Liquidity crunch leads to lending crisis
Amount lent by NBFCs to urban areas nosedives significantly since last October

The last quarter of FY19 witnessed a slowdown in sanctions across rural, semi-urban and urban areas, but it is the loans to urban areas which have nosedived. This can be attributed to the liquidity crisis and consumers pushing away their purchases.
“NBFCs are becoming risk averse and trying to preserve cash in their books. Also mutual funds have stayed away from lending to NBFCs as they are facing redemption pressure leading to bottlenecks in lending,” says an analyst with a ratings agency. “NBFCs have found it difficult to raise capital through debt markets and banks are not willing to roll on NBFCs with large wholesale exposure. As lending costs have gone up and lending lines have squeezed, NBFCs are resorting to lending to high margin categories.”
On June 26, ratings agency ICRA downgraded Edelweiss Finvest Pvt Ltd because of its increased vulnerability towards wholesale lending book. It also downgraded Piramal Capital and Housing Finance Ltd due to increased challenges in resource mobilisation for NBFCs and housing finance companies.
“There is a slowdown across the board and credit lines have squeezed even for the largest NBFCs. And there is no clarity if there will be any uptick,” says a banking analyst from a domestic brokerage.
The FIDC note adds that one of the major concerns is the reluctance on the part of banks to continue with the existing lending arrangements to NBFCs. There have been instances of banks withdrawing unutilised lines of credit or showing apprehension towards renewal or rolling over existing credit lines.
The one category that has managed to stay afloat is gold loans. During January-March 2019, gold loans saw a spike in growth of 110 percent on a year-on-year basis, as NBFCs lent Rs11,641 crore.
“Gold loan lending has not been affected by the liquidity crisis hence that category and personal loans continue to witness growth. People have apprehensions about taking a new loan due to the slowing economy and NBFCs charging higher lending rates,” says the banking analyst.
The dominoes are falling in the NBFC sector, but private equity firms are looking at it as an opportunity to acquire and fund businesses which have more retail lending exposure. “It is one of the best times to acquire NBFCs which are catering to retail lending from the balance sheet to tide over the liquidity crunch. A lot of NBFCs will be forced to sell if the pressure sustains,” says a global fund manager.
First Published: Jun 27, 2019, 14:29
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