City
Epaper

RBI cancels licence of Kapol Cooperative Bank in Mumbai

By IANS | Updated: September 27, 2023 21:45 IST

New Delhi, Sep 27 The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has cancelled the licence of the Kapol Co-operative ...

Open in App

New Delhi, Sep 27 The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has cancelled the licence of the Kapol Co-operative Bank Limited, Mumbai.

Consequently, the bank ceases to carry on banking business, with effect from the close of business on September 25, 2023.

The Additional Secretary & Central Registrar of Cooperative Societies, Ministry of Cooperation, Government of India has also been requested to issue an order for winding up the bank and appoint a liquidator for the bank.

The Reserve Bank of India cancelled the licence of the bank as the bank does not have adequate capital and earning prospects. As such, it does not comply with the provisions of Section 11(1) and Section 22 (3) (d) read with Section 56 of the Banking Regulation Act, 1949.

The bank has failed to comply with the requirements of Sections 22(3) (a), 22(3) (b), 22(3)(c), 22(3)(d) and 22(3)(e) read with Section 56 of the Banking Regulation Act, 1949.

The continuance of the bank is prejudicial to the interests of its depositors.

The bank with its present financial position would be unable to pay its present depositors in full; and public interest would be adversely affected if the bank is allowed to carry on its banking business any further.

Consequent to the cancellation of its licence: "The Kapol Co-operative Bank Limited, Mumbai, Maharashtra.” is prohibited from conducting the business of ‘banking’ which includes, among other things, acceptance of deposits and repayment of deposits as defined in Section 5 (b) read with Section 56 of the Banking Regulation Act, 1949 with immediate effect."

On liquidation, every depositor would be entitled to receive deposit insurance claim amount of his/her deposits up to a monetary ceiling of Rs 5 lakh from Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporation (DICGC) subject to the provisions of DICGC Act, 1961.

As per the data submitted by the bank, 96.09 per cent of the depositors are entitled to receive full amount of their deposits from DICGC.

As on July 24, 2023, DICGC has already paid Rs 230.16 crore of the total insured deposits under the provisions of Section 18A of the DICGC Act, 1961 based on the willingness received from the concerned depositors of the bank.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalYunus regime pushing Bangladesh towards radical Islamist control: Report

Other SportsGCL Season 3: Alpine Pipers beat Continental Kings to be crowned champions; Alaskan Knights finish third

NationalAndaman & Nicobar Islands release draft electoral roll after intensive revision drive

National2026 Bengal polls: Humayun Kabir withdraws his new party's Ballygunge seat candidate after launch

InternationalCISF hosts study programme for Nepal Armed Police Force officers in Delhi

International Realted Stories

InternationalCyclone Ditwah affected 374,000 workers across Sri Lanka: ILO

InternationalBrazilian President Lula could visit India next month, sources say

InternationalIndian origin Tamils in SL share their assessment of Ditwah havoc with EAM Jaishankar

InternationalINSV Kaundinya to embark on maiden overseas voyage for Muscat from Porbandar

InternationalPakistan: Imran Khan's sisters, PTI workers hold sit-in protest