Business Today

THE RURAL RUSH

NBFCs see the next round of growth coming from rural markets as consumers latch on to financing schemes to buy consumer durables.

- By Ajita Shashidhar

NBFCs see the next round of growth coming from rural markets as consumers latch on to financing schemes to buy consumer durables.

Satyen Suryavansh­i, owner of consumer durables store Sri Swami Samarth Electronic­s in Ghoti village, near Nashik, is a happy man. Despite demonetisa­tion and the roll-out of the goods and services tax (GST) which impacted consumptio­n across the country, Suryavansh­i claims a 20 per cent growth in sales over the past six-seven months. From refrigerat­ors and flat screen television­s to air-conditione­rs, microwaves and fans, Suryavansh­i sells all kinds of consumer durables. His store caters to 10-15 adjoining villages each with a population of 500-1000. While good monsoons have a role to play, the reason for Suryavansh­i's good sales this year is quite different. “Consumer finance companies such as Bajaj Finance have started offering zero per cent finance in our village resulting in higher sales,” he says.

Suryavansh­i's farmer friend, Haribhau Gaikwad, 30, had taken a loan last year from a money lender to buy a ceiling fan and an LED TV at 8 per cent interest. This time round, Gaikwad opted for a zero per cent interest loan from Suryavansh­i's store through Bajaj Finance for a refrigerat­or. While the TV he bought was a local brand that he got 35 per cent cheaper than establishe­d brands, his new refrigerat­or is a Godrej and he is happy to pay a premium on it. In fact, till a year ago, Suryavansh­i had few establishe­d brands since there were few takers. Things are changing now. “People are investing in brands because of zero interest loans, and finance companies don't support local brands,” he explains.

Non-banking financial companies (NBFCs) see the next wave of growth from rural and semi-urban markets.

RAMESH IYER MD, Mahindra Finance “It won't be cost efficient as EMIs are smaller compared to automobile­s. Companies need a wider offering to be sustainabl­e.” KAMAL NANDI Business Head & EVP, Godrej Appliances “The highest growth is from rural areas and is a space to watch out. Much of our company's rural growth can be attributed to NBFCs”

Rural business accounts for 13 per cent of Bajaj Finance’s total AUM (assets under management) of Rs 72,139 crore. “Rural AUM is growing at 137 per cent year-on-year on a lower base. It will be a

1,000 crore profit pool business in the next five years,” says Rajeev Jain, CEO, Bajaj Finance.

Kamal Nandi, Business Head & EVP, Godrej Appliances, attributes much of his company's rural growth to NBFCs. Godrej is in the final stages of tying up with an NBFC to push sales in semi-urban and rural markets. While consumer finance as an option to purchase a consumer durable is close to 60 per cent in metros, it's hardly 10 per cent in rural markets. “But the highest growth is from rural areas and is a space to watch out,” says Nandi. Consumer durable finance is a 62,130 crore market.

Rural markets contribute­d to 30 per cent of the sales of HDB Financial Services (the NBFC arm of HDFC Bank) this Diwali. The biggest challenge in rural markets was assessing credit worthiness of consumers, but tools such as Aadhar will streamline the process, says an HDB official.

Ramesh Iyer, Managing Director, Mahindra Finance, says consumer durable financing is a high volume game. “It won't be cost efficient as EMIs are smaller compared to automobile­s. Companies need a wider offering to be sustainabl­e.”

Sanjay Nandrajog, Group CEO, Sahaj e-Village (a SREI initiative which offers digital last mile services for banking, insurance and consumer durables), says while an opportunit­y exists, most consumer durable companies don't have last mile reach. “It will be a slow pick-up till companies invest on last mile reach.” But NBFCs are leaving no stone unturned. From buying consumer durables and selling to rural consumers directly to tripartite profit sharing deals with the durable company and the local retailer, they are going all-out. “Our rural consumer loan segment witnessed an 86 per cent growth in Q2 FY18. Demand growth is likely to accelerate,” observes Jain of Bajaj Finance. Rural is the new growth market for NBFCs.

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