Non-industrial sectors dominate non-food credit growth since 2014

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The overall non-food credit growth during the period 2014-15 to 2020-21 was almost entirely driven by expansion of credit to non-industrial sectors, particularly lending to the retail segment in the form of personal loans, per an article in the Reserve Bank of India’s latest monthly bulletin.

Active participation of both the dominant-group (including six leading banks on the basis of their share in total non-food credit) and the other-group of banks (which includes the remaining 27 banks) is driving credit growth to the non-industrial sectors, according to an analysis of 33 select banks by RBI officials Pawan Kumar, Manjusha Senapati and Anand Prakash.

Impact of Covid

The authors observed that credit extended by the other-group to the industrial sector was affected significantly due to Covid-19 but the performance of this group is better than the dominant-group as far as credit to agriculture and services sectors is concerned.

They said that, “The sharp slowdown in industrial credit, especially by other-group of banks, warrants attention and steps to step up credit offtake commensurate with appropriate risk-taking, a number of which have already been taken by the Government and the Reserve Bank, could defreeze the credit market for the industrial sector and help in reviving the growth momentum derailed by the Covid-19 pandemic.”

After witnessing a significant slowdown in credit offtake during 2019-20 and 2020-21, there has been some uptick in credit growth in the recent months notwithstanding the second Covid wave, which augurs well for the economy, the authors said.

Credit boom period

According to the article, bank credit growth has witnessed significant fluctuations in the past one and half decades.

“The period between 2007-08 to 2013-14 could be characterised as bank credit boom period in the Indian economy, as non-food credit registered double digit growth, primarily driven by robust credit growth to the industrial sector,” the authors said.

Both dominant-group and other-group of banks lent aggressively to the industrial as well as other sectors.

Also see: E-mandate processing: Banks, payment aggregators rush to meet deadline for recurring online transactions

Within industries, infrastructure, and basic metal & metal product industries accounted for a major portion of credit offtake from both the bank groups during the credit boom period.

Credit cycle reversal

Thereafter, however, the credit cycle reversed along with a shift in the sectoral deployment of bank credit.

“During 2014-15 to 2020-21, overall credit growth decelerated, primarily driven down by reversal in credit growth to the industrial sector because of deleveraging by non-financial firms, increasing dependence on non-bank sources for financial resources, and some risk aversion on the part of banks, especially by the other-group of banks to lend to industries, which got further compounded after the outbreak of Covid-19 pandemic,” the authors said.

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Credit shrinks less in second Covid wave due to localised lockdowns

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The first half of the financial year typically sees muted loan growth before the busy season begins with the festive season.

The degrowth in non-food credit on a year-to-date (ytd) basis so far in FY22 has been lesser than in the comparable period in FY21 as the lockdowns during the second wave of the pandemic were more localised in nature. Between March 29 and July 30, 2021, banks’ outstanding loans fell 0.5%, against a 1.1% drop in outstanding loans seen between March 27 and July 31, 2020.

In fact, the trend in loan growth was better in the first four months of FY22 than in the first four months of the pre-Covid year FY20. Between March 29 and August 2, 2019, outstanding loans in the banking system had fallen 0.66%. The first half of the financial year typically sees muted loan growth before the busy season begins with the festive season.

In a report dated August 16, Nomura said that its India business resumption index (NIBRI) took less than three months to cross 100 after the second wave, whereas it had taken nearly 10 months to crawl back towards the 100-mark after the first wave of Covid-19.

Bankers said that while the imposition of lockdowns and other mobility restrictions had hurt disbursements in the first two months of FY22, the recovery was swift. Sandeep Bakhshi, MD & CEO, ICICI Bank, told analysts that retail disbursements moderated in April and May due to the containment measures in place across various parts of the country. “With the gradual easing of restrictions, disbursements picked up in June and July. Credit card spends declined in April and May but improved to March levels in June, driven by spends in categories like consumer durables, utilities, education and insurance,” Bakhshi said. ICICI Bank’s retail loan portfolio, excluding business banking, grew by 20.2% year-on-year and was flat sequentially as on June 30, 2021.

Utilisation of working capital limits has also improved. State Bank of India (SBI) chairman Dinesh Khara said earlier this month that the level of under-utilisation in the bank’s commercial client group dropped to 25% in Q1FY22 from about 30% in the previous quarter.

At the same time, lenders have been cautious while guiding for full-year credit growth. SBI said it expects a 9% growth in FY22 and Khara said credit growth will be a function of the real economy. “We are only waiting for the opportunity to support credit growth, but it will emanate from borrowers and the real economy,” he said.

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Non-food credit growth falls to 6.44%

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“Also, de-growth in large industries and slower growth in housing and NBFCs (non-banking financial companies) segment restricted the overall bank credit growth,” the rating agency said, adding that an increase in credit outstanding is anticipated as year-end transactions are likely to push up bank credit.

The rate of growth in non-food credit shrank in March, falling to 6.44% year-on-year (y-o-y) for the fortnight ended March 12, from 6.58% in the previous fortnight. Only a month ago, during the fortnight ended February 12, the non-food credit growth stood at 6.61%.

As on March 12, outstanding non-food credit stood at Rs 107.29 lakh crore, showed data released by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI). Issuances of commercial papers (CPs) fell during the fortnight ended February 28 to Rs 69,500 crore, from Rs 88,216 crore during the previous fortnight. The CPs outstanding declined to Rs 3.91 lakh crore from Rs 3.99 lakh crore as on February 15.

Deposits with banks continued to grow in double digits and stood at Rs 149.56 lakh crore, up 12.12% YoY. The credit-deposit ratio was 71.74%.

Though the weighted average lending rates on fresh loans of banks have fallen 122 basis points (bps) from January 2020 to January 2021, the overall credit growth continues to moderate due to risk aversion and continued parking of excess liquidity with the RBI, Care Ratings said. “Also, de-growth in large industries and slower growth in housing and NBFCs (non-banking financial companies) segment restricted the overall bank credit growth,” the rating agency said, adding that an increase in credit outstanding is anticipated as year-end transactions are likely to push up bank credit.

In early March, Crisil said in the current fiscal, bank credit is seen rising 4-5%. This is a revision of the rating agency’s projection from June 2020, when they had expected the bank credit growth to be 0-1%.

In FY22, Crisil expects the bank credit to bounce back to 9-10% levels, driven by a pick-up in corporate credit, the government’s infrastructure push and a likely revival in demand. Retail lending, a major driver of bank credit in the past, is expected to slow down to 9-10% this fiscal before returning to the mid-teens growth of past years.

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Non-food credit growth at eight-month high of 6.53%

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Most large banks have been saying that they are seeing a pick-up in economic activity and expect that to translate into higher loan growth, largely on the back of housing loans.

The growth in non-food credit rose to an eight-month high of 6.53% year-on-year (y-o-y) during the fortnight ended January 1, from 6.03% in the previous fortnight. The last time non-food credit grew faster was during the fortnight ended April 24, 2020.

As on January 1, outstanding non-food credit stood at Rs 106.12 lakh crore, showed data released by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI). Deposits with banks stood at Rs 147.27 lakh crore, up 11.48% y-o-y. The credit-deposit ratio was 72.06%.

Most large banks have been saying that they are seeing a pick-up in economic activity and expect that to translate into higher loan growth, largely on the back of housing loans. Some private banks have also reported a strong growth in advances during Q3 ahead of their financial results.

After State Bank of India’s (SBI) Q2FY21 results, chairman Dinesh Kumar Khara had said that the bank was expecting an 8-9% credit growth in FY21 because economic activity had gathered pace. “We have already seen the growth as far as our book is concerned. We have seen growth of about 6% till September 30. Hopefully, with the unlocking happening, we should be in a position to reach better than 8%,” he observed.

For both public-sector banks (PSBs) and private banks, much of the fresh lending in the last few quarters has been in the government segment as also in gold loans. The emergency credit line guarantee scheme (ECLGS) has also helped step up loan sanctions to small enterprises. The RBI’s trend and progress report said that credit expansion was at a higher pace among PSBs during March, June and September, 2020 quarters, after three consecutive quarters of deceleration. Lending in rural areas has been a bright spot for banks in FY21. “Although the share of rural credit in the total has been hovering between 8 and 9%, its growth surpassed that of other categories in 2019-20, after a gap of four years,” the central bank said.

Analysts also expect loan growth in Q3 to have been robust on the back of festive demand and the government’s credit guarantee scheme for small businesses.

In a results preview, analysts at Axis Securities said, “Overall, we estimate business growth to recover, aided by pent up demand, a good festive season, and expect systemic loan growth for FY21 to pick-up from its lows.” At the same time, whether the recovery in credit demand sustains through Q4FY21 remains to be seen.

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