The story behind attractive FD rates
Non-banking financial companies are offering appealing rates to raise deposits, raising concerns about sustainability, pressure on margins


“Our cost of funds has remained steady at 8.5 percent. As long as our contribution of deposits is within 25 percent of our total borrowings, we do not foresee any material impact on our overall cost of funds in the short and medium term,” says Rajeev Jain, managing director of Bajaj Finance.“Our ALM management and strong liquidity position has ensured our strong growth momentum. We have a diversified borrowing mix between banks/ money markets/ deposits at 37 percent/ 50 percent/ 13 percent respectively. In the current scenario the liquidity event has clearly differentiated between good and bad credit,” Jain says.
Bajaj Finance’s net interest margins were around 12 percent in Q1FY20 and 9.8 percent for FY19. Bajaj Finance’s overall franchise stands at 36.94 million in Q1FY20, a growth of 31 percent year-on-year. The NBFC added 2.46 million new customers in the three months to June.
“The margins that most NBFCs commanded in previous quarters are unlikely to be met,” says an analyst with a global equity research firm.
The main rationale that these NBFCs are offering such attractive rates is for balance sheet expansion, which would help them to cover for fixed costs or maintain satisfactory capital adequacy to meet for instances of a possible default or for higher provisioning. There continues to be a very real concern in retail lending at this stage.
First Published: Aug 13, 2019, 11:13
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