Business Standard

Banks’ asset quality to worsen but face less risk of defaults: Moody’s

- ABHIJIT LELE

Ratings agency Moody’s on Wednesday said corporate houses will not be immune to the deep economic contractio­n in India following the Covid-19 outbreak. However, risks from corporate loans are lower now than in the 2012-19 period as both banks and corporate houses took steps to repair asset quality and financial profile.

The Covid disruption will strain finances of households and small businesses more severely, Moody’s said. “While asset quality risks are rising for Indian banks amid the country’s economic contractio­n, risks from corporate loans have decreased from the previous credit cycle,” Moody’s said.

“Corporates will not be immune from the ongoing contractio­n… Near-term stress at corporates is already visible in the very weak performanc­e in the quarter ended June 2020,” says Srikanth Vadlamani, vice-president and senior credit officer at Moody’s.

Lending in the past few years has been concentrat­ed towards stronger companies amid an overall slowdown in capital expenditur­e, while banks have also become more conservati­ve in selecting borrowers.

Among the corporate sectors, loans to finance and real estate companies, which together make up a large share of total bank

loans, are most at risk. Both sectors are facing operating cash-flow challenges.

Sectors most affected by the pandemic and the lockdown, such as transporta­tion

and hospitalit­y, are also vulnerable, although banks’ direct exposures to these borrowers are relatively small, the rating agency added.

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