SBI begins work on framework for subsidiaries' merger
State-run banking behemoth State Bank of India has set up a crack team to prepare a framework for amalgamation of five associate banks with itself, even as the political opposition to the proposed move is gaining ground and the government approval is still awaited.
“A team of 15-20 members has been set up and it has started working on the framework for the merger. The team is headed by a general manager and there are a few deputy general managers,” a source said.
The team has been formed under the supervision of associate and subsidiaries department, which is being headed by managing director V G Kannan.
“If everything works fine, in 3-4 months the process is likely to begin,” he said.
Last month, the bank’s board had submitted a proposal to the government for merging its five subsidiaries and first women-oriented lender Bhartiya Mahila Bank with itself.
“This merger discussion is purely exploratory at this stage and is not certain. A proposal seeking an in-principle approval to start negotiations with associate banks will be submitted to the government,” SBI had said in a statement issued after its board meeting last month.
SBI has five associate banks — State Bank of Bikaner and Jaipur, State Bank of Travancore, State Bank of Patiala, State Bank of Mysore and State Bank of Hyderabad.
"The idea is to merge all the five associate banks at the same time. They are on the same technology platform, which SBI has. It will not be a difficult process," the source added.
Recently, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley had said the Centre is evaluating the merger proposal and will soon respond.
"We are looking at SBI proposal at the moment. It is with the government and will respond. The government's policy, by and large, supports consolidation. I have indicated that in the budget itself," he said after a meeting with the heads of public sector banks and financial institutions held last week.
Jaitley had also said that government's nod to the proposal is expected soon.
Immediately after the announcement, the associate banks' employee union had termed the board's decision as arrogant and had gone on a nation-wide strike on May 20. The employee unions of these five associate banks have called for a strike on June 28 and July 29 to protest the proposed merger.
Moreover, Communist Party of India General Secretary S Sudhakar Reddy on Sunday said Telangana assembly should pass a resolution opposing the amalgamation and added, the state will lose revenue if the SBH is merged with the parent SBI.
On June 9, the newly inducted CPI(Marxist)-led Left Democratic Front government in Kerala had opposed the merger of the SBT with the SBI, becoming the first state government to lodge a protest.
"People of the state consider SBT as a bank of Kerala and the government also has the same view. We want SBT to remain as it is," Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan had told reporters.
Among the five subsidiary banks, SBBJ, SBM and SBT are listed entities.
The merged entity will create a banking behemoth, which can compete with the largest in the world with an asset base of almost Rs 37 lakh crore, with 22,500 branches and 58,000 ATMs as on December 2015. SBI alone has close to 16,500 branches, including 198 foreign offices spread across 36 countries.
SBI first merged State Bank of Saurashtra with itself in 2008. Two years later, State Bank of Indore was merged. SBI has maintained since then that it would merge the others as well but none of its initiatives fructified due to lack of capital — which was pegged at least Rs 2,000 crore for each bank — and stiff opposition from the employee unions.
"The country needs stronger banks rather than a large number of lenders," Jaitley had said at the second edition of the Gyan Sangam held in March.
Last month, Minister of State for Finance, Jayant Sinha, had said, " We have 27 public sector banks right now. When the dust settles, I think we will have, may be, 8-10 very competitive banks. Some of them are going to be large scale global players, while some are going to be differentiated banks."