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Divide on NBFCs, as sector stares at a breakdown
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SME Times News Bureau | 12 Apr, 2020
There seems to be a divide brewing within industry stakeholders and
market watchers on whether or not to support the cash-strapped NBFC
sector; which stares at a near breakdown without new relief measures.
However,
should the relief be a part of Covid-19 package or not is the going
concern, with many stakeholders pointing out other sectors which are
also in dire need of help.
At present, the coronavirus crisis
again lays bare the wounds in the shadow-banking sector, and the
financial companies staring at a mega default of around Rs 1.75 lakh
crore.
A recent report rating agency CRISIL said that the
liqudity cover available with CRISIL-rated non-banking financial
companies will decline sharply if they cannot avail on their own bank
borrowings the moratorium announced by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI)
in its "COVID-19 Regulatory Package".
It noted that NBFCs face a
double whammy because they are offering moratorium to customers despite
not getting one themselves from their lender-banks. That will put
significant pressure on liquidity profiles of many NBFCs, it added.
"CRISIL's
analysis of NBFCs it rates shows liquidity pressure will increase for
nearly a quarter of them if collections do not pick up by June 2020.
These NBFCs have Rs 1.75 lakh crore of debt obligations maturing by
then," it said.
Another rating agency Acuite Ratings has said
that while the gross advances of the NBFC sector stood at Rs 22.76 lakh
crore as on March 31, 2019, retail NBFCs constituted Rs 14.48 lakh crore
or 64 per cent of gross advances and the selected 11 NBFCs together
constitute 43 per cent of these retail NBFC portfolio as on March 31,
2019.
It noted that the loans of retail NBFCs are granular in
nature and largely cater to self-employed borrower segment where the
cash-flows highly are correlated to the economic activity levels and
therefore, inherently more volatile as compared to that of salaried
individuals.
"One important segment in retail NBFCs is new or
used vehicle finance for transport operators, small businesses, farmers
and self-employed individuals. Their lending portfolio also includes
small and medium enterprises where the ticket size is higher, typically
up to Rs. 5 crore. Clearly, the economic disruption brought about by the
Covid lockdown will have a severe impact on the incomes of such
borrowers for several months depending on the intensity of the
outbreak," said that Acuite report.
Since the RBI has provided a
three month moratorium framework (March � May, 2020) for banks and
NBFCs, almost all retail NBFCs are expected to provide such a moratorium
to their borrowers. While this is likely to provide a temporary
reprieve to the retail borrowers of the NBFCs, it is likely to have
significant implications for their liquidity and businesses in our
opinion in FY21, it said.
Acuite's analysis of the top 11 retain
NBFCs in India highlighted that almost 60 per cent of their borrowings
(excluding securitisation) are from non-bank sources and require
continuity in debt servicing. It estimates the refinancing requirement
for these 11 retail large NBFCs at around Rs 10,000-20,000 Cr to avoid
any challenges in their debt servicing and to sustain their operations.
Suman
Chowdhury, Chief Analytical Officer, Acuite Ratings & Research:
"The aggregated debt repayment including interest for the top 11 retail
NBFCs in first quarter of FY21 is estimated to be between Rs
40,000-60,000 crore while the cash reserves are estimated to be around
Rs 45,000 cr. It is apparent that many of these NBFCs would find it
difficult to manage their cash flows including their operating expenses
during the next 3 months unless they get access to additional bank lines
or refinance.
Further, industry body FICCI has also suggested
for a special liquidity line to NBFCs from banks as well as a
significant allocation from the TLTRO operations mandatorily flowing to
the NBFCs, this could be implemented in the following ways
I a
presentation, FICCI recommended an additional 10 per cent loan by banks
under a special COVID-19 program. An amount of 10 per cent of total
borrowings as refinance against existing NCDs issued by the NBFC and
HFCs, it said.
N. R. Bhanumurthy, Professor of National Institute
of Public Finance and Policy also said that this is not the government
to look into the regulatory issues much and NBFCs also require support
as other segments, more so as they were already going through a
liquidity crisis.
However, there are some concerns regarding the
supported viable for the government and the RBI towards the NBFCs given
their already feeble financial status and the recent instances of
corporate misgovernance and liquidity crisis.
Speaking to IANS,
Chief Economist at HDFC Bank said that currently, all the sectors which
have genuine needs should be looked into and provided with relief, and
merely sticking to NBFCs would not be beneficial for the economy.
"There
are all sorts of claims on the government's resources which are
limited. Now its no longer about NBFCs, there are the MFIs
(micro-finance institutions), then there are actual sectors like civil
aviation, hospitality, part of the MSME sector which of course is funded
partly by the NBFCs," he said.
Barua added that there have been much more claimants on the RBI's and the government's resources, be it fiscal or monetary.
"NBFCs
deserve some kind of a support� but they have also been some kind of a
problem for the past year and a half and now we have other segments to
also consider. MFIs for instance I think they are very actively involved
in reaching credit to the very poor who are likely to be affected the
most by the coronavirus," he said.
He said that currently, it is
much more than just about the NBFCs and the resources are limited, so
the government will have to think about how much to give them and how
much to others who have a very genuine need for financial resources be
it from a fiscal source or from monetary sources.
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