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Why Do People Still Have Deposits in Indian Overseas Bank and UCO Bank?

  • Close to one-fifth of the loans given by Indian Overseas Bank and UCO Bank have not been repaid.
  • If the loans of a bank are not being repaid, its chances of returning deposits are also low but that is not the case because government is not going to let a public sector bank go bust.
  • Most depositors do not keep track of the state of the bank they have deposited their money in, especially if it happens to be a public sector bank.

Vivek KaulAug 16, 2016, 03:41 PM | Updated 03:41 PM IST
PTI Images

PTI Images


That we are a financially illiterate nation is given. But even with this disclaimer I am sometimes amazed at how lackadaisical people are when it comes to their money.

Take the case of two public sector banks: a) Indian Overseas Bank b) UCO Bank. Recently, both the banks declared results for the three-month period ending 30 June 2016. As of 30 June, the bad loans of Indian Overseas Bank amounted to 20.48 percent. And that of UCO Bank were at 17.19 percent .

This basically means that close to one-fifth of the loans given by these banks have not been repaid. The question is how do these banks or for that matter any bank, give loans? A bank raises deposits and then gives out those deposits as loans.

Of course, if the loans of a bank are not being repaid, its chances of returning deposits are also low. At least, that is how things should work in theory. But that is not the case primarily because everyone knows that a government is not going to let a public sector bank go bust. (Actually, the government won’t let even a private sector bank go bust, but that is a story we will leave for another day).

And this explains why people still have their money deposited with these banks. Take the case of Indian Overseas Bank. As on 30 June 2016, the total deposits with the bank stood at Rs 2.18 lakh crore, in comparison to Rs 2.32 lakh crore a year earlier. Now that is a fall of 5.85 percent.

This drop is extremely marginal when one takes into account the fact that the bad loans of the bank have more than doubled during the same period. As on 30 June 2015, the bad loans of the bank had stood at 9.40 percent of its total advances. What this clearly tells us is that the smart money has started to move out of the bank. But the bulk of the lot continue to hold on to their deposits in the bank.

How do things look for UCO Bank? I couldn’t find the deposits of the bank as on 30 June 2016, and hence, have worked with 31 March 2016, numbers, which are good enough to make the point I am trying to make.

As of 31 March 2016, the total deposits of UCO Bank were at Rs 2.07 lakh crore, down from Rs 2.14 lakh crore from a year earlier. This is a meagre fall of 3.4 percent. During the same period, the bad loans of the bank have jumped from 6.76 percent to 15.43 percent.

While the investors in the stocks of these banks have realised the true situation that these banks are in, the same cannot be said about the depositors. The explanation for this is fairly straightforward. Most depositors do not keep track of the state of the bank they have deposited their money in, especially if it happens to be a public sector bank.

The de facto assumption is that money deposited in a public sector bank is safe, which it is. Nevertheless, if at all there is trouble, there might be transitional problems and during that period liquidity of these deposits might be an issue.

Also, for all the risk that depositors are taking on by investing in these banks, what is the extra return that they are earning? The interest on fixed deposits of UCO Bank for a period of one year or more vary between 7.25 percent and 7.5 percent. The interest rates on fixed deposits of Indian Overseas Bank for a similar period vary between 7 percent and 7.25 percent.

The State Bank of India, the largest public sector bank, offers interest rates between 7 percent and 7.5 percent, for fixed deposits of one year or more. Hence, the State Bank of India offers more or less the same interest rate as Indian Overseas Bank and UCO Bank, do.

At the same time, it is a much safer bank to have your deposits in given that its bad loans as on 30 June 2016, stood at 6.49 percent of its total advances. They had stood at 4.29 percent as on 30 June 2015.

So, the bad loans of State Bank of India are lower than that of both Indian Overseas Bank as well as UCO Bank. At the same time, they have gone up at a much slower pace. In case both Indian Overseas Bank and UCO Bank, the bad loans have more than doubled over the last one year. This is clearly not the case with State Bank of India.

Hence, even those depositors who like to hold their deposits in government owned banks, the State Bank of India, is a much safer bet. Also, it is the biggest government bank and the government has the most interest in keeping it going.

The only place human beings are known to be rational are in theoretical economics. In real life they are clearly not. The above example clearly shows us that. The reasons for people holding on to deposits in Indian Overseas Bank and UCO Bank can be multiple

The first, is that they don’t know that the banks are in a bad shape. The second, is that they do know that banks are in a bad shape, but they also know that government banks don’t fail. The third, is that they have always had their deposits in these banks and are friendly with the people who run the branch they have their deposits in.

Nevertheless, none of these reasons is a rational one because the fixed deposits of these two banks do not pay a higher rate of return for the extra risk that the people are taking on.

This article was originally published in Vivek Kaul’s Diary— a newsletter that cuts through the noise and presents actionable views on socio-economic developments in India and the world. He is the author of a trilogy on the history of money and the financial crisis. The series is titled Easy Money.

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