Why gold loans continue to glitter in these trying times

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Gold accounts for a large proportion of Indian household wealth and this asset has been coming in handy during the period of financial stress caused by the pandemic. Demand for gold loans was strong last fiscal year and the trend continues in 2021-22 too.

Demand for gold loans from micro enterprises and individuals – to fund working capital and personal requirements, respectively – has increased with the pick-up in economic activity and the onset of the festive season, which coincides with the easing of lockdown restrictions by several States, stated Crisil in a recent note.

Loans against gold jewellery portfolio of scheduled commercial banks surged by 59.1 per cent to ₹63,770 crore as on September 24, 2021 from ₹40,086 crore as on September, 2020, according to data with the Reserve Bank of India. SCBs LAGJ portfolio stood at ₹28,163 crore as on September 27, 2019.

 

Q2 disbursements

Second quarter results of banks reveal a continued demand for gold loans while gold loan-focussed non-banking finance companies also said there continues to be a robust appetite for these loans.

“We remain optimistic about gold loans. Year-to-date, gold loans have increased by 26 per cent and we forecast a growth of 25 to 30 per cent for gold loans this fiscal,” said Shyam Srinivasan, Managing Director and CEO, Federal Bank after the second quarter results.

 

The private sector lender’s gold loan disbursals rose to ₹15,976 crore in the quarter-ended September 30, 2021.

CSB Bank also reported a 10.3 per cent year-on-year increase in gold loans for the second quarter of the fiscal.

Second quarter results of gold loan-focussed NBFCs – Muthoot Finance and Manappuram Finance – are likely to shed more light on this trend but analysts said that they are likely to have seen good growth.

“We expect a healthy growth in the gold loan portfolio for Manappuram Finance and Muthoot Finance given the various attractive interest schemes introduced by these gold financiers to attract high ticket-size gold loan customers. Since gold prices have been stable, we expect gold financiers to offer some reprieve to customers (especially those who continue to pay the interest component) to repay rather than rush to auction off their gold,” said a recent report by Motilal Oswal.

IIFL Finance also reported a 19 per cent year-on-year growth in its gold loans AUM to ₹13,600 crore as of September 30, 2021.

 

Will growth sustain?

Umesh Mohanan, Executive Director and CEO, Indel Money pointed out that the economy is getting back on track but a large number of sectors are still badly impacted.

“People trying to reopen or restart their businesses need urgent cash, and for this gold loan is a convenient and fast option that does not require a credit check. Gold is in fact becoming an alternative capital option,” he said.

Indel Money has registered a growth of 25 per cent year-on-year in gold loans and expect the demand to continue. The average ticket size of loans is ₹75,000-85,000 and the average tenure is 1 year.

Experts point out that small business owners, many of whom took the moratorium or restructuring, may now find it difficult to get a loan from the bank.

In this case, gold loans prove to be a useful option.

VP Nandakumar, Managing Director and CEO, Manappuram Finance said, “With the unorganised sector also getting back on its feet, we expect improved growth in gold loans, microfinance, as well as our other business verticals.”

 

Assets under management (AUM) of non-banking financial companies (NBFCs), which primarily offer loans against gold, is expected to rise 18-20 per cent to ₹1.3 lakh crore this fiscal, according to Crisil’s forecast.

 

PSBs lead

According to a recent report by ICICI Securities, the organised gold loan industry, including agriculture loans, has grown at an even stronger pace since 2018-19, with a near 31 per cent growth in 2020-21 due to the cautious stance taken by financial institutes in other loan products due to pandemic-hit economy and higher gold prices.

 

Public sector banks held the largest market share of the organised gold loan industry (excluding agriculture loans) at about 44 per cent in 2017-18, compared to 34 per cent of specialised NBFCs and 12 per cent of private sector banks.

The report estimated that overall, the market share of banks in the organised gold loan industry including agri loans, increased to about 75 per cent in 2020-21 from about 73 per cent in fiscal year 2019-20.

“If banks versus NBFCs share in organised gold loan industry including agriculture loans is observed, banks’ share is estimated to have increased in fiscal year 2020-21 on the back of increased LTV or loan to value and risk aversion by banks in other loan products,” it noted.

However, operationally intensive nature of the business, existing well-distributed infrastructure across India and a well-established client base provide strong business moats for specialised NBFCs, it said.

Online gold loans are also now catching up.

Federal Bank in its investor presentation said disbursals through fintech enabled gold and micro lending platforms crossed ₹3,800 crore.

Recently, asset-backed digital lending platform Rupeek has signed an agreement with Kerala-headquartered South Indian Bank as a lending partner to provide online gold loan services. The service is, however, initially available in limited cities.

Gold prices, repayments

Experts note that gold prices have been stable, which has led to low delinquency amongst borrowers and has helped NBFCs fare better than banks in the business.

“While there has been a moderation in gold prices in the second half of FY21 with around 10 per cent decline in gold prices over peak of August 2021, the decline has been moderated in year to date 2021-22,” ICRA said, adding that gold loan NBFCs have reported low gross net performing assets (GNPAs) since fiscal year 2017-18.

Many NBFCs are also reworking the typical one-year tenure for gold loans to shorter tenures of three months or six months.

Gold loan auctions, which saw a spurt earlier this year, are also likely to normalise as the economic conditions improve.

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

CRISIL, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Over the last six months, the gold price has corrected 10% on a 30-day rolling basis, although it has dropped double that amount on an absolute basis.

According to CRISIL Ratings, the recent drop in gold prices is unlikely to have a significant effect on the asset quality of non-banking financial companies (NBFCs) that lend against gold. However, Banks that disbursed gold loans aggressively during the previous fiscal year may see an impact on their asset quality.

In addition to receiving interest on a regular basis, NBFCs have ensured that the disbursement loan-to-value (LTV) is held below 75 percent over the past few fiscals. The average portfolio LTV for NBFCs was 63-67 percent as of December 31, 2020, while the average LTV on incremental disbursements in the October-December 2020 quarter was 70 percent. Interest receivables have remained at just 2-4 percent of the loan book over the last few years, demonstrating the LTV discipline.

Banks, on the other hand, had a higher incremental-disbursement LTV of 78-82 percent than NBFCs. Most of their book’s growth occurred in the third quarter of last fiscal year, when gold prices were soaring. In the 11 months through February 2021, Bank loans against gold increased by 70% to over Rs 56,000 crore. Announcement made by Reserve Bank of India (RBI), August 2020 that the LTV limit would be relaxed to 90% (only for banks), contributed to this growth.

Krishnan Sitaraman, Senior Director & Deputy Chief Ratings Officer, CRISIL Ratings, said, “Without periodic interest collections, banks’ books can be vulnerable to asset-quality issues to some degree, given that gold prices have fallen 18-20% from their August peaks on an absolute basis. However, with the LTV dispensation period ending in March 2021, incremental lending would have more LTV cushion.”

Cushion available with lenders in terms of the value of gold provided as collateral relative to the loan outstanding is influenced by LTV and timely interest collection. As a result, reliable risk management systems and timely auctions are critical for mitigating gold price fluctuations and eventual credit loss.

Ajit Velonie, Director, CRISIL Ratings, said, “While gross non-performing assets (GNPA) could rise, ultimate credit cost – a more appropriate indicator of asset quality for gold loans – is not expected to. Although NBFCs’ GNPAs had risen to as high as 7%, credit costs were still low at 10 to 80 basis points. This demonstrates sound business judgement and timely auctions. Given the rapid growth that banks have experienced, tracking LTV, and remaining agile is critical for avoiding possible asset-quality issues.”



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Benchmark indices end flat with Nifty and Sensex in red, financials underperformed, BFSI News, ET BFSI

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


Benchmark indices ended flat with negative bias on March 22 after last hour buying erased all the intraday losses. At close, the Sensex was down 0.17% at 49,771.29, and the Nifty was down 0.05% at 14, 736.40.

IndusInd Bank, ICICI Bank and HDFC Bank were among major losers on the Nifty. Among sectors, Nifty IT, Metal, pharma and FMCG indices added 1% each, while Nifty Bank and PSU Bank index shed a % each. BSE Midcap and Smallcap indices rose 0.7-1%.

The Nifty Bank Index ended negative at 33,605 down by -1.63%. Amongst the top losers were- Induslnd Bank at Rs 968 down by -4.32% followed by ICICI Bank at Rs 573 ending below -2.25%, HDFC Bank at Rs 1,469 (-1.89%), Axis Bank at Rs 716 (-1.38%), SBI at Rs 367 (-1.12%), Kotak Mahindra Bank at Rs 1,882 (-0.63%).

Nifty Financial Services ended below 15,802 down by -1.15%. Amongst the biggest losers were Power Finance at Rs 121 down by -1.66% followed by Bajaj Finance at Rs 5,389(-1.12%), Indiabulls Hsg at Rs 213 (-0.93%), Bajaj Finserv at Rs 9,405 (-0.37%). While all the major indices traded in the red, Chola invest. and HDFC managed to end things on a positive note.

Other key takeaways

FPI inflows into equities at record high since FY13: RBI report

Foreign portfolio investors have pumped in a record USD 36 billion into equities so far this fiscal up to March 10, which is the highest since FY13, shows the latest data from the Reserve Bank. On the other hand, net foreign direct investment inflows jumped to USD 44 billion, till end January, up from USD 36.3 billion a year ago, driven by the massive inflows in November and December, with the last month of the year getting a record USD 6.3 billion.

Utkarsh SFB concludes private placement of Rs 240.47 crore
Utkarsh Small Finance Bank Ltd. has concluded private placement of Rs 240.47 crore to 6 Investors. Bank may undertake a pre-IPO placement of up to Rs 250 crores in consultation with the lead managers to the offer. Kotak Mahindra Capital Company Ltd. acted as financial advisor to the Bank for the concluded private placement round.

The lender’s initial offer comprises a fresh issue of up to ₹750 crore and an offer for sale by Utkarsh Coreinvest Ltd, aggregating up to ₹600 crore. ICICI Securities, IIFL Securities and Kotak Investment Banking will manage the share sale.

Global fund managers warn of stock market correction if yields surge to 2%
Bond yields have been inching higher in the last few weeks, rebounding strongly from 0.5% in the middle of last year. If yields continue to push higher and breach the 2% barrier, a 10% stock market correction could be in the offing, according to a survey of global fund managers conducted by Bank of America. Adding to this, the survey highlighted that fund managers believe that if yields touch 2.5%, bonds are likely to become more attractive than stocks.

Gold Updates
Gold prices traded steady with COMEX spot gold prices were trading near $1731 per ounce on Monday. Gold April future contract at MCX were trading over half a percent down at Rs. 44730 per 10 grams by noon.

Gold prices are expected to trade sideways to down for the day with COMEX spot gold support lying at $1710 and resistance at $1740. MCX Gold April support lies at Rs. 44500 and resistance lies at Rs. 44900.

Rupee Updates
Indian rupee ended higher by 14 paise at 72.37 per dollar, amid selling saw in the domestic equity market. It opened marginally higher at 72.48 per dollar against Friday’s close of 72.51 and traded in the range of 72.33-72.51.

The range between 72.30-72.70 is expected to continue, as the markets broadly are in a weak direction for the USDINR pair. In any scenario of serious lockdown there might be chances of USDINR appreciation but till then it’s an advantage bulls for rupee.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY