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Basel III norms prevented merging subsidiary: Pratip Chaudhuri

Former State Bank of India (SBI) chairman Pratip Chaudhuri has said the country's largest lender would have completed the process of merging a subsidiary but didn't for the huge capital requirement due to the Basel III norms.

"We have decided to merge one more subsidiary which we are pretty positive but because of Basel III impact, it is (delayed)," said Mr Chaudhuri, who left the bank last month.

SBI had a shortage of capital but now is better placed to merge one of its subsidiaries, he said. He further said that in the recent past it was able to merge two subsidiaries State Bank of Indore and State Bank of Saurashtra.

He specifically pointed to steep salary hike which will have to be given to the employees of the merging subsidiary, which eats into capital base of the parent.

Depending on the bank to be merged, it will take either Rs 1,000 crore or up to Rs 2,000 crore for the merger. SBI's capital adequacy stood at 12.92 per cent as of March 2013, had received an infusion of Rs 7,900 crore from the government last fiscal and is likely to get around Rs 4,000 crore this fiscal year.

"Now that we are comfortable with the capital, I think we are poised to merge one of the subsidiaries," he said.

Notably, the bank, which controls nearly a fourth of the banking system, will need Rs 2.30 lakh crore towards capital as it gears up to meet the stringent Basel-III norms by 2018.

Basel-III is the newer international standards of capital allocation devised and adopted following the 2008 financial crisis. The Basel-III measures lay a lot of emphasis on increasing the buffers, which can help in times of difficulty and avoid the stress spilling over to other markets in the highly interconnected financial system.

There are five more subsidiaries, including State Bank of Hyderabad, State Bank of Patiala, State Bank of Bikaner and Jaipur, State Bank of Travancore, and State Bank of Mysore of which one can be merged with the parent.

Before retiring, Mr Chaudhuri had said a bank with a lower retail presence would be preferred for the merger and that he would announce the decision. However, as he moved closer to retirement, he decided to leave it to his successor, which is yet to be decided.

He had also named a one-man panel headed by S Vishwanathan, managing director in-charge of associates and subsidiaries at SBI, to suggest the best possible candidate for the merger.