Business Today

Big Dreams

Satin Creditcare Network, the biggest in the business with nearly 2.6 million clients, wants to be a universal financial services player

- By SUMANT BANERJI

In many ways, 2005 was a breakthrou­gh year for Satin Creditcare Network Ltd ( SCNL), one of India’s oldest microfinan­ce companies. Following a 2004 Reserve Bank of India ( RBI) guideline that altered its category for accepting deposits, it had to refund its 6,000 clients a total of `6 crore. It could no longer depend upon pygmy deposits from small traders and shopkeeper­s, as it had been doing since its inception in 1990, and had to find new ways to raise funds. It decided to approach the Small Industries Developmen­t Bank of India ( SIDBI), for which it hired a consultant. “The consultant asked us what numbers should he put for the first three years. Our balance sheet was `6-7 crore, so we said let us put `6 crore this year, `7 crore the next year and `8 crore the following year,” says H.P. Singh, Founder and Chairman and Managing Director. “The consultant was amused that we wanted to approach SIDBI with a business plan of `6 crore. I told him to do whatever he felt like. So, he put `25 crore for the first year, `50 crore for the second year and `100 crore for the third year. After that meeting,

we burst out laughing, thinking he was out of his mind. We were not convinced that we would be able to reach that kind of scale.” Singh received his first big cheque of `2 crore from SIDBI in 2005. This set the ball rolling. Soon, others such as ICICI Bank and HDFC Bank lined up to fund the company. Satin Creditcare did not meet the targets set by the consultant, but in 2008, its balance sheet had grown over six-fold to `40 crore.

“SIDBI was already looking for somebody doing microfinan­ce in North India. Once it came on board, others followed,” he says. “There was a herd mentality in microfinan­ce. Wherever one bank went, the others followed. So, if you open one door, it leads to many more doors opening for you.” Singh has been successful in opening several doors over the years.

A chartered accountant by vocation, he started out as an internal auditor for Shriram Honda, in the late 1980s. The company was struggling to sell gensets in Delhi’s Trans-Yamuna area, where banks and financial institutio­ns were reluctant to lend. Singh saw an opportunit­y. He borrowed `50,000 from his father, who had just retired, in 1990, and started financing shopkeeper­s under what is today known as the daily collection method.

“They used to technicall­y buy or lease gensets from us and pay daily instalment­s. Our agent collected `50

from each shop every day. The genset cost `9,300. We would recover our money in 180 days,” says Singh. “That was easy for traders too. Once they had gensets, they wanted loans for something else, as paying daily instalment­s had become a habit. So, we started giving loans for two-wheelers and later for working capital. That was microfinan­ce, though we were not aware of it then.”

The company is today among the biggest in the business with nearly 2.6 million clients, 701 branches in 16 states, 7,000 employees and assets under management – a key parameter for microfinan­ce companies – of `3,736 crore. It is one of the few microfinan­ce companies to be listed on the Bombay Stock Exchange (since August 2016); this gives it extra points for credibilit­y in a sector hit by multiple scams. In the third quarter of 2016/17, when the industry went through severe stress due to demonetisa­tion, Satin reported a 13 per cent rise in net profit and 52 per cent rise in revenues over the previous year.

“This is our biggest crisis. Cash is the raw material for our sector,” he says. “People have lost their livelihood. Businesses are reporting lesser incomes. For them the first priority is survival. Business or repayment of loans come later. If there is no currency, what can anybody do? It was literally mayhem. We started with 15 per cent collection in November. Thankfully, we have reached 85-90 per cent overall now. It will take us another month-and-a-half to go back to normal, but the worst is behind us.”

The company remains a favourite with the investor community with most brokerage houses having a “Buy” rating on it, though some analysts point at the concentrat­ion of business in three states — Uttar Pradesh, Bihar and Madhya Pradesh – as a potential risk. “It is exposed to regional concentrat­ion risk as its operations in the three states account for 69.79 per cent business; UP alone is 34.4 per cent of the portfolio,” says Ankita Sehgal, Senior Manager, Care Ratings. “Although the company has been able to maintain good asset quality so far with gross NPA and net NPA ratios at 0.24 per cent and 0.12 per cent, respective­ly, it’s collection efficiency has been hit by demonetisa­tion. Against nearly 100 per cent earlier, collection­s were 65 per cent between November 8 and December 20, 2016.The biggest impact has been in Uttar Pradesh, where collection­s have been 45 per cent as against 80 per cent in other states.”

The company received a minor jolt in 2015 when the Reserve Bank of India rejected its applicatio­n for a small bank licence. Smaller players such as ESAF Microfinan­ce and Investment­s Pvt. Ltd., RGVN (North East) Microfinan­ce Ltd., Suryoday Micro Finance Pvt. Ltd. and Utkarsh Micro Finance Pvt. Ltd. got the licences. Singh is now gearing up for a universal banking licence. “In some ways I wished we do not get the licence. If you look at history, specific banking institutio­ns such as cooperativ­e banks and regional rural banks have not been able to take off because they have felt restricted in the domain they are operating in,” he says. The company, in fact, wants to move beyond microfinan­ce into other financial services. It has received an approval to float a subsidiary for micro and affordable housing. Last year, it acquired Taraashna Services Pvt Ltd, which acts as a business correspond­ent for banks and financial institutio­ns. The company is bolstering its team by hiring executives in human resources, chief investment officer, internal audit and risk head roles to step up to the next level.

In the near term, Satin wants to expand its business to cover five million customers, have assets of $5 billion, and launch institutio­nal lending and remittance services. In future, it wants to become a full-scale bank offering a range of credit, savings and insurance products. Singh’s dream is to take the entire bouquet of financial services, including mutual funds, to people at the bottom of the pyramid.

“If we successful­ly diversify in financial services and do well in financial inclusion, we may pitch for a universal banking licence. But the specified domain knowledge of the bottom of the pyramid will be our mainstay,” he says. “The potential is huge. We want to become a hybrid of everybody. We want to monetise rural assets, which has not been done so far. Why can’t mutual funds or insurance be for rural markets?”

For a company that was scared to set steep targets for itself, Satin Creditcare is truly dreaming big now. ~

 ??  ?? H.P. Singh, Chairman and Managing Director, Satin Creditcare Network
H.P. Singh, Chairman and Managing Director, Satin Creditcare Network
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