Saswata Guha, Fitch Ratings, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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We are pretty mindful of the fact that a fair degree of underwriting has been done by banks over the last three to four years in certain cases quite aggressively and some of that underwriting is probably yet to see the right kind of seasoning yet, says Saswata Guha, Director & Team Head, Fitch Ratings.

The gist of your report is that the impact of pandemic going forward is likely to pose challenges for the banking sector. You have said that not only credit cost will rise but even the NPA situation would get challenging. Most of the large banks say they have adequately provided for the challenges which lie ahead. What is your hypothesis for this space right now?
The hypothesis is primarily based on the premise that not everything that is arguably stressed is getting recognised at the moment as NPL, simply because there continues to be several forbearances in place as well as the judicial stay on some of the moratorium loans.

The number is roughly about 4% odd over and above the system’s NPL ratio which is roughly around 7%. But having said that, the 4% still does not account for the incipient stress including anything that is 30-60 days overdue and that is a number that has been on the rise quarter on quarter across the banks.

But more importantly, what it does not include are the several SME loans which have been refinanced under the various easy refinance schemes under the government’s relief measures and that cumulatively means that whatever the government is guaranteeing is just about 20% of the total exposure. The total exposure of those loans is roughly about 8.5% of the total system loans and when you start adjusting all of these into the number that we have at the moment, it is quite clear that at some point, whether it is easy liquidity condition or waning of some of the forbearances, it is likely to have an impact on asset quality. Whether that will manifest in the next financial year and whether some of it will get pushed further out because of forbearance measures being extended, we do not know, but it is quite clear that whatever banks are reporting while not being outside of our expectations, also does not present the full picture.

There is a race to bottom as far as home loans are concerned. Other consumer loans are also getting quite competitive. Meanwhile, fixed deposits rates etc also are in a race to the bottom. From here on, do you see rates hardening? How much do you see the additional borrowing cost for the NBFC universe? Will the banks face the same pinch?
Funding costs will be impacted. The declining funding cost trajectory has been a huge contributor to the fact that banks have continued to do well through a time of very limited growth. At some point, we do expect the funding cost to bottom out but if you were to consider the current liquidity situation, of which funding costs are a significant function, we expect that to continue at least for some more time, at least for a large part of this particular calendar year.

Any upward movement on the rate side will put pressure on the banks but what is important here is to also understand the inclination of the banks to lend now that it is being driven by two factors. One is credit demand itself which continues to remain reasonably subdued, at least as of now. The other of course is the bank’s ability to lend and in this situation, I have to call out the state owned banks which are constrained by virtue of the capitalisation.

Both of these factors are contributing to very limited credit supply. So without the inclination of banks to go out and lend in a meaningful way, it will not put pressure on the loan to deposit ratio which would therefore mean that banks might still have some headroom even after the rates start inching up for them, to be able to maintain their funding costs at low rates.

But quite clearly, what we have seen as of now is not sustainable because at some point we expect rates starting to inch up. You have raised a fairly valid point on retail credit and we have seen a fair bit of that and continue to see banks almost getting lock, stock, barrel into that space and trying to give out retail credit as much as possible.

It is quite possible that certain parts of retail credit, especially home loans, may prove to be a little more resilient than what we had expected initially and that was back in 2020 when things were very very uncertain. But there is also a large segment of unsecured credit cards within retail which are the usual suspects which we deem as vulnerable. You could also see vulnerabilities emanating on account of loan against property, loan against shares and some spaces which NBFIs dabble in a lot more than banks.

That is one space where we would see potential pressure in future. What is challenging with retail and to an extent even SMEs is that unlike large corporates which were pretty much the epicentre of the last asset quality cycle, it is very difficult to try and square in on an individual SME or an individual retail given how granular this portfolio is.

Banks would have to look at it on a portfolio basis but we are pretty mindful of the fact that a fair degree of underwriting has been done by banks over the last three to four years in certain cases quite aggressively and some of that underwriting is probably yet to see the right kind of seasoning yet. In times to come, clearly we will see some pressure and the litmus test of that portfolio.



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Banks’ impaired loans and credit costs to rise: Fitch

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Indian banks’ improved financial metrics do not fully reflect the impact of the coronavirus pandemic, cautioned Fitch Ratings.

The global credit rating agency expects both impaired loans and credit costs to rise as forbearance and easy-liquidity conditions ease even as it projected India’s real GDP growth at 11 per cent in FY22.

Also read: RBI allows AD Cat-I Banks to post and collect margin in India

Fitch believes the state-led banks are more vulnerable than private banks, given their participation in relief measures, while their earnings and core capital buffers are weak.

The agency observed that the operating environment remains challenging as the banking sector tries to balance a gradually recovering economy with preserving moderate loss-absorption buffers.

Pressure on retail, stressed SMEs loans

Indian banks’ aggregate non-performing loan (NPL) ratio fell to 7.2 per cent by end-December 2020 (end-March 2020: 8.5 per cent).

Fitch said NPLs exclude unrecognised impaired loans under judicial stay, restructured loans, loans under watch and loans overdue by 60 plus days, which formed 4.2 per cent of loans.

It underscored that average contingency reserves of 0.7 per cent of loans are inadequate to absorb heightened stress, although private banks are well above the average.

Fitch sees high risk of a protracted deterioration in asset quality with more pressure on retail and stressed SMEs loans (8.5 per cent of loans, 1.7 per cent state guaranteed).

Credit growth

Credit growth was weak at 4.5 per cent in the first nine months of the financial year ending March 2021 (9MFY21), in line with Fitch’s expectations, as banks remained risk averse.

Fitch said private banks are better poised to tap growth opportunities in 2021 as their higher contingency reserves offer better earnings and capital resilience.

The state-led banks’ average buffer between pre-provision profits and credit costs is only 160 basis points (bps) versus 340 bps at private banks, it added.

State-run banks: Limited core capital

Fitch assessed that state-led banks also have limited core capital buffers (average common equity Tier 1 ratio: 9.8 per cent) in the event of further asset stress, which is unlikely to be remediated solely via the state’s planned capital injections of $5.5 billion (0.7 per cent of risk-weighted assets) in FY21 and FY22.

Also read: India needs to make efforts to get rating upgrade in line with fundamentals: CEA

The agency emphasised that the plan is well below its estimated capital requirement of $15 billion to $58 billion under varying stress scenarios.

The strategy to either not lend or lend only to capital-efficient sectors is likely to continue as low market valuations leave state-led banks with limited scope to access fresh equity on their own, it added.

Stress among retail customers

Fitch said the faster-than-expected GDP rebound in 3QFY21 (October-December 2020) is positive, but many sectors continue to operate well below capacity.

In addition, the decline in private consumption (3QFY21: -2.4 per cent), and reports of rising urban utility bill defaults and social security withdrawals point towards stress among retail customers.

Fitch believes that the SME sector faces a litmus test in FY22 as short-term credit support extended in FY21, which, in its view, deferred the recognition of stress, comes up for refinancing.

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Markets lose upward rally and closes flat; Nifty and sensex suffer minimal loss, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The benchmark indices erased all the intra day gains and ended with marginal losses, breaking the six day winning momentum. The Sensex was down at 51,329.08, and the Nifty was down 0.04% at 15,109.30. Nifty Bank ended at Rs 36,065 adding 0.20% while BSE Bankex ended at Rs 40,724 adding 0.16%.

Amongst the top Gainers were- PNB at Rs 39 adding 2.76% followed by IDFC First Bank at Rs 50 adding 1.73%, Axis Bank at Rs 742 (0.86%), ICICI Bank at Rs 633 (0.60%), HDFC Bank at Rs 1,661 (0.41%). Major Indices that traded in the red were Induslnd Bank at Rs 1,025 (-0.90%), Bandhan Bank at Rs 328 (-0.71%), SBI at Rs 394 (-0.57%).

Nifty Financial Services ended at 16,905 adding 0.25%. Amongst the biggest losers were Bajaj Finance at Rs 5,400 (-1.77%) followed by Power Finance at Rs 125 (-1.68%), Bajaj Finserv at Rs 9,941 (-0.79%), Cholamandalm at Rs 459 (-0.34%). while all other major indices traded in Red, few managed to remain in the Green including HDFC at Rs 2,747 adding 0.50% and Indiabulls Hsg at Rs 218 (0.05%).

Other key takeaways

Fitch Ratings
India’s 2021-2022 budget has proposed relaxing foreign-ownership caps on insurers and listing India’s largest state-owned insurer, measures that Fitch Ratings says will help the industry attract foreign capital, strengthen solvency and promote competition.

The proposals could encourage global insurers to enter the fast-expanding Indian market, while international insurers already holding minority stakes in domestic companies may try to increase their ownership over the medium term.

Bitcoin jumps to new highs
Bitcoin extended gains on Tuesday to a record high as the afterglow of Tesla Inc’s investment in the cryptocurrency had investors reckoning it would become a mainstream asset class for both corporates and money managers.

Bitcoin has more than doubled over two months as institutional investors search for alternative wealth stores and retail traders ride the wave. Monday’s leap after Tesla’s announcement was its largest daily rise in more than three years. It climbed to a new peak of $48,216 late in the Asian afternoon on Tuesday. Rival cryptocurrency ethereum had struck a record high of $1,784.85 in the early morning.

Central Bank Of India Q3
Net profit was up 6.5 percent at Rs 165.4 crore against Rs 155.3 crore (YoY). NII was up 10.2 percenat Rs 2,228.1 crore against Rs 2,021.9 crore (YoY). Gross NPA at Rs 29,486.1 crore against Rs 30,785.4 crore (QoQ). Net NPA at Rs 7,514.7 crore against Rs 8,683.6 crore (QoQ). Provisions at Rs 743.7 crore against Rs 1104.9 crore QoQ and against Rs 1,249.2 crore YoY.

Gold Updates
International gold and silver rose on Monday as expectations of a large US economic stimulus package bolstered bullion’s appeal. Domestic gold and silver prices rose on Monday tracking overseas prices. Domestic bullion traded flat to higher this Tuesday morning, tracking the overseas markets.

Technically, MCX Gold April resistance now is at 47950-48280 level. Support is at 47600-47350 levels. MCX Silver March witnessed a bounce back from 21-DMA at 67300 level & ended above 70000 indicating a sideways to upside momentum upto 70800-71500 levels.

Rupee Updates
Indian rupee ended higher by 8 paise at 72.88 per dollar, amid profit booking seen in the domestic equity market. It opened 8 paise higher at 72.88 per dollar against previous close of 72.96 and remained in the range of 72.84-72.93. The fund inflow from USA keeps dollar prices at check from rising, which helps rupee appreciation, along with no weakness in capital markets



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RBI’s norms will enhance stability of NBFC sector: Fitch Ratings

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The proposed changes to India’s regulatory framework for non-bank financial institutions (NBFIs) recently unveiled in the Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI) discussion paper are likely to enhance the sector’s stability, according to Fitch Ratings.

The credit rating agency believes that the reforms would preserve NBFIs’ niche business models, and could improve the funding environment for some entities by strengthening investor confidence in the sector.

”For the sector as a whole, the proposed measures should strengthen governance and risk management, although we do not view these areas as major credit weaknesses for Fitch-rated Indian NBFIs. The longer-term impact of such reform would also depend on its implementation, and robust regulatory and market scrutiny will be key in holding entities to higher standards,” the agency said in a note.

Scale-based regulations

ICRA observed that larger entities face enhanced disclosure requirements, and tighter risk and capital management requirements, which would likely be credit positive, it added.

It opined that the scale-based regulations reflect calls for closer supervision of large NBFIs that have grown more systemically significant.

“We believe the moves to strengthen risk controls and frameworks should be manageable for Fitch-rated NBFIs. For example, they should already comfortably meet the suggested requirement for “Upper Layer” NBFIs, expected to include 25-30 of the largest entities including Fitch-rated names, to maintain a minimum common equity Tier 1 ratio of 9 per cent,” the agency said.

Fitch views proposals to appoint auditors by rotation, as well as requirements to disclose information such as the incidence of covenant breaches and asset quality divergence as credit positive.

Unlike banks, many NBFIs have appointed the same auditors for many years. In addition, lending to directors and senior employees would be restricted, reducing governance risks.

Core banking solution

Requirements to implement a core banking solution (credited for improving efficiency and reducing operational risks in banks) and introduce an internal capital adequacy assessment process (ICAAP) could further strengthen the framework for monitoring and managing risks.

Most large NBFIs’ systems are already integrated with banks and payment portals, and Fitch believes additional costs to meet the core banking solution requirement would be manageable. However, the measure could pose a more significant expense for mid-sized NBFIs.

For NBFIs in the Upper Layer, listing may be made mandatory. The agency opined that this would affect only a few corporate-backed NBFIs, and should not present a challenge given their parents’ experience in capital markets.

 

Real estate lending

In general, business models should not be significantly affected, but some lending activities could be curtailed by the suggested changes, especially in real estate, ICRA said.

The agency observed that the RBI is looking to restrain lending to early-stage development projects that have not yet received regulatory approval, and has proposed added internal controls for lending against land acquisition.

“Some entities have built up exposures to these risky areas in recent years, which have become a point of vulnerability for the sector. The suggested new rules could curb a further run-up in such exposures in the longer term,” the agency said.

Provisioning

Fitch is of the view that the suggested reform would also raise NBFIs’ standard provisioning requirements on commercial real estate lending, to be in line with those for banks.

Fitch-rated Indian NBFIs do not engage in real estate lending, other than IIFL Finance. However, if IIFL is placed in the Upper Layer, any added provisioning from this proposal is unlikely to be significant relative to the firm’s broader provisioning needs in light of the pandemic, the agency said.

Fitch noted that NBFIs with assets below ₹1,000 crore (around $130 million) would continue to operate under current frameworks, but additional rules aligning non-performing loan recognition and a new leverage cap of seven times would add to regulatory robustness.

The central bank further highlighted the need for a resolution framework for failing NBFIs. This would be another important element in the regulator’s financial stability toolkit.

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