India Ratings: RBI’s new norms likely to increase NBFCs’ bad loans by one-third

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However, NBFCs would have to invest in systems and processes to comply with daily stamping requirements, India Ratings said, adding that it understands that NBFCs have presented to the RBI for providing a transition period on this requirement.

Non-banking finance companies (NBFCs) will likely see around one-third rise in their non-performing assets (NPAs) after the Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI) latest clarification on upgradation of non-performing non performing assets (NPAs) kicks in.

On November 12, the central bank said loan accounts classified as NPAs may be upgraded to ‘standard’ assets only if the entire arrears of interest and principal are paid by the borrower. The rule will apply to both banks and NBFCs.

India Ratings said NBFCs will likely have modest impact on provisioning because of the clarification as such lenders are using Indian Accounting Standard (IND-As), and generally for higher-rated NBFCs, provision policy is more conservative than income recognition, asset classification (IRAC) requirements. However, NBFCs would have to invest in systems and processes to comply with daily stamping requirements, India Ratings said, adding that it understands that NBFCs have presented to the RBI for providing a transition period on this requirement.

“Accounts can get into NPA category just for a day’s delay in paying the instalments and once it gets categorised as NPA it will not be able to become standard unless all the arrears are cleared. So, in other words, accounts would get categorised as NPAs at a faster pace and would remain sticky in that category for a longer period of time. Both these accounting treatments would result into higher headline number for NBFCs. It may so happen that NBFCs would disclose NPA numbers as per IRAC norms and stage 3 numbers as per Ind-As separately in their disclosures,” India Ratings said.

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PNB puts up National Steel & Agro Industries for sale to recover Rs 200cr dues, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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State-owned Punjab National Bank (PNB) has put up a Madhya Pradesh-based steel and agriculture company for sale to recover its outstanding of nearly Rs 200 crore. The National Steel and Agro Industries Ltd has a balance outstanding of Rs 199.90 crore to the bank.

“We intend to place the account for sale to ARCs/NBFCs/other banks/FIs, on the terms and conditions stipulated in the bank’s policy, in line with the regulatory guidelines,” PNB said in an auction notification.

The lender has set the reserve price (on cash basis) at Rs 95 crore for the sale process.

For the prospective bidder to expedite the process of due diligence exercise and for verification purposes of the buyer, the bank said it will make all possible efforts to bring copies of documents at one place.

However, the bank at its sole discretion may withdraw the account offered for sale, without assigning any reasons, it added.

PNB has set December 8 as the last date for completion of due diligence exercise. The last date of submission of binding bids is December 9, while the date for opening of bids is fixed as December 10, 2021. PTI KPM MR MR



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NPAs of NBFCs, HFCs may rise for 3-4 quarters due to tweak in norms

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Non-banking finance companies (NBFCs), including housing finance companies (HFCs), may see an increase in non-performing assets (NPAs) for three-four quarters due to the tweak in norms relating to when a borrower account can be flagged as overdue and tightening of rules relating to upgradation of NPA accounts.

However, NPAs are expected to stablise a couple of quarters after the Reserve Bank of India’s modified “Prudential norms on Income Recognition, Asset Classification and Provisioning (IRACP) pertaining to Advances” take effect, say industry experts.

The RBI has asked lending institutions to comply with the aforementioned prudential norms at the earliest, but not later than March 31, 2022.

Limited economic impact

Experts assessed that the impact of the modified norms could only be an accounting one and not so much economic as many NBFCs are not only holding more than required provisions under the expected credit loss (ECL) framework but also Covid-related provisioning buffer.

“Many NBFCs are following monthly tagging of NPAs but RBI has proposed NPA tagging as part of day-end process for the relevant date. So, due to the changed norm, assets in the special mention account/SMA-2 category (when principal or interest payment in a loan account is overdue for more than 60 days and up to 90 days) could migrate to the NPA category,” said a senior NBFC official.

Krishnan Sitaraman, Senior Director and Deputy Chief Ratings Officer, CRISIL Ratings, assessed that the RBI’s clarifications to the ‘Prudential norms on IRACP pertaining to Advances’, which now ask the NBFCs to recognise NPAs on a daily due date basis as part of their day-end process, will lead to higher gross NPAs (GNPAs).

No more flexibility

Referring to most NBFCs following month-end NPA recognition, he noted that typically, they ramp up collection activity on overdue accounts between the due date and the month end, which is why overdues reduce towards the month-ends. Now, this flexibility is no longer available.

“Bounce rates in the 60-90 days bucket are estimated at 25-35 per cent. Consequently, a significant proportion of the loans in the 60-90 days bucket may slip into the more than 90 days overdue bucket and will have to be recognised as NPA,” Sitaraman said.

On RBI stipulation that loan accounts classified as NPAs can be upgraded as ‘standard’ asset only if entire arrears of interest and principal are paid by the borrower, he opined that typically, it has been difficult for retail borrowers classified as NPAs to fully clear their three or more overdue instalments quickly.

Data shows these borrowers clear only one or two additional instalments typically, so their accounts remain overdue even when it’s for less than 90 days.

Sitaraman said:“The combination of day-end recognition and tighter upgradation criteria means such accounts are likely to remain classified as NPAs for a longer period.

“Consequently, the headline reported GNPAs will rise and stay elevated for some time. This will also increase the operational intensity for NBFCs as they align their systems for daily stamping of NPAs.”

RBI tweaked the criteria for upgradation of accounts classified as NPAs as it found some lending institutions upgrading accounts classified as NPAs to ‘standard’ asset category upon payment of only interest overdues, partial overdues, etc. To avoid any ambiguity in this regard, the central bank clarified that loan accounts classified as NPAs may be upgraded as ‘standard’ asset only if entire arrears of interest and principal are paid by borrower.

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RBI introduces internal ombudsman mechanism for select NBFCs

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The Reserve Bank of India on Monday introduced the Internal Ombudsman mechanism for select non- banking finance companies.

“…the Reserve Bank…has directed Deposit-taking NBFCs (NBFCs-D) with 10 or more branches and non-deposit taking NBFCs (NBFCs-ND) with asset size of ₹ 5,000 crore and above having public customer interface to appoint Internal Ombudsman (IO) at the apex of their internal grievance redress mechanism within a period of six months from the date of issue of the direction…,” it said.

NBFCs including stand-alone primary dealer, NBFC-Infrastructure Finance Company, core investment company, Infrastructure Debt Fund – NBFC; NBFC – Account Aggregator; NBFCs under Corporate Insolvency Resolution Process; NBFCs in liquidation and NBFCs having only captive customers have been excluded from the directive.

“The IO shall deal only with the complaints that have already been examined by the NBFC but have been partly or wholly rejected by the NBFC. In other words, the IO shall not handle complaints received directly from the customers or members of the public,” the RBI said.

The central bank had in the Statement on Developmental and Regulatory Policies as part of the Monetary Policy Statement in October this year announced the move while noting that the increased significance, strength and reach of NBFCs across the country has necessitated having in place better customer experience including grievance redress practices.

“The implementation of the IO mechanism will be monitored by the NBFC’s internal audit system apart from regulatory oversight by RBI,” it further said.

The person appointed as the IO shall be either a retired or a serving officer, not below the rank of Deputy General Manager or equivalent in any financial sector regulatory body or any other NBFC, bank, with necessary skills and experience of minimum of seven years of working in areas such as non-banking finance, banking, financial sector regulation or supervision, or consumer protection, the RBI said.

Further, the person should not have worked or be working in the NBFC or companies in the Group to which the NBFC belongs and he or she should not be above the age of 70 years at any point of time during the tenure as IO.

The NBFC may appoint more than one IO depending on the number of complaints received per branch network. In such a case, the NBFC shall define the jurisdiction of each IO.

The NBFC shall put in place a system of periodic reporting of information to Reserve Bank on a quarterly and annual basis.

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NBFCs source majority loans from digital channels post-Covid

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The company currently receives over 60% of its collections via digital mode where customers can pay via digital wallets or a company-generated hyperlink.

By Piyush Shukla

The Covid-19 pandemic has accelerated the pace of customer acquisition through digital channels by non-banking finance companies (NBFCs). Several non-bank lenders have focused on digital channels for loan applications and even the approval process, which helped with business continuity.

“Digital platforms not only enabled business continuity during the lockdown, but has also helped us process larger volumes with greater speed and efficiency. Our increased focus on online loan processing during the lockdown coupled with our quick response helped our services stay seamless and uninterrupted,” Renu Sud Karnad, managing director (MD) at Housing Development Finance Corp (HDFC), told FE.

Karnad said by September-end, HDFC received 89% of new loan applications through the digital channels, a substantial increase than below 20% pre-pandemic. The non-bank lender has witnessed 16.44% average traffic spike on its website post March 2020, while there has been a 35.58% hike in online generated leads. As on September 30, HDFC’s outstanding loan book, after sell down of loans, stood at Rs 5.21 lakh crore, up 10% year on year.

Mid-sized non-banking finance company Shriram City Union Finance is also focusing higher on digital means to increase loan and deposit business. The company currently receives over 60% of its collections via digital mode where customers can pay via digital wallets or a company-generated hyperlink.

Speaking to FE, Shriram City Union Finance MD and CEO YS Chakravarti said the NBFC’s fixed deposit programme, launched nine months earlier, has enabled it to garner Rs 20 crore of deposits every month consistently for the last three months. The NBFC is now targeting Rs 100 crore of deposits each month by the next year. The fixed deposit programme is a totally digital and paperless journey for the customer, Chakravarti said.

On the asset side, currently, Shriram City Union Finance is generating 20,000-22,000 loan applications online per month, which is significantly higher than than 2,000 applications received digitally before March 2020. Chakravarti said the company expects 25% of overall loan volume over the next 12-18 months to come from the digital mode.

The NBFC’s website presently witnesses more than 3 lakh clicks each month, over 10 times higher than 20,000-30,000 clicks it received before the pandemic hit India. As on September-end, Shriram City Union Finance’s total assets under management stood at Rs 30,425 crore, up 10.5% on year.“We are making in-roads on the digital front, with a focus on digitising the post disbursal service where we have automated a host of self-service features for our customers,” Chakravarti said.

To ensure social distancing and safe contact with customers during the pandemic, gold loan financier Muthoot Finance launched its ‘Loan @ Home’ mobile application in July 2020, and, to date, it recorded about 10,000 downloads. The NBFC’s gross loan assets under management, as on September-end, stood at Rs 55,146.8 crore, up 17% on year.

According to most non-banks, they are tailoring tech products according to customers’ needs and to reach newer geographies. “We integrated disruptive technologies such as Natural Language Processing (NLP) and Machine Learning (ML). This integration has enabled us in offering seamless services through our website chatbot by understanding and analysing user intent, effectively respond to user interaction and there by deliver an enhanced user experience,” Karnad said.

Further, HDFC also launched ‘HDFC Now’ – a completely digital top-up loan for existing customers and started offering content on its website in six regional languages, including Hindi, Marathi, Tamil, Telugu, Malayalam and Kannada. While digital lending enables faster disbursements, there are also concerns that need tackling to safeguards customers’ interest.

In a speech on October 22, Reserve Bank of India deputy governor M Rajeshwar Rao said, “We were and are inundated with the complaints of harsh recovery practices, breach of data privacy, increasing fraudulent transactions, cybercrime, excessive interest rates and harassment.”

He added that governance is more of a cultural issue than a regulatory issue. Therefore, NBFCs must create a culture of responsible governance where every employee feels responsible towards the customer, organisation and society. “Good governance is key to long-term resilience, efficiency and might I add, survival of the entities,” he said.

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Bankers must do proper due diligence before joining corporates, says Amarjit Chopra, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The arrest of Former SBI Chair Pratip Chaudhuri sends a clear message to the bankers that they must lot of due diligence of companies particularly NBFCs whose boards they are joining post-retirement, says Amarjit Chopra, who has held several directorships in public sector banks, and was also a former president at the Institute of Chartered Accountants of India (ICAI).

“Firstly credentials of promoters and secondly past relationship of bankers in their various capacities in banks with such companies need to be kept in mind. Not following this gives rise to unnecessary suspicion and speculations,” Chopra said, as he reflected on the arrest of Chaudhari’s arrest by Enforcement Directorate earlier this month in connection with a loan scam case. Below are edited excerpts from the interaction:

Q: What is your initial impression on the arrest of Ex SBI Chair Pratip Chaudhuri in a loan scam case?

Amarjit Chopra: It is extremely unfortunate that a person of his stature with an impeccable track record has been arrested without an appreciation of facts. His reputation has been tarnished for no reason. And to me his arrest is a big setback to the morale of banking personnel particularly when the economy needs a boost in credit expansion

Q: SBI Chair Dinesh Kumar Khara has said Chaudhuri has not been given an opportunity to be heard, Also, many bankers have described this as high handedness by enforcement agencies/ police. What is your view?

Amarjit Chopra: From the reports it appears that Pratip Chaudhuri was not given any opportunity to be heard before his arrest. Prima facie his arrest reflects high handedness on the part of enforcement agencies and police.

One needs to understand the facts to appreciate the wrong done to Pratip Chaudhuri. The promoters of the Jaisalmer hotel project, Garh Rajwada, approached SBI for a loan to construct a hotel. The loan of Rs 24 crore would have been sanctioned following a process. Going by the amount and the fact that the bank involved was SBI the case would not have gone to the level of MD/Chairman of that period..

Loan proposal along with technical and financial feasibility report of the project, valuation report of the land and other documents etc would have been obtained and appraised before any recommendation for sanction of loan by any official/ committee.

The loan was disbursed in the year 2008. The borrower did not complete the project. A key promoter passed away in 2010. Needless to say that as per banking norms opportunities would have been given to the borrower to settle the amount or to complete the project which the promoters failed to do. Consequently, the loan was classified as NPA.

Going by my experience in all such cases the banks do try to persuade the borrowers in such cases to settle the matter before resorting to other measures. This case would have been no exception to the same. In this case as the promoters neither settled the account nor completed the project the bank was left with no alternative but to follow the process of selling the NPA to ARC Alchemist in 2014 and ARC stepped into the shoes of the lender bank. This was done four years after the death of the key promoter.

Q: What according to you could have prompted the enforcement agencies to arrest Chaudhuri in the first place?

Amarjit Chopra:

It may be interesting to note that Pratip Chaudhuri became Chairman in April 2011 i.e. after sanction and disbursal of loan and rather after the account had turned NPA and retired in September 2013 i.e. before the sale of the asset to ARC Alchemist..

Pratip Chaudhuri joined Alchemist Board in October 2014 after completing a mandatory cooling period of one year after his retirement from SBI. Alchemist had stepped into the shoes of the lender by acquiring the asset. To my mind, ARC would have tried to negotiate it with borrowers but later on sold the asset to another party, an NBFC in 2017.

So far as I understand the process clearly, the bank before selling the asset to ARC Alchemist would have obtained a valuation report and would have advertised the sale in newspapers. In case promoters had any objection they should have filed the objection at that time rather than filing any complaint later after the sale of the asset. They had an opportunity to settle the account presale with the bank and postsale with ARC. So, there appears to be no justification in their filing a protest petition with Chief Judicial Magistrate later and alleging sale of the asset at lower price.

It is surprising that the court has taken cognisance of a complaint by a defaulter who failed to execute the project and later on refused to settle the account. Enforcement agencies having taken cognisance of such complaints would only encourage more financial indiscipline on the part of defaulters..

It is crystal clear that Pratip Chaudhuri was not even Chairman of SBI when the sale to ARC happened. So the allegation against him cannot be in his capacity as a banker. A protest petition has been filed against ARC Alchemist and all of its directors without making SBI a party. It is shocking that Alok Dhir, the promoter of ARC Alchemist, has evaded arrest. It may not be wrong to presume that the action that Chaudhuri faces is not because of being Chairman of SBI. Rather he faces this action being on the Board of ARC Alchemist as this company was involved in the purchase and sale of the asset.

Q: Does Enforcement Directorate seem to have jumped the gun in this case?

Amarjit Chopra: Probably yes! The Supreme Court in a recent judgement in case of Ravindranatha Bajpe versus Mangalore Special Economic Zone Ltd and others has clearly held that no vicarious liability would come on any director for any criminal offences of the company till the time it is proved that he had consented or had knowledge of a fraud.

In the given case based on protest petition even if enforcement agencies/police had to proceed, the same could have been based on investigations into conduct of various parties including the borrowers and the findings thereof. An action like arrest cannot be based upon surmises and conjectures..

Q: What does Chaudhuri’s arrest imply for the banking industry?

Amarjit Chopra: In recent years after the arrest of certain top functionaries of Bank of Maharashtra, IDBI etc bankers had become risk-averse and the same affected credit expansion adversely. The slowdown in credit expansion also resulted in economic sluggishness in the country.

It may be worthwhile to point out that Bank of Maharashtra officials were later exonerated of all charges but the damage was done to the morale of banking staff.

A couple of days back the government issued instructions to ensure that enforcement agencies need to distinguish between genuine banking business decisions and actions taken with an intent to defraud. It was done primarily with a view to infuse confidence in bankers that a protection cover is being provided to them for their genuine business decisions.

But this one case has nullified the impact of those instructions. It is despite the fact that apparently, this action against Chaudhuri has nothing to do with his role as a banker as stated earlier.

In my opinion, going by human psychology it would certainly affect credit expansion as well as cleaning up of the balance sheets of banks particularly through sales of bad loans to ARCs. Here I will certainly like to add that all these years the role of various ARCs has not been free from controversy and needs to be looked into. The government and RBI would do well to constitute a group to suggest some measures to improve the functioning of ARCs..

Q: What is the signal reflected by the enforcement agencies here?

Amarjit Chopra: It is difficult to answer. But one message is loud and clear that top functionaries in banks need to do a lot of due diligence of companies, particularly NBFCs whose boards they are joining post-retirement. Firstly credentials of promoters and secondly past relationship of bankers in their various capacities in banks with such companies need to be kept in mind. Not following this gives rise to unnecessary suspicion and speculations.

Motives can be imputed and at times certain genuine business decisions may be looked at with a different mindset by public and enforcement agencies. Keeping oneself engaged post-retirement is fine but joining the boards of companies with which one has dealt with in various capacities as banker may not be a healthy trend..

Unfortunately in the recent past, there has been an increasing trend amongst bankers and bureaucrats joining the boards of such companies that they dealt with as senior functionaries. One may be honest but it is equally important to appear as honest.

It may not be an exaggeration to say that enforcement agencies in the given case probably acted upon the surmise that Chaudhuri happens to be a director on the board of Alchemist and earlier he and the company had a business relationship. So, better avoid such conflicted appearing positions.

Q: Do you have any suggestions for the government/ RBI?

Amarjit Chopra: The government and RBI would do well to review the extent of mandatory cooling period that officials of banks and bureaucrats may have to observe post-retirement before taking up an assignment with private entities, particularly whose files they have dealt with in the last three years of their official position.



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Must address systemic risk arising out of growing NBFCs: RBI deputy governor M Rajeshwar Rao

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It is in this background that the RBI has conceptualised the scale-based regulatory framework.

As the non-banking financial company (NBFC) sector increases in size and complexity, there is regulation needs to address the systemic risks arising out of it, Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI) deputy governor M Rajeshwar Rao said on Friday. Referring to the central bank’s proposal to apply scale-based regulation to NBFCs, Rao said that NBFCs must keep the customer at the centre of all innovation and address concerns around governance.

“While we are aware that differential regulation in the NBFC sector is required to allow it to bridge the gap in last mile connectivity and exhibit dynamism, this premise remains valid till the time their scale of operations is low. As and when they attain the size and complexity which poses risk for the financial system, the case becomes stronger for greater regulatory oversight,” Rao said during a virtual event organised by the Confederation of Indian Industry (CII).

It is in this background that the RBI has conceptualised the scale-based regulatory framework. Such a framework, proportionate to the systemic significance of NBFCs, may be the optimal approach where the level of regulation and supervision will be a function of the size, activity, and riskiness of NBFCs, Rao said. As regulations would be proportional to the scale of NBFCs, they would not impose undue costs on the regulated entities (REs). “While certain arbitrages that could potentially have adverse impact would be minimised, the fundamental premise of allowing operational flexibility to NBFCs in conducting their business would not be diluted,” Rao said.

The deputy governor observed that there has been a consistent and conscious understanding that a one-size-fits-all approach is not suitable for the NBFC sector, which includes a diverse set of financial intermediaries with different business models serving a heterogenous group of customers and exposed to different risks.

Rao cautioned that no innovation should come at the cost of prudence and it should not be designed to cut corners around regulatory, prudential and disclosure requirements. “Responsible financial innovation should always have customer at its centre and should be aimed at creating positive impact on the financial ecosystem and the society. One should therefore consider the impact of new ideas on the financial fabric at the conceptualisation stage itself,” he said.

The deputy governor referred to the surge in digital credit delivery during the pandemic and said that while the benefits accruing from digital financial services is not a point of debate, the business conduct issues, and governance standards adopted by such digital lenders have shaken the trust reposed in digital means of finance in India. “We were and are inundated with the complaints of harsh recovery practices, breach of data privacy, increasing fraudulent transactions, cybercrime, excessive interest rates and harassment,” Rao said.

He added that governance is more of a cultural issue than a regulatory issue. Therefore, NBFCs must create a culture of responsible governance where every employee feels responsible towards the customer, organisation and society. “Good governance is key to long-term resilience, efficiency and might I add, survival of the entities,” he said.

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AUMs of NBFCs to rise 18–20% y-o-y this fiscal: Crisil Ratings.

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Assets under management (AUM) of non-banking financial companies (NBFCs), which primarily offer loans against gold, are expected to rise 18–20 per cent to ₹1.3 lakh crore this fiscal against ₹1.1 lakh crore in FY21, according to Crisil Ratings.

The credit rating agency said that this growth would be despite a contraction in the first quarter, when pandemic-driven lockdown measures hindered branch operations and kept potential borrowers away.

The agency added that demand for gold loans from micro enterprises and individuals — to fund working capital and personal requirements, respectively — has increased with a pick-up in economic activity and the onset of the festive season, which coincides with the easing of lockdown restrictions by several States.

Sought-after asset

Krishnan Sitaraman, Senior Director and Deputy Chief Ratings Officer, said, “Gold-loan disbursements have rebounded sharply in the second quarter of this fiscal after a dismal first quarter. We expect this momentum to continue for the rest of this fiscal.”

He emphasised that gold loans will continue to be a sought-after asset class, while lenders would remain cautious about growth in many other retail asset classes.

Also see: NBFCs: No need to press the panic button yet

From a credit perspective, gold loans are a highly secured, liquid asset class that generates superior returns with minimal credit losses, the agency said.

Therefore, NBFCs that offer them are better placed than those extending loans to most other retail asset classes, especially in times of asset-quality pressure spawned by the pandemic.

Risk management

The agency noted that historically, gold-loan NBFCs have seen negligible losses because of robust risk management practices such as periodic interest collection (which keeps the loan-to-value, or LTV, under check) and timely auctions of gold.

Also see: What’s next for gold loans after the pandemic?

“Maintaining LTV discipline adds to the comfort. But sharp swings in the price of gold impacts both, the portfolio and disbursement LTV, as it influences the cushion available with lenders.

“Lenders faced this issue last fiscal because gold prices fell sharply between January and March 2021, after the August 2020 peak,” the agency said.

NBFCs vs banks

On their part, NBFCs have manoeuvred the situation well, Crisil Ratings said, adding that banks, on the contrary, were less proactive and so have seen a rise in delinquencies and faced challenges in rolling over a part of their portfolio to 75 per cent LTV (as per current Reserve Bank of India guidelines) after the 90 per cent LTV dispensation ended in March 31, 2021.

Banks’ loan against gold jewellery portfolio grew by about 80 per cent in FY21.

Ajit Velonie, Director, Crisil Ratings, observed that gold-loan NBFCs have been swift in calibrating disbursement LTV while also implementing strong risk management practices to keep portfolio LTV in check.

Also see: IIFL Finance launches instant business loan on WhatsApp

Besides ensuring periodic interest collection, they do not flinch from conducting auctions when required — which rose sharply in March and April 2021 — to avert potential asset-quality challenges.

Velonie said timely auctions have ensured that credit costs — a more appropriate indicator of asset quality for gold-loans — remained in check at 30 basis points, well within the historical range.

With leverage being low and pre-provision profitability remaining strong, Crisil Ratings expects the overall credit profile of gold-loan NBFCs to remain stable.

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Banks, NBFCs report jump in advances in September quarter, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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In a sign that bank credit growth may be on an uptrend, most bank and non-bank lenders reported a jump in disbursal of advances in the quarter ended September.

HDFC Bank saw its advances book grow by around 15.4% year on year at the end of the September quarter, proforma numbers released by the private sector lender showed. Its total loans aggregated to Rs 11.98 lakh crore at the end of September, up 4.4% sequentially. It’s total loans were at Rs 10.38 lakh crore at the end of September 2020.

As per the bank’s internal business classification, retail loans during the September quarter grew by around 13% year on year and 5.5% over June quarter. Commercial and rural banking loans grew by around 27.5% y-o-y while other wholesale loans grew by around 6%.

HDFC Bank has “resumed its retail growth journey” as the economy recovered from the second wave of Covid-19, said Gautam Chhuggani, director – financial at investment management firm Bernstein Research.

“We expect loan mix normalisation to be the norm in the coming quarters, with a focus on improving margins and ongoing tech transformation,” he said and noted that the bank has already reported a healthy bounce-back on new credit card issuances after the Reserve Bank of India in August lifted a ban imposed in December last year.

Mortgage lender HDFC assigned loans amounting to Rs 7,132 crore at the end of the September quarter versus Rs 3,026 crore a year earlier. It sold loans worth Rs 27,199 crore in the preceding 12 months versus Rs 14,138 crore in the previous year, regulatory filings show.

Private sector lender IndusInd Bank reported better-than-expected credit growth of 10% with total loans at Rs 2.2 lakh crore at the end of the September quarter, preliminary numbers filed with stock exchanges showed.

“The credit growth indicates underlying strong credit re-acceleration in the retail book,” said Anand Dama, senior research analyst at Emkay Financial Services. “The bank has been growing its corporate book since the June quarter and we believe that the bank is likely to have seen healthy momentum in the corporate book in September quarter as well.”

IDFC First Bank posted 9.75% growth in advances at Rs 1,17,243 crore for the second quarter ended September.

Leading non-bank lender Bajaj Finance reported it had booked 6.3 million new loans at the end of the September quarter versus 3.6 million a year ago. It’s assets under management (AUM) stood at Rs 1.66 lakh crore for the quarter under review as against Rs 1.37 lakh crore a year earlier.

Non-bank lender Mahindra & Mahindra Financial Services posted a 60% year-on-year growth in disbursements at Rs 6,450 crore at the end of the September quarter. With further improvement in mobility during September, the collection efficiency for the NBFC was reported at 100% for September 2021.

“Subject to improvement in auto supply chain, the company is hopeful of a good Q3 FY22 ahead, supported by festival season and harvest cash flow.” M&M Finance said in a statement.

Private lender Yes Bank posted a 3.6% rise in its advances to Rs 1.72 lakh crore, though retail disbursements grew at a faster rate and grew by 126.6% over last year to Rs 8531 crore at the end of the September quarter as against Rs 3764 crore a year ago.



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Banks’ credit outlook ‘stable’ for FY22, says Crisil Ratings, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Crisil Ratings has kept a ‘stable’ credit outlook for banks for the second half of financial year 2022.

Strong capitalisation will remain a key factor for private banks to have a stable credit growth, while public sector banks benefit from government support.

However, privatisation of two public sector banks, as announced in Union Budget 2021-22, will be eyed.

Banks’ credit growth is expected to revive 9-10% in FY22, after a fall of around 5% in FY21, the agency said, adding that profitability of the banking sector is set to improve over the medium term.

Gross non-performing assets are likely to touch 10-11% by the end of this fiscal.

According to reports, the GNPA is at 8-9%, supported by government schemes and restructuring dispensation, the agency said. In FY18, the GNPA had hit a peak of 11.2%.

The NPA level improved because banks have lowered their provisioning levels from before, thereby limiting the impact of legacy NPAs on future earnings, Crisil said, in its half yearly ratings round up report.

Retail segment growth is expected to return to the mid-teens this fiscal, after a slow growth reported a year ago. Within retail, housing loans, which constitute more than half of retail advances for banks, saw slow growth last fiscal, but demand remains strong over the long term, the agency said.

With rising affordability and the recent trend of working from home, demand for own houses and larger houses are likely to rise, and banks will benefit from lower competition from non-banks as well as surplus liquidity, it added.

However, a potential third COVID-19 wave remains a key near-term risk, while deceleration in economic and demand growth, both global and domestic, due to tapering of monetary and fiscal stimuli will be key medium-term risks.

The impact of the third wave is likely to be contained due to the increase in the pace of inoculations, with nearly 70% of the adult population receiving at least one dose.

For non-banking financial companies, the agency expects better credit quality than last year, but has retained a ‘monitorable’ outlook.

The credit quality growth for NBFCs is expected to pick up to 6-8% in FY22 from 2% in FY21. However, it remains lower than the pre-pandemic level of 18%.

Crisil expects NBFCs to witness an uptick in stressed assets as MSME and unsecured loans have been hit the most. However, loans to other sectors have been relatively resilient.

Asset quality in these segments continue to be impacted the most, with delinquencies rising almost 300 basis points in June 2021 against March 2021 levels, despite higher restructuring and write-offs last fiscal compared with other asset classes. Delinquency levels for these segments will remain elevated given a likely higher recovery period for borrowers, Crisil said.

Improved capitalisation and strong parentage will be key support factors for non-bank lenders. The agency noted that many NBFCs have strengthened their provisioning buffers, factoring in the COVID-19 crisis, leading to more comfortable liquidity in the sector.

Crisil expects the sector to witness organic consolidation with stronger NBFCs, who have strong parentage, and gain market share.

Performance on asset quality and impact on earnings will remain key monitorables for NBFCs.



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