Business Standard

Higher bond yields may take sheen off retail NBFCs

Cost of funds climbs 40 basis points year-on-year during the first half of FY18, may rise further as bond yields continue to head north

- KRISHNA KANT

The recent rise in bond yields could spoil the growth party for retail non-banking finance companies (NBFCs). Retail NBFCs such as Housing Developmen­t Finance Corporatio­n (HDFC), LIC Housing, Indiabulls Housing, and Bajaj Finance, among others. The sector was one of the key beneficiar­ies of low bond yields and interest rates in the past three years, but now that yields are rising, the companies are likely to see a compressio­n in their net interest margins (NIMs), translatin­g into lower profitabil­ity.

NBFCs’ cost of funds was up 40 basis points (bps) during the first half of FY18 over the last fiscal year and analysts see its rising further as bond yields continue to head north. Yields on Government of India 10-year bonds are up nearly 160 bps, or 25 per cent, in the past 15 months.

The hardest hit will be secondand third-tier NBFCs with lower credit rating and higher cost of funds. This, the analysts said, could lead to a rerating of the sector on the bourses. The Business Standard (BS) retail NBFC index has doubled in value since January 2015 against a 23 per cent rise in the benchmark S&P BSE Sensex during the period (see chart).

The interest cost for 22 retail NBFCs declined to 8.9 per cent (on average) during 2016-17 from a high of 10.4 per cent during 2012-13. It followed the trajectory of bond yields, albeit with a lag. The yields averaged 8.4 per cent during FY12 and it declined to as low as 6.2 per cent during the last quarter of the 2016 calendar year. Yields are currently hovering around 7.8 per cent.

“Retail NBFCs benefitted immensely from lower interest rate and benign liquidity conditions in the last three years. It not only lowered their cost of funds and boosted margins but easy availabili­ty of capital allowed them to raise their share of the overall loan market at the expense of commercial banks,” said Dhananjay Sinha, headresear­ch, Emkay Global Financial Services.

The combined loan book (or advances) by retail NBFCs in the Business Standard sample was up 19.3 per cent during the April-September 2017 period to reach ~9.6 trillion, growing at double the pace of growth (10.4 per cent) reported by commercial banks during the period. This came on the back of industry’s equally fast growth in the previous three years. Retail NBFCs’ loan book grew at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 19.7 per cent during the three years ending March 2017. This was nearly thrice the pace of growth (6.9 per cent) in banks’ loan books during the period.

This translated into a profit boom in the industry and the combined net profit of NBFCs grew at a CAGR of 18.7 per cent during three-year period ending March 2017, making NBFCs one of the best-performing sectors on the bourses during the period. The BS NBFC index is up 35 per cent in the last 12 months against 17 per cent appreciati­on in the benchmark Sensex during the period.

Analysts now see a reversal as higher interest rates eat into industry margins, besides affecting the demand for retail credit. “Higher interest rates will affect NBFCs in two ways. First, it will compress industry’s NIMs or the spread of yield on assets over cost of funds. Second, higher interest rate could hit the demand for retail loans, lowering the industry’s pace of growth,” said G Chokkaling­am, founder and MD, Equinomics Research & Advisory.

The industry’s NIMs improved to 730 bps in the first half of FY18 on average, from 540 bps during FY14. Historical­ly there is a negative correlatio­n between NIMs and bond yields. One basis point is one one-hundredth of a per cent.

Analysts also expect a rise in competitio­n from commercial banks whose lending rates become more competitiv­e in a high interest rate scenario. “As lending rates rise, banks become more cost competitiv­e and they tend to grow faster than NBFCs. This will hurt NBFCs, especially the secondtier ones with lower credit rating and higher cost of funds,” Sinha said.

Equity investors, it seems, have already begun to rebalance their portfolio. The NBFC index is down 6.2 per cent in the current month against the 5.7 per cent decline in the Sensex during the period.

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