We will raise more money as and when the opportunity seems right in the market, says CEO, Piramal Retail Finance

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


“The best deals happen in tough times,” believes Jairam Sridharan, Chief Executive Officer, Piramal Retail Finance when asked about the acquisition of Dewan Housing Finance Corporation Ltd (DHFL) during this current economic uncertainty.

In an interview with BusinessLine, Sridharan also said that consumer demand remains strong, and while the rising Covid cases have raised concerns, it is expected that the impact may be muted. Excerpts:

Piramal Capital and Housing Finance Ltd raised ₹4,050 through NCDs recently. How will that be used?

There is the organic business we are growing, which is right now the primary usage of where money is going. The DHFL transaction is another area, which we will need to fund. And there are some investments we are making in terms of hiring more people, opening more locations, which also need to be funded. And there are refinancing needs from the old portfolio we have.

So, the money we have raised will be used for new business deployment, refinancing of old debt, investments in businesses like retail and inorganic acquisition. We will use the money for whatever immediate use case there is.

Will there be further fund raises?

We will raise more money this fiscal. We have not taken a comprehensive approval but we will raise it as and when the opportunity seems right in the market and the yields seem conducive. Last year was the year of AAA borrowers. Now with liquidity starting to get better for AA borrowers, we will let that play out a little bit. We have raised a boat load of equity capital in the last year-and-a-half. We have over ₹18,500 crore of equity capital. That is a lot for a company with a total book of about ₹45,000 crore.

What kind of consumer demand are you seeing?

Consumer demand has been surprisingly strong since Diwali. Businesses are seeing footfalls. Small town India which depends on small businesses have seen progression. There is a take off in the real estate market as people are buying homes, buying more vehicles as they move away from public transport. But we have to wait and watch with what has happened in April. Everything is back up in the air. No one is talking of a total lockdown and so it looks like core businesses will continue to function and hopeful the impact will be a lot muted. We have an important weapon this time which is vaccination and that is going on in full swing.

What is your consumer base today?

Our overall lending book today is ₹45,000 crore of which ₹5,000 crore or 11 per cent is retail finance. In the medium term, we want retail to be two-thirds of our lending book. The number of consumers is about 10,000. But with the acquisition opportunity — DHFL had close to 1 million customers, it is a very different scale. So strategically it makes sense for someone in our position to do a transaction like DHFL because it gives us access to a customer base, branches and people. Using that platform, we can start selling other things.

Is acquiring DHFL amidst the current economic uncertainty a concern?

The best deals happen in tough times. If you buy something at a very expensive price, it makes it difficult to make it succeed. If we manage it well, then a good franchise at a fair or low valuation is more likely to succeed than a great franchise bought at a very high valuation.

By when is IRDAI approval expected for the DHFL transaction?

The approval from the Competition Commission of India came on Monday. Now, let’s see when the IRDAI approval will come. They are the regulators, we will wait for their clearance.

[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY

Piramal Retail Finance to foray into used-car, consumer and education finance

[ad_1]

Read More/Less


The company is targeting to grow the share of retail loans to about two-thirds of the book from 11% at present, and will also add other loan categories such as education loans and small business loans.

Piramal Retail Finance, a business entity under Piramal Capital and Housing Finance, on Thursday said it has made a foray into used-car financing and digital unsecured lending. The company is targeting to grow the share of retail loans to about two-thirds of the book from 11% at present, and will also add other loan categories such as education loans and small business loans.

The lender is entering into partnerships with various participants in the tech ecosystem. By Q4FY21, Piramal had gone live with two fintech partnerships – with ZestMoney in the purchase finance space and with CARS24 in the area of used-car financing. With these launches, Piramal Retail now offers seven products – affordable housing loans, mass affluent housing loans, loans against property (LAP), secured small business loans, purchase finance, unsecured loans and used-car loans.

Jairam Sridharan, chief executive officer, Piramal Retail Finance, said that the company has grown its product base quite significantly and is pivoting to a multi-product retail lending strategy rather than a purely home loans-driven business. “We are looking to be among the largest in the retail lending business in India but in a responsible way and in a way right for the customer, not necessarily driven by balance sheet growth intent,” he said.

During FY21, the lender has expanded its employee base to about 1,000 from 500, and it intends to double the number again in the next 12 months. Its presence has grown to 40 locations from 14 in FY21 and it is looking to add another 10 locations in three months. “Then the rest depends on what happens on one of the inorganic transactions that we are waiting on. We started the year with two products and now have grown into seven products and looking to add another four in the next twelve months,” Sridharan said.

The Piramal group’s overall lending book stands at about Rs 45,000 crore, of which Rs 5,000 crore, or 11%, is retail. The group has received the approval of the antitrust regulator to acquire Dewan Housing Finance’s (DHFL) loan book. That book has also got a substantial retail portion and depending on when the transaction happens and on how the accounting is done, the share of retail will grow to the mid-40s, Sridharan said.

“Our intent in the medium term is to grow retail to about two-thirds of our financial services business, with wholesale comprising the rest. Even though we have launched a lot of non-mortgage products, with the DHFL acquisition, which is almost entirely a mortgage business, our business is going to become very mortgage-heavy,” he said. That is why the company is keen to launch all its non-mortgage businesses now so that it has something to cross-sell to the large base of DHFL customers, he added.

Get live Stock Prices from BSE, NSE, US Market and latest NAV, portfolio of Mutual Funds, Check out latest IPO News, Best Performing IPOs, calculate your tax by Income Tax Calculator, know market’s Top Gainers, Top Losers & Best Equity Funds. Like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter.

Financial Express is now on Telegram. Click here to join our channel and stay updated with the latest Biz news and updates.



[ad_2]

CLICK HERE TO APPLY