net was much, much lower. So that is the broad breakup of slippages in this quarter.

K
Kunal Shah
analyst

And incremental this INR 120 crores, INR 130 crores higher delta compared to last 2 quarters. This is coming, particularly on the card side?

U
Unknown Executive

Some of it from cards, some of it from micro finance, some of it from retail assets. But like I said, the net slippage numbers are lower. The gross numbers added up to approximately 130 across these 3.

K
Kunal Shah
analyst

And credit card credit cost maybe with the ROE lever that change in stance, yes?

U
Unknown Executive

Yes.

K
Kunal Shah
analyst

No, I was just saying that some change in stance in terms of credit costs supporting the ROA. The last time we have been highlighting that we might not see too much of delta coming in credit cost given the product profile, but I hear you that maybe you said there could be some...

U
Unknown Executive

So there are focus programs being run, for example, in micro finance and cards on recoveries and all of that we are rolling out. Essentially, our 2 large pools which generate slippages are typically cards and micro finance. So that is the larger focus. Within the rest of retail assets, the idea is to focus on upgrades, recovery, go out and get resolutions done, look at property, collaterals being liquidated and all of that. So we have, for example, historically had NPAs in our business loan portfolio. There are efforts to go out and do some liquidation and all of that at a faster pace. So we should have some benefit from that. But in our sense, that will be more a near-term outcome that will happen. Sustainably for us, it will be a combination of higher income much better on cost and provisioning being largely range bound in the 1.5%, 2% range.

R
R. Subramaniakumar
executive

Kunal, this is a 2-pronged strategy. Number one is arresting the slippage, which I said that and we see some green shoots in the month of December itself. Our collection efficiency in 0 bucket has moved up from 99.41% that is 1 of the major indications saying that by end of the quarter, we'll not be able to do it. In cards also, the recovery has just moved up from that a couple of percentage points and above that in the 0 bucket. So first, we arrested the first strategy of not allowing the thing to slip out of hand. The second strategy was looking at the technical write-off account and NPS as 2 separate events. And we have rolled out a separate program. In fact, for micro finance, dedicated 240-plus people, 250 people have been put on the field only to attend to this technical rate of recovery only. So we feel that with this focus attention, the recovery will be higher, which is added to what we have been asking for, it will be able to counterproductive. Second, if the slippage is arrested and you are able to get the recovery, then meanwhile, we have a very clear program of nondiscretionary nondiscriminatory settlement program which is going to accelerate it. It was on a selective basis. Now this will also add up to that settlement. In those vintage accounts where getting the recovery beyond around 14%, 15% is going to be a challenge. So that is also being rolled out, and we are confident with all these 3, 4, 5 measures, we'll be able to make a further one. Vijay, you want to add something?

V
Vijay Mahajan
executive

As rightly said, initial bucket resolution rates are very good, and our recoveries have also been good. So this 2-pronged strategy is helping us a lot in a couple of products in cards.

R
R. Subramaniakumar
executive

We strongly believe we will be able to achieve it.

Operator

The next question is from the line of Piran Engineer from CLSA.

P
Piran Engineer
analyst

Congrats on the quarter. Most of my questions have been answered. Just a couple of clarifications. Firstly, on the news that RBI gave only 1 year extension for your co-branded card with Bajaj, they found some deficiencies. So can you just clarify on what they were and what are the remedial actions you all are taking?

R
R. Subramaniakumar
executive

Yes. While I may not be able to comment about the regulatory discussions with them. But however, I can just give a clarity on the whole relationship, what we have been enjoying with the BFL. First is that we have an agreement, which is there for the 5 years just find around -- which is still going to be in place up to December 2026. That's number one. Number 2 is that, as part of our entire internally when we just evaluated it, we have decided to have a derisking of dependency on 1 major partner. So our strategy is to have multiple NBFCs, multiple PSUs onboarded. And we are in a very advanced to what Bikram also said initially that in maybe a couple of weeks or a couple of months, you will be able to -- you'll hear because it is in the different stages of integration and agreement where we will be able to have multiple partners coming up. And the third very important thing as a strategy, we have designed that to move up to the level of 50-50. Now, we were at 25% at the beginning of the year, 85% was sourced through our major partners, which moved down to 65% today. And we want that to be taken to 50% in maybe 2 quarters or so once these agreements are done. That is going to be done through -- apart from relationship through others, and we will also be in a -- we have already put around 2,000-plus DSTs on the floor. And all the branches have commenced leveraging it, hitherto that was not being done. We have around 2 million customers who are associated with the liability product. We have a very good relationship with them. And the conversion of those will also in a position to add up to our numbers.

P
Piran Engineer
analyst

Okay. No, I get that. I appreciate the diversification strategy. I just want to understand like is it a small technological issue because let's say RBI does not renew it after 1 year. I know it's only going to be 40%, but it's still a large number. So just wanted to understand I don't want details. I know it's confidential, but can you just give a sense of how difficult the challenges are to overcome whatever RBI would have told you all to do? Are they mere technical upgrades? Or is there more to that? That is my only thing.

R
R. Subramaniakumar
executive

No, it is [indiscernible] execution part of it. I'm pretty confident as a person who went deep into it to get it executed in a short while. When I say short while maybe couple of quarters. Yes.

P
Piran Engineer
analyst

Couple of quarters, okay. And sir, secondly, just did I hear it correctly that MFI collections were slightly lower in the election states?

R
R. Subramaniakumar
executive

No, no, no. What we said as a prudent measure, we just wanted to hold back the disbursement. That is the reason that our disbursement has not been matching like what we projected at the beginning of the quarter. Why we did was the election, yes, there may be a problem. So instead of focusing only on the disbursement and collection, we focus more on the collection. So these elections, there was a setback because in the collection number of days, people are working there instead of 25 days, it got reduced to around 15 to 20 days because of the various disruptions which happens in the villages. So we prudently withdrew our ability to disburse. Now we are ramping up during this quarter. And what we have achieved in the month of December is that the full efficiency has been achieved back in the collections. So it is around 99.41%, which you will definitely appreciate that is 1 of the -- this I'm talking about our entire portfolio. And the stage, what we are talking about, which was little backwards in collections, which was 99.1% has also moved up to 99.5%. There are states where we achieved even 99.6% and 99.7% in the 0 bucket.

Operator

The next question is from the line of Prabal from Ambit Capital.

U
Unknown Analyst

First, does the business acquisition cost on Slide #17, what exactly is that?

U
Unknown Executive

It's the combination of all the costs we incur for sourcing new cards, sourcing new tractor loans, home loans, micro finance, all of those have done the business acquisition for us.

U
Unknown Analyst

And is there a possibility of efficiency getting generated out of it in the near term?

U
Unknown Executive

So in the near term, what you will actually see is the loans that we generated from these costs that we have incurred should contribute more to these income lines. Incremental, this is purely a function of what do you want to source incrementally. So if you want to source a certain amount of tractors or a certain amount of cars, there is a certain cost that you incur. The benefit of that flows through the income. So therefore, the income generation that happens is higher than the cost that you incur because you appreciate -- most of these costs are incurred upfront by us in terms of onboarding a customer cost related to that model. The benefit flows through in subsequent months.

U
Unknown Analyst

Okay. An extended question will be OpEx to asset is around 5% currently. How do you see that trend going ahead?

R
R. Subramaniakumar
executive

It will start to calibrate down as we start increasing the share of our own sourcing. Like for example, in cards, Bikram spoke about getting 30%, 40% sourcing done through its own sales teams. Similarly, in home loans and business loans, Vijay and Kamal and Parag are working on generating some branches. We are also taking the help of RBL FinServe to generate leads from their own customer base and in their geographies. So the idea would be to bear down the cost of incremental asset sourcing through some of these levers, which we are working on. A lot of these have gone live over the last few years that will give us a few months and quarters to start seeing the benefits flow through in terms of incremental share of sourcing.

U
Unknown Analyst

A second question will be, you mentioned about diversifying on the card side. So congratulations first on that. My question would be, just if I have to see for example, a Bajaj Finance card, how is the dynamic different versus your card which is getting sourced by us in respect of yield and the cost of acquisition? And also if you can mention that historically, how has the Bajaj customer asset quality has been versus the card which was sourced by us?

R
R. Subramaniakumar
executive

I'll ask Bikram to answer it.

B
Bikram Yadav
executive

Yes. So I'll take the first question. I think I'll break the question into 3 parts: Asset quality both the portfolios are almost range bound. Bajaj being credit tested at certain points in time have given about 50 basis points better performance than the other portfolio. In terms of performance, our other side of the portfolio is more mass affluent to affluent and the Bajaj portfolio is the more mass to mass affluent. So what we see is that those spends and the ANR per customer on the other ex-Bajaj portfolio is almost 2x. So the asset and spend on Bajaj customer is spend, it would be 20% on the other side. Therefore, if you were to see our spend and asset mix is 40-60, whereas in our portfolio it's about 75-25. And sourcing, as we have covered earlier in the commentaries that earlier it was 85-50 which now is about 35-65, and we are inching very close to taking over 50-50 in another maybe 2 quarters max.

U
Unknown Analyst

Okay. So this is the platform of spend with the new card is coming which is why we are able to reduce the share of Bajaj so quickly, is that the right understanding.

B
Bikram Yadav
executive

Yes. Yes.

U
Unknown Analyst

And on the yield side, so what would you be earning on the co-branded side? And when it comes -- when it becomes like your customers, how can that be different?

U
Unknown Executive

So -- say this question once again, please?

U
Unknown Analyst

So on the yield and the cost side so when it is getting sourced from Bajaj, how much...

U
Unknown Executive

These are also range bound. So as a percentage of exposure, yields are range bound. On a per customer basis, we clearly get better returns on ex Bajaj portfolio.

U
Unknown Analyst

Okay. If Bajaj is better with respect to ROA than a Bajaj customer?

U
Unknown Executive

ROA would be slightly better with Bajaj customer, but it is largely range bound for both.

Operator

The next question is from the line of Anand Dama from Emkay Global.

A
Anand Dama
analyst

Sir, my first question is on the AIF. So basically, if you can explain like what is this investment that we have made, is this basically investment that we have made over 10 years? And how much of that basically is in the last 10 months. RBI today also clearly said that they've been watching the AIF buildup over the past 10 months. And their main contention, main concern was that a lot of lenders basically have sold out their NPS to these AIFs and basically indirectly invested into [indiscernible]. So how much of that do you think they could be in our portfolio? If you can talk about that, number one. Number two is that you talked about that basically we will look at redeeming these investments so what is your view on like how much time will it take for you to redeem these investments and will that lead to a complete write-back of all these provisions that we have made in the third quarter? If you can just throw some light on, particularly the AIF.

R
Rajeev Ahuja
executive

Yes, Anand, this is Rajeev. I'll take that. See, we are largely in the venture debt platform and our relationship with them goes back almost 10 years. And the idea is basically that they are a premier platform which invests in debt-oriented securities in the new marketplaces, digital businesses. Many of them are some of the largest brands, which you all know. We have been a partner LP with them. And by the way, it's widely held. We don't have any -- in fact, our last investment was just under 5% of the entire funding they had raised. They have raised 3 rounds of the funds for this purpose. And obviously, quite successful, very widely held, as I said. And we also have an independent business focused on the new economy group, and it's highly successful. We have done payments, treasury, a little bit of lending, deposits, et cetera. And I would say 1 of the few banks which is deeply embedded in the entire ecosystem. So our endeavor to partner with them going back almost 10 years was with the idea that this will give us a window to understand this ecosystem because these guys bring tremendous relationship with the VCs and the companies, and that has served us extremely well. Now this guideline, this requirement of the RBI has a particular purpose, which is actually, I think, very clearly stated in the circular. However, the way the circular requires all regulated entities is to basically assess what is the common borrower, stroke investor and the exposure we have. So unfortunately, whether your exposure is kosher or not, it gets caught. So I can only confirm to you that over the 3 funds we've invested, we received our money and a significant amount of return, which should be the case. And going forward, we don't anticipate anything other than the return of a principal plus the indicated range of return they have mentioned. To your second point on redemption, see, what happens is, as the fund life starts coming closer to its final date, the investments keep getting redeemed. So that is one normal rate of redemption. I cannot sit and tell you exactly what will be the rate of redemption, but it keeps happening every quarter. Secondly, obviously, this circular came towards the end of December. Everybody has been grappling were trying to understand what the meaning is. We took the view that let's provide first and then explore if we would like to do other options. This fund is in the money. The NAV is in the money. So once there is a little bit of a clarity in breathing space, I'm sure if we'd like to, we can get liquidity for our investments. In which case, all the provision will be written back once we sell it. In any case, Anand, like I said, we don't anticipate anything other than return. And I think as Mr. Kumar was repeatedly mentioning, it is just a contingency to meet with the RBI guidelines, not at all in the nature of any impairment. I hope that addresses that.

A
Anand Dama
analyst

Sure. So basically, I understood it correctly that none of these investments that we have made is in a nature where basically we have tried to sell off our digital assets to those AIFs and indirectly, basically, we have invested.

R
Rajeev Ahuja
executive

Absolutely. Absolutely. And Anand, I'll just say 1 more thing. I mean, in many cases, we made the loan first and then independently, they may have made the investment or vice versa. So there is no connect between this fund's practices and our own independent assessment. Unfortunately, like I said, everything is captured in the circular. The intention was very clear in the circular, but so we have to abide by it. From an economic perspective, we don't see any problem whatsoever.

A
Anand Dama
analyst

Sure. Do you expect any of these reversals happening in next quarter? And basically, if you can quantify or maybe over next year as such?

R
Rajeev Ahuja
executive

Like I said, I cannot -- I can only say we are not perturbed 1 bit. We wanted to play it very, very straight and just go by and comply with the guideline. We'll see what happens. Like I said, this has barely been 2, 3 weeks for us at the end of the year, beginning of the year, we had other things to do. There is a lot of options on the table. We'll take it with a little breathing space and then decide what to do.

A
Anand Dama
analyst

Second question is on the corporate NPA pool that we have. So one, basically, any lumpy recovery that you expect in the next 2 to 3 quarters? Number one...

R
R. Subramaniakumar
executive

No. Anand, it is a work in progress. There are -- see, if you look at it last time, the recovery was much higher than the slippage which we have been able to do it for the last 3 or 4 quarters consistently like that. The efforts are on. There are certain accounts where it is in advanced stages of getting realizations. There are some advantages, efforts have been started, right? It's going on because the portfolio is around [indiscernible]

A
Anand Dama
analyst

Basically even during the current quarter, we have had some recovery from return of accounts and that we tend to show it into provision line items, but there are some line basically we show it into the other income line. So is there [indiscernible] that there's no change that accounting as well?

U
Unknown Executive

Go ahead. Go ahead. Please go ahead.

U
Unknown Executive

Sorry, we missed what he said.

U
Unknown Executive

No, we missed it. Kindly repeat it again.

A
Anand Dama
analyst

So basically, recoveries of return of accounts. Basically, we have taken it out of from the provision line item, whereas typically, we are seeing there are some lines show it into the other income. So any change that we want to do even on that front?

U
Unknown Executive

If I remember right, the circular, which came from RBI has first asked banks to take it from the provision line and then there was a dispensation. So I know a few banks who have done it on the provision line and some who have done it in the income line. This has been our practice for the last 3 or 4 years since the circular change. I think we continue with this process only.

Operator

The next question is from the line of Rakesh Kumar from B&K Securities.

R
Rakesh Kumar
analyst

Can you hear me, sir?

R
R. Subramaniakumar
executive

Yes, Rakesh.

R
Rakesh Kumar
analyst

So the question was with regards to the sale of credit card portfolio of around INR 793 crores, where the loan account number is close to around [ 1.5 ] lakhs as we have given in our result note. So what was the provision that we were holding because I think we have reversed whatever we realized. So if you can throw some light on that, sir?

R
R. Subramaniakumar
executive

First of all, I wanted to say that our provision thing is 120 days, we provide 100% of that outstanding, previously it was 180, now it is 120. The entire portfolio, what you saw was 2 years of vintage and they have been 100% provided for. And we made a complete evaluation in calculation. It is going to be recovered over a period of 2, 3 years let us assume, the amount of collection charges are -- the spend we'll make on that collection will be higher than that of the upfront money what you're getting it hence we decided prudently move towards that selling [indiscernible]

R
Rakesh Kumar
analyst

Okay. So -- and other thing was that considering this total retail loan disbursement that we have seen this quarter. And out of that, the disbursement of the secured retail loan. So is there any -- like this is just an opportunistic move in the business? Or is there any thought that we have to go more into the secured retail side. So if you can explain, sir?

R
R. Subramaniakumar
executive

Yes. So as a strategy, we explained earlier in the vision document also, we said that we will be in a position to expand the run rate of growth of the secured portfolio will be faster and higher when compared to the run rate of growth of other unsecured product. That is a given. So when you just make that beginning and lot of products that are launched in the last 9 to 12 months period, and those are started scaling. For example, Tractor was done a couple of years before, and they just started scaling. Housing loan and the LAP loan, which we call it as the mortgage loans have been commenced with the AHL and THL and small LAP and other things. They have started scaling in the last 2 quarters. In respect of other loans, the 2-wheeler we just commenced it and the 4-wheeler use also we commenced it. So they will start scaling after the quarter or so. So in a nutshell, the strategy is that in our entire credit growth, there will be a growth of 20% straight upfront. It will be 20 plus as we move forward next year and next year. And within that, the retail growth will be around 25%. And within that, the credit of -- the secured credit growth will be somewhere 25% to 30%. So that is how exactly that is planned out, and we will be achieving it as per the plan of action. We have been achieving it and we'll continue to achieve it.

R
Rakesh Kumar
analyst

Got it. Got it. Sir, just coming back to the first question. So the loan that we have -- loan accounts that we have sold the credit card, this is to some banks, some private bank we have sold, correct?

R
R. Subramaniakumar
executive

No, we sold to ARC -- I think it is Kotak.

Operator

The next question is from the line of Shubhranshu Mishra from PhillipCapital.

S
Shubhranshu Mishra
analyst

Three questions from the credit card portfolio. First 1 is when we land a credit card to a Bajaj Finance customer, what is the ownership of that customer? So does it permanently become our customer and Bajaj Finance cannot give them any kind of its products, whether it is credit or noncredit? Or is it a transient movement, Bajaj can also land them any credit or noncredit product. We can also land them any credit or noncredit product, whether it's savings account or any type insurance or another personal loan, for example, that is first. The second question is the present set of regulations say that the originator cannot be the collection agency. So in the co-brand of Bajaj Finance, is Bajaj Finance or any of its subsidiaries or any of its parent subsidiaries doing the collections for that particular portfolio? That's the second. And the third question is what is the percentage of less than 25,000 credit limit credit cards in the entire credit card portfolio?

R
R. Subramaniakumar
executive

So 1 or 2 points I'll clarify. The remaining data, I will ask Bikram to do it. First 1 is when the customer is acquired, it comes into the balance sheet of the bank, and he becomes a customer of the bank, right? That is a major point. So once he is a customer of your bank and the rest of the things are left to the bank for cross-sell and upsell and everything. So I'll just park it that. The second, when it comes to that collection agency, previously, it was a part of the BFL. Now it is not with the BFL. As a transition, it is with -- if you look at it, there is arm's length relationship as well as the current company, which is vis-a-vis in the collection. Ultimately, the collection is not by the company. It is the agencies below that. We are around 1,300-plus agencies. And all these agencies are independent of it, and it is being managed by the bank. So the moment the agencies are managed, allocation is taken by the bank. The question of interpreting in another way may not arise. This is what I believe it. As regarding the point and other things, I want -- Bikram you can give the data.

B
Bikram Yadav
executive

So as Mr. Kumar has mentioned, the customer once he takes a card from RBL Bank from any of the channel, whether co-brand or non-co-brand becomes the customer of the bank. We can sell anything to that customer and so does can the co-brand entity. So there are no -- because it's an open market customer, anyone can reach out to him and sell whatever they deem fit. Second thing -- second question that you have asked is that how many customers are less than 25,000 credit limit, that would be less than 5% of the portfolio, maybe in the range of 2% to 3%. And that is also the test program that we have done to test certain segments is where this number would lie. Most of our portfolio would be about 25,000.

S
Shubhranshu Mishra
analyst

Right. So if I can just squeeze in 1 last question. Who is doing the collections of the Bajaj Finance portfolio right now? What is that entity's name.

U
Unknown Executive

Collections are done by the agencies. And the agencies are typically told by Mr. Kumar. They are managed by us. Our -- we control the agencies and the field agency goes and collects for Bajaj customers as well.

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, that was the last question. We now conclude the Q&A session. If you have any further questions, please contact RBL Bank Limited via e-mail at ir@rblbank.com. I repeat, ir@rblbank.com. On behalf of RBL Bank Limited, we thank you for joining us, and you may now disconnect your lines. Thank you, members of the management.

R
R. Subramaniakumar
executive

Thank you. Thanks. Thanks, everyone.

Operator

Thank you, sir.