Business Standard

MSMES may need more restructur­ing after moratorium

- NAMRATA ACHARYA

Micro, small, and medium enterprise­s ( MSMES) might need large-scale restructur­ing in August once the moratorium on loan repayment is lifted, people in the industry have said.

Most small businesses have started opening up with Unlock 1.0 but they continue to remain under stress due to lack of demand.

In March, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) had launched three-month moratorium on loans, which was extended by another three months. Customers can now avail of moratorium till August, albeit at a higher cost on account of accrued interests.

“About 40-50 per cent of borrowers are availing of the moratorium and the stress is likely to continue. Across the banking sector, small businesses have been seriously impacted and banks might have to make high provisions for them if restructur­ing is not done. This will seriously impact balance sheets of all banks,” said Samit Ghosh, founder of Ujjivan Financial Services, adding that MSMES might need further restructur­ing after the moratorium period is over.

S Harisankar, managing director and chief executive officer of Punjab & Sind Bank, said they were adopting a wait and watch approach. “If cash flow improves, MSMES will be self-sustainabl­e. If it doesn’t, we will have to be open for further restructur­ing and forbearanc­e,” he said.

Small industries have proposed to extend the moratorium till March 31, 2021. “For most MSMES, the supply chain is largely disrupted, there is an acute labour shortage, and the export market is very weak. Most importantl­y, there is not much demand in the market,”

said Chandrakan­t Salunkhe, founder and president of SME Chamber of India and SME Importers Associatio­n of India.

According to estimates by Small Industries Developmen­t Bank of India (Sidbi), recoveries have been around 40-65 per cent in June for most non-banking financial companies, including microfinan­ce operators.

Microfinan­ce lenders that lend to small businesses have been witnessing better recoveries as their lending has been mostly concentrat­ed in rural areas. Most of the loans sanctioned by Sidbi have been for emergency purposes, such as paying staff salaries, according to sources. Sidbi had received ~15,000 crore from the RBI to provide financial help to MSMES.

“Although 75 per cent of our customers are in rural areas, if we look at pure urban customers, we find small businesses have been very badly affected. It is quite possible that they might need some restructur­ing once the moratorium is lifted,” said H P Singh, chairman and managing director, Satin Creditcare Network.

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