Indifi secures Rs 35 crore in debt financing from IndusInd Bank, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Online lending platform Indifi Technologies on Monday said it has secured Rs 35 crores in debt financing from IndusInd Bank Ltd. These funds were deployed through a Rs 35 crore of term loan from IndusInd bank’s impact investing group to Riviera Investors Private Limited which is Indifi‘s in-house Non-Banking Financial Company (NBFC) arm.

The funds will be used for onward lending to small businesses (Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises) to accelerate post-COVID economic recovery, Indifi said.

“We are extremely thankful to the US International Development Finance Corporation (DFC) and IndusInd Bank for this facility which comes to us at the right time and helps us in our goal of extending debt financing to underserved MSMEs who are recovering from the COVID impact,” Siddharth Mahanot, Co-founder and COO, Indifi Technologies, said in a statement.

Indifi claims to have successfully disbursed over 30,000 loans across more than 12 industries since its inception.

“Indifi deploys a unique and innovative approach to improve access to finance for small businesses, which are an important engine for economic growth in the Indian economy,” Loren Rodwin, Managing Director of Social Enterprise Finance in DFC’s Office of Development Credit said.



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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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Northern Arc raises $10 mn in ECB from Calvert Impact Capital

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Northern Arc Capital, a non-banking finance company (NBFC) that provides access to debt capital for under-banked individuals and businesses, announced that it has raised $10 million in debt through external commercial borrowing (ECB) from US-based impact investor Calvert Impact Capital.

The funding is Calvert Impact Capital’s largest debt investment in India so far.

In a press release, Northern Arc said that it will deploy the funds towards on-lending to financial institutions as well as lending directly to retail customers and to mid-market corporates.

“Underbanked customers, including low-income households and small businesses, to whom credit has dried up over the last few months due to the pandemic, will be key beneficiaries of the proceeds,” the NBFC added.

“The partnership with Calvert Impact Capital is long-term and multi-dimensional, helping both organisations achieve common goals across impact and growth,” Bama Balakrishnan, COO of Northern Arc said in the release, adding, “The facility’s longer duration will expand Northern Arc’s ability to fund MSMEs and households.”

Calvert Impact Capital’s portfolio serves sectors, geographies, and populations that are often overlooked or underserved by the traditional capital markets.

“As an investor, we benefit from leveraging the market and credit expertise of the Northern Arc team as we put capital to work for impact in India,” Daniel Ford, Investment Officer of Calvert Impact Capital was quoted in the release as saying.

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Ares SSG funds complete acquisition of Altico Capital

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Ares SSG on Thursday announced that some of its funds have completed the acquisition of all underlying assets of Altico Capital India Limited.

“The acquisition marks the first resolution of a defaulting NBFC outside India’s Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code and represents Ares SSG’s single largest investment in India to date,” said the Asia Pacific alternative asset manager.

Funds managed by Ares SSG along with Assets Care and Reconstruction Enterprise have acquired all outstanding loans and investments from Altico for about ₹2,800 crore, which is in line with its original resolution plan submitted in February 2020.

“Ares SSG’s plan has ensured a full resolution while also maximising the value of the underlying assets for creditors, despite the adverse impact of the pandemic on several of Altico’s portfolio companies,” the statement said.

Debt ridden Altico had been facing a liquidity crisis since late 2019. It had defaulted on about ₹20 crore to Mashreq Bank in September 2019.

Also read: Mutual fund exposure to NBFC debt grows marginally in Q3

Lenders led by State Bank of India had then formed a committee and initiated the resolution plan. In all, about 27 lenders have exposure to Altico Capital.

In the statement, Ares SSG said Altico’s entire team will continue to assist in servicing the existing portfolio.

“This investment also highlights our confidence in the prospects for India and the steps being taken to spur growth that has over the past year been held back by the global pandemic,” said Shyam Maheshwari, Partner, Ares SSG.

Manish Jain, CEO, SSG Advisors, an advisor to Ares SSG, said, “Ares SSG’s plan for Altico allows its creditors to realise immediate value for the assets.”

Set up in 2004, Altico Capital is an NBFC, which focuses on senior secured lending to mid-income residential projects and Commercial Real Estate sector across Tier-1 cities. It also provides structured finance solutions to the infrastructure and other adjacent sectors.

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RBI article, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Only private investment is “missing in action” at a time when all engines of aggregate demand are starting to fire to boost economic growth, according to a Reserve Bank article. Observing that there is little doubt today that a recovery based on a revival of consumption is underway, the RBI in the recent article said, “the jury leans towards such recoveries being shallow and short-lived”.

The key to whet the appetite for investment, it said, is to rekindle the animal spirits, a spontaneous urge to action rather than inaction, and not as the outcome of a weighted average of quantitative benefits multiplied by quantitative probabilities.

“All engines of aggregate demand are starting to fire; only private investment is missing in action. The time is apposite for private investment to come alive,” said the article prepared by RBI Deputy Governor Michael Debabrata Patra and other officials.

The article published in the RBI Bulletin- February 2021 further said “the time is apposite” for private investment to come alive.

Fiscal policy, with the largest capital expenditure (capex) budget ever and emphasis on doing business better, has offered to crowd it in.

“Will Indian industry and entrepreneurship pick up the gauntlet?,” it said.

The Indian economy is estimated to contract by 8 per cent during the current financial year on account of the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic. The economy is expected to stage a V-shape recovery in the next fiscal and record double-digit growth.

An another article ‘Sectoral Deployment of Bank Credit in India: Recent Developments’ published in the Bulletin said that the muted credit offtake in the recent past needs to be seen in the context of economic slowdown coupled with the COVID-19-induced lockdown.

The RBI said the views expressed in the articles are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the views of the Reserve Bank of India.

Bank credit growth, which had already started decelerating in 2019-20, experienced a further setback in 2020-21 in the wake of the pandemic.

However, with the gradual resumption of economic activity, credit to agriculture and services sectors has registered accelerated growth in the recent period, it said. Even in the industrial sector, credit growth to medium industries has accelerated, indicative of positive impact of several measures taken by the government and the Reserve Bank of India (RBI).

“However, contraction in credit to large industries and infrastructure remains a cause of concern,” it said.

The Reserve Bank has taken several measures to facilitate credit flow to various sectors of the economy, especially to the MSME and NBFC sectors.

Credit offtake is expected to pick up as the economy is poised to stage a smart recovery in 2021-22 on the back of decline in coronavirus infections and swift roll-out of the vaccination programme. This is in addition to a number of measures announced by the government in the Union Budget 2021-22 to accelerate the growth momentum, the article said.

As per the article, the recent decline in credit growth was mainly due to large industries.

“Owing to the stressed assets in large industries, there was a general reluctance on the part of bankers to lend to these industries, with the problem getting compounded by the pandemic,” it said.



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NBFC stressed assets may hit Rs 1.5-1.8 lakh crore by fiscal-end, says Crisil

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Nevertheless, gold loans and home loans have been resilient, with the least impact among segments.

By the end of the current financial year, rating agency Crisil expects stressed assets of non-banking financial companies (NBFCs) to touch Rs 1.5-1.8 lakh crore or 6-7.5% of the assets under management (AUM). However, reported gross non-performing assets would be limited due to the one-time Covid-19 restructuring window and the micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs) recast scheme offered by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI). Unlike previous crises, the pandemic has impacted almost all NBFC asset segments.

Operations of most of these lenders were curbed the most in the April-June quarter, when disbursements and collections were severely affected by the complete standstill in economic activity. Krishnan Sitaraman-senior director, Crisil Ratings, said, “This fiscal has bought unprecedented challenges to the fore for NBFCs. Collection efficiencies, after deteriorating sharply, have now improved, but are still not at pre-pandemic levels.” There is a marked increase in overdue amounts across certain segments and players, he added. Nevertheless, gold loans and home loans have been resilient, with the least impact among segments.

The past experience of handling asset quality will come to the rescue of NBFCs. For instance, many NBFCs have reoriented their collection infrastructure and are using technology more centrally, which has improved their collection efficiencies. Since the lockdown was lifted in phases, collection efficiency has improved, but is still some distance away from pre-pandemic levels in the MSME, unsecured and wholesale segments, given the volatility in underlying borrower cash flows. Stressed assets in the unsecured loans can be in the range of 9.5 to 10% by the end of FY21. Similarly, stressed assets in the real estate finance can shoot up to 15-20% by March end.

The big challenge this year will be the unsecured personal loans segment, where underlying stress has increased significantly with early-bucket delinquencies more than doubling for many NBFCs. For vehicle finance, however, Crisil expects the impact to be transitory, and collection efficiencies to continue improving over the next few quarters as economic activity improves. Unlike previous crises, the current challenges on account of Covid-19 impacted almost all NBFC asset segments. However, the restructuring schemes offered by the RBI will limit the reported gross non-performing assets (GNPAs), Crisil said.

Rahul Malik-associate director, Crisil Ratings, said, “How NBFCs approach restructuring will differ by asset class and segment.” While the traditional ones such as home loans have seen sub-1% restructuring, for unsecured loans it is substantially higher at 6-8% on an average, and for vehicle loans it is 3-5%, he added.

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L&T Finance closes ₹2,998.61-cr rights issue

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L&T Finance Holdings Ltd (LTFHL), on Tuesday, said it has closed its ₹2,998.61-crore rights issue. The issue was oversubscribed by about 15 per cent.

LTFHL is a Non-Banking Financial Company present in businesses, including rural finance, housing finance, infrastructure finance and investment management.

Dinanath Dubhashi, Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer, LTFHL, said: “The response reflects the faith in the resilience of our business model, which along with our AAA credit rating and strong backing of our parent, gives us the confidence of continuing on our path of creating a stable and sustainable organisation for all our stakeholders.”

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Srei reports whopping loss of Rs 3,810cr in Q3, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Srei Infrastructure Finance Ltd on Sunday said it has posted a consolidated net loss of Rs 3,810 crore during the third quarter of the current fiscal on account of higher and accelerated provisioning as a prudent measure. The company had reported a net profit of Rs 60 crore in the year-ago period.

Its revenue from operations for the October-December period of the current fiscal stood at Rs 490 crore as against Rs 1,450 crore in the corresponding quarter last year.

The company said its total consolidated provisioning was at Rs 3,100 crore for the period under review and the net worth stood at Rs 296 crore as of December quarter of FY21.

The Kolkata-based company claimed that the COVID-19 pandemic had impacted its recovery, leading to an asset- liability mismatch.

“The current financial year has been one of the most challenging years in our history of more than three decades.

“The COVID-19 induced stress on our asset quality coupled with the credit squeeze in the NBFC sector has created an unprecedented situation. As a matter of prudence…we have decided to increase our provisions significantly,” Srei chairman Hemant Kanoria said.

The lender had in November 2020 said a special audit of the company and its subsidiary, Srei Equipment Finance Ltd, was undertaken by an auditor appointed by the Reserve Bank of India.

A special audit is typically undertaken if there is a sharp deterioration in the quality of a lender’s book.



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Loan recovery: Ministry gives more power in the hands of NBFCs

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The Finance Ministry has operationalised a budget announcement that lowered the minimum loan size eligible for debt recovery by NBFCs under the SARFAESI law to ₹ 20 lakhs from the existing level of ₹ 50 lakhs.

This move could come in handy for large non-banking finance companies (NBFCs) with a minimum asset size of ₹ 100 crore for making loan recovery under the Securitisation and Reconstruction of Financial Assets and Enforcement of Security Interest (SARFAESI) Act 2002.

Such NBFCs can now take recourse to SARFAESI law for loan sizes at minimum ₹ 20 lakhs or more, implying that home loans to lower to middle-income groups as well as loans extended as Loans against Property (LAP) for small and medium businesses would also get covered for recovery using this route is case of defaults, said industry observers.

SARFAESI empowers banks and financial institutions to attach pledged assets of the borrower in the event of non-payment of dues by the borrower.

It may be recalled that late former Finance Minister Arun Jaitley had in the 2015-16 Budget announced that certain NBFCs would be allowed to use SARFAESI to make recoveries of defaulted loans.

Starting then with NBFCs having asset size of ₹ 500 crore and above and for loan sizes of ₹ 1 crore and above, the government had year-after-year been lowering the threshold. Now in the latest budget, this facility has been given for loan sizes of ₹ 20 lakh and above from a level of ₹ 50 lakh prescribed in last year’s Budget.

Reacting to the latest move of the Department of Financial Services in the Finance Ministry, Raman Aggarwal, Co-Chairman, Finance Industry Development Council (FIDC) told BusinessLine that such threshold has been there only for NBFCs and not banks. NBFCs should be allowed to enforce security through SARFAESI for any loan amount.

“We welcome this step. But FIDC has been representing for some time that there should not be any limit or threshold. Even the U.K.Sinha Committee on MSMEs had recommended that there should not be any thresholds. It goes against MSME lending as such lending is usually small ticket sized lending”, he said.

Srinath Sridharan, Independent markets commentator, said: “It is common place to find SME/MSME borrowers using the route of Loan Against Property (LAP) to fund their businesses. In that light, this reduced threshold amount of ₹ 20 lakh for initiating SARFAESI proceedings could hurt genuine business borrowers who have used LAP for lack of other SME funding.

Seen with the lens where the threshold for SME defaults to be taken under IBC proceedings was moved to ₹1 crore, this quantum need to be relooked, in toto along with the IBC threshold”.

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Eduvanz raises $10 million in debt funding

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Eduvanz, a fintech Non-banking Finance Company (NBFC) that enables students to Study Now, Pay Later at zero per cent interest rates, has raised $10 million in debt funding from multiple financial institutions including InCred Financial Services, Vivriti Capital, and Northern Arc Capital.

Eduvanz aims at changing the way India pays for education by enabling learners to apply for low-cost loans via its digital platform. It has already helped more than 25,000 learners and has disbursed loans worth Rs 300 crore. From April 2020 to December 2020 when the pandemic hit, the unique customer base of Eduvanz grew by four times, and monthly disbursal of loans grew three times.

Varun Chopra, CEO, and co-Founder of Eduvanz, said “During the pandemic, we have found that learners in India focused on learning and upskilling themselves. We are moving towards becoming a leader in the financing-lending market for education. The debt we have raised further strengthens our position and will help us reach out to many more who are looking to fund their education”.

Founded in 2016 by Varun Chopra, an IIT Madras alumni and Raheel Shah, an IIM Ahmedabad alumni, the company had raised $5 million in Series A funding from Sequoia and Unitus Ventures in August last year.

“As a technology-enabled debt platform, we are glad to associate with Eduvanz. We are aligned with Eduvanz in the belief that access to credit is a critical ingredient for development. We appreciate the company’s effort to help the youth of the county by providing access to finance and counselling” said Irfan Mohammed, CBO, Vivriti Capital.

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