Cautious banks drastically cut education loans as income, job losses rise, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The bank credit is ticking up for industry and allied sectors in line with the economic revival, but certain segments continue to stay in doldrums.

Credit to commercial real estate and education loans shrunk by 0.5% and 8.7% on year, respectively, in October.

According to RBI data on sectoral credit deployment, loans to the industry sector increased 4.1% on year to Rs 28,54,571 crore as on October 22. On the other hand, loans to commercial real estate fell 0.5% on year to Rs 2,53,582 crore while education loans credit deployment by banks by 8.7% to Rs 47,260 crore.

Experts say banks have sharply reduced exposure to unsecured credit and are focusing on secured home loans and working capital needs of high rated corporate borrowers. While they are focusing on growing the mortgage book, banks have reduced exposure to commercial real estate, given the uncertain times.

Education loan NPAs

Nearly 9.55% of education loans extended by PSU banks were labelled as non-performing assets (NPAs) as on December 31, 2020, with loans for engineering and nursing courses topping the chart.

Job and income loss and drop-out rates during the pandemic were key factors behind the surge in education loan NPAs.

Rising unemployment rate is posing major challenges to the banking system as the repayment ability of the borrowers are getting impacted accordingly.

About Rs 8,587 crore loans over 366,260 accounts have turned bad as of December 2020.

As on December 31, 2020, there are 24.84 lakh education loan accounts with an outstanding of Rs 89,883.57 crore across the country. Out of these, about 9.55% or 3.66 lakh accounts with an outstanding of Rs 8,587.10 crore have turned NPAs, the parliament was informed.

The highest defaults were in loans extended for engineering courses as Rs 4,041.68 crore spread over 176,256 accounts as on December 31, 2020.

COVID-led spike

Interestingly, the NPA rate has dropped to 7.61% in FY20 end from 8.11% in FY18. It stood at 8.29% in FY19. The category has witnessed higher NPAs than other categories of retail loans including housing, vehicle, that saw bad loans in the range of 1.52% and 6.91% in FY20 While NPAs in the housing, vehicle and other retail sector loans have remained below 2%, consumer durables NPAs have trebled to 6.91% as on March 2020 from 1.99% in March 2018.

Reserve Bank of India
Reserve Bank of India

Rising graph

Led by a rise in lending to micro and small, and medium industries, bank loans to the industry sector grew a 4.1% on year in October, sharply higher than 2.5% a month ago and contraction of 0.7% a year ago, according to the RBI data.

Loans to large corporates rose 0.5% (on a year-on-year basis) to Rs 22.7 lakh crore in October compared to a contraction of 1.8 % a year ago.

All major segments, except services including agriculture, industry and retail posted higher growth rates over the previous year. Overall bank credit rose 6.9% in October compared to 5.2% a year ago according to the latest data on sectoral deployment of bank credit released by the Reserve Bank of India.

Government schemes like emergency credit guarantee schemes targeted at such borrowers also seemed to have played a part in the pick-up in lending to these corporate borrowers during the festival season.

The 10.7% growth in gross capital formation in Q2’21-22 is driven primarily by public capital expenditure although there are also signs of a pickup in private capex in the current fiscal.



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GyanDhan to disburse education loans worth ₹650 cr in FY22

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GyanDhan, an education financing platform, aims to disburse ₹650 crore worth of education loans in FY22, of which, ₹50 crore will be earmarked for domestic short-term courses.

The company has firms such as Great Learning and various IAS institutions to offer interest-free education loans to students wanting to pursue short-term courses.

GyanDhan Founder and CEO, Ankit Mehra, said: “Till now, we have disbursed more than ₹1,000 crore in total. We have extended loan offers to nearly 3,000 students in the last six months, partnering with more than 350 institutions in India. It is revolutionary in terms of its varied features like – instant loan approval, no-cost EMIs, disbursal in 24 hours, and the option to customise the loan product for the institute.”

“The process is streamlined with completely online application submission and minimum document requirements. With the help of customised loan products and flexible repayment options, students can opt to upskill from institutes like Great Learning and bid goodbye to the hassles of financing the courses with GyanDhan,” he added.

The company has already sanctioned ₹200 crore of loans in this financial year, including domestic and abroad education loans.

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SBI offers revamping of loan for personal segment borrowers

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State Bank of India (SBI) has announced offering restructuring of loans to its eligible personal segment borrowers who availed home loans, Xpress credit, education loans and auto loans before April 1, 2021.

According to the bank, the eligible borrowers may access the following link and opt for restructuring (under Resolution Framework 2.00).

The link: https://covid19restruct.sbi.co.in:8443/EMIRestruct/EMI_CustomerLogin.jsp

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New policy on education loans: A new chapter for students, but is it risky?

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Banks, especially those in the public sector, supporting the higher education dreams of Indians, both within and outside the country, is no longer news.

However, their recent decision to give loans to power the dreams of Non-Resident Indians (NRIs) and Persons of Indian Origin (PIO)/ Overseas Citizens in India (OCI) keen on getting a degree from an Indian institute of higher learning, is news for overseas Indians to sit up and take notice.

Banks will also consider education loan applications of students born abroad (have overseas citizenship by birth, when parents were on deputation with Foreign Government/ Government agencies or International/ Regional Agencies) and are now studying in India (after repatriation of their parents) for higher studies in the country.

Education loan to the aforementioned category of students will be subject to Foreign Exchange Management (Borrowing and Lending in Rupees) Regulations, as per the Indian Banks’ Association’s ‘Model Educational Loan Scheme for Pursuing Higher Education in India and Abroad (2021)’. The earlier version of the ‘Model Educational Loan Scheme For Pursuing Higher Education in India and Abroad (2015)’ specifically stated that a student should be an Indian national to be eligible for an education loan.

Tweak in nationality criteria

The tweak in the nationality criteria in IBA’s Educational Loan Scheme ensures that it dovetails with the National Education Policy/NEP 2020 (released in July 2020). NEP envisages stepping up current public (Centre and States) expenditure on education in India from 4.43 per cent of GDP to 6 per cent and allowing select foreign universities – those from among the top 100 universities in the world – to operate in India.

According to banking expert V Viswanathan, the revamped loan scheme will be an incentive for meritorious students belonging to the NRI/PIO/OCI category to pursue studies in Indian institutions of international repute such as IITs/IIMs/IISc/XLRI.

“This will increase the number of students studying in Indian educational institutions of higher learning considerably. The number of foreign students studying in an educational institution is an important criteria in getting international ranking,” he said.

For NRI/ PIO/ OCI students, the new scheme requires the co-applicant to be a permanent resident of India. However, if the parents are also NRI / PIO/ OCI, banks may stipulate an additional co-applicant (who is a permanent resident of India). As per the scheme, normally, the student borrower may not have a credit history and as such he/she is assumed to be creditworthy. However, in case of an adverse credit history, banks, at their discretion, may frame suitable criteria based on their risk appetite.

Covers exchange programme

The scheme now also covers expenses towards exchange programme, whereby an Indian education institution sends its students to pursue education at a partner foreign university for six months to a year.

As for the documents required to take a student loan, the scheme makes it mandatory to submit passport in case of studies abroad. It says Aadhaar (unique identification) should be made mandatory, wherever applicable, as per the Supreme Court decision; and PAN Card is a mandatory document.

However, in case the student is not able to submit PAN details at the time of application, the same may be submitted subsequently as per the timeline decided by the respective banks (a minimum time of at least six months from the date of disbursal of the loan may be given).

Viswanathan observed that passport details can help banks in tracing an overseas student-borrower through the embassy/consulate in India in case he/she stops servicing the education loan.

Adequate financing

The scheme underscored that while assessing the quantum of finance, banks should ensure that a student is neither over-financed nor under-financed.

When it comes to the quantum of finance, the new scheme has not prescribed any cap. It only specifies that need-based finance should be provided to meet the expenses, taking in to account minimum margins.

The earlier scheme had capped the maximum finance for studies in India and abroad at up to a maximum of ₹10 lakh and ₹20 lakh, respectively. However, banks could consider higher quantum of loan on course to course basis (courses in IIMs, ISB).

Due to the rise in bad loans in the up to ₹4 lakh category, the new scheme has incorporated a clause, whereby parent(s)/ guardian(s) have to be joint borrower(s), along with a suitable third-party guarantee. The scheme says that it will also be open to banks to offer differential interest rates based on rating of courses/ institutions or even students.

The revamp of the model educational loan scheme also comes in the context of loans to this segment hitting the slow lane and non-performing assets hovering at over 5 per cent.

The educational loan portfolio of public sector banks (PSBs) rose by 9.1 per cent year-on-year (y-o-y) to ₹65,335 crore as on March-end 2016.

However, the growth slowed to 2.9 per cent y-o-y as on March-end 2020 (to ₹72,891 crore) and further to 1.5 per cent y-o-y as on December-end 2020 (to ₹73,977 crore), as per RBI data.

While the new scheme is a welcome development, there are rising concerns on possible defaults in education loans amid the Covid-19 pandemic, which has laid the economy low since March 2020.

Now, if student borrowers, who completed the final year of their course in 2020, did not get a job during the pandemic period, banks’ exposure to them could turn sour. The one-year repayment holiday/ moratorium after completion of course for these borrowers would either have been over by now or nearing completion.

So, the government, the Reserve Bank of India, and banks may have to consider an extended repayment holiday to alleviate the student-borrowers’ loan repayment woes as the pandemic has reared its ugly head again in the form of a second wave, and companies weigh their hiring plans from the point of view of demand for goods and services and the need to contain costs.

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