Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Banks’ aversion to NBFCS fuelled the liquidity crisis

- Shayan Ghosh shayan.g@livemint.com

MUMBAI : The liquidity crisis, which has become a bone of contention between the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) and the government, has its roots in banks’ reluctance to lend to non-banking financial companies (NBFCS), according to bankers

spoke to.

According to the chief financial officer of a leading public sector bank, lenders are wary of lending to certain NBFCS because of a heightened risk-perception about the sector. He said that ever since some of the NBFCS defaulted on short-term papers, banks had become more cautious in lending to them. “We are monitoring how these NBFCS cope with the commercial paper redemption pressures and that will be a crucial criterion for additional lending,” he said.

Commercial banks have three kinds of exposures to an NBFC: subscribin­g to their commercial papers, sanctionin­g a loan or a line of credit, and buying existing loans from them. According to RBI data, outstandin­g bank credit to all industry stood at ₹27.01 trillion in the fortnight ended 28 September, up 2.6% from the year-ago period. Loans to NBFCS stood at ₹5.46 trillion on the same fortnight, up 41.5% from the same period last year. This is the latest disaggrega­ted sectoral data available from RBI.

Data compiled by showed there was a liquidity surplus in the first half of August, while the second half saw a deficit. However, since 8 October, system liquidity has been in a deficit mode with the deficit widening to as much as ₹1,463.14 bil- lion on 22 October and settling at ₹1,159.98 crore on 30 October.

A press release from the central bank, dated 1 October, had said: “The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) had telegraphe­d in its previous post-monetary policy press conference­s that the system liquidity will move into deficit in the second half of the fiscal year and that the evolving liquidity conditions shall determine its choice of instrument­s for both transient and durable liquidity management.”

The central bank has through a series of open market operations (OMO) injected liquidity into the system.

Earlier this month, it announced ₹36,000 crore of OMO purchases and met its target in three tranches throughout the month. The banking regulator has also announced another ₹400 billion through the same route in November. The RBI’S monetary policy has decided to adopt a neutral liquidity stance. Under this, RBI aims to keep the call money rates closer to the repo rate.

A managing director and chief executive officer at a mid-size bank said on the condition of anonymity the bank is not lending to infra-financing NBFCS after the IL&FS crisis. He said the bank is not averse to lending to NBFCS but has adopted a calibrated approach on the sector. “Our bank is lending only to NBFCS that finance short-term assets and housing, a more secured class,” said the bankers. That apart, it has doled-out incentives to banks to allow flow of funds to NBFCS.

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 ?? REUTERS ?? Ralf Speth, CEO, JLR
REUTERS Ralf Speth, CEO, JLR

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