BusinessLine (Delhi)

To unlock liquidity, larger banks may tap securitisa­tion route

- K Ram Kumar

Larger banks may explore securitisa­tion in the current financial year to unlock liquidity and support loan growth in the backdrop of deposit growth continuing to lag credit growth.

So far, non-banking finance companies, including housing finance companies, small finance banks and some small banks have tapped the securitisa­tion route whenever they faced a situation where resource mobilisati­on has not kept pace with asset creation.

Securitisa­tion is a structured process whereby identified pool of loans are packaged together and sold to an SPV (special purpose vehicle), which in turn issues PTCs (Pass Through Certificat­es) to investors.

Direct assignment is a variation of the securitisa­tion transactio­n, whereby the identified assets are sold on a bilateral basis to the investor (and no separate SPV is set up).

Sanjay Agarwal, Senior Director, CARE Ratings, said: “The banking system is in a churn right now in terms of di„erence in credit and deposit growth. So, in FY25, there may be some solution to narrow this gap.

“We are likely to see first few securitisa­tion transactio­ns in FY25 from larger banks. Right now, it is process of discovery.”

HIGHER CREDIT GROWTH

He said that historical­ly, for the last three-four decades, credit growth has always been higher than deposit growth, except for about five years from 2014 when the banking sector faced asset quality reviews and then Covid challenges.

“We have a very high CD (credit-deposit) ratio of 80 per cent, thereabout­s. The earlier gap of 400-500 basis points between credit and deposit growth in FY23 has now narrowed down to 200250 bps. So, to a certain extent, this gap is likely to remain,” Agarwal said.

If larger banks enter the fray for securitisi­ng their loans, the market volumes could go up. According to ICRA, the overall volumes for FY2024 grew by 4 per cent year-on-year (YoY) to ₹1.88-lakh crore.

Abhishek Dafria, Senior Vice-President and Group Head, Structured Finance Ratings, ICRA, said: “The securitisa­tion market volumes expanded by 25 per cent YoY in FY2024, if we exclude HDFC Ltd, which exited the market in Q2 (July-September) FY2024. The increase in volumes was driven by both existing large originator­s, who securitise­d higher volumes during the year, and new originator­s.

“We witnessed a sharp increase in securitisa­tion by small finance banks as well as initial steps taken by a few private sector banks in this space to support their portfolio growth, given the recent challenges in deposit growth rates.”

If similar trends continue, ICRA projects securitisa­tion volumes to comfortabl­y cross ₹2-lakh crore in FY2025.

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