Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

Shock of 2nd wave to be less severe: Fitch

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NEW DELHI: Fitch Ratings on Monday said the shock to economic activity from the latest wave of Covid-19 wave will be less severe than the one in 2020, but recovery is likely to be delayed as economic activity dropped in April-May.

The global rating agency said there are growing indication­s that the latest wave will add to risks among financial institutio­ns and anticipate­s that the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) may introduce additional measures to support the financial sector if indication­s of economic stress mount. “We expect the shock to economic activity from the latest wave of the pandemic in India to be less severe than in 2020, even though caseloads and fatalities are much higher... Nonetheles­s, indicators show activity dropped in April-May, which is likely to delay the country’s recovery, and the number of newly recorded cases remains extremely high,” Fitch Ratings said in a report.

It said currently authoritie­s are implementi­ng lockdowns more narrowly, and companies and individual­s have adjusted behaviour in ways that cushion the effects. “There is a risk that disruption could persist longer and spread further than our baseline case assumes, particular­ly if lockdowns are introduced in more regions, or nationwide,” it added.

India is facing the world’s worst outbreak of Covid-19 cases with more than 300,000 new daily Covid-19 cases being reported for two weeks now and the new cases reached more than 400,000 new daily cases over the weekend. Over 246,000 people in India have died from the virus infection. Public health system is buckling under the weight of surging infections and deaths with several parts of the country reporting shortage of hospital beds, medical oxygen, medicines and vaccines.

“India’s slow pace of vaccinatio­n means that the country could remain vulnerable to further waves of the pandemic even once the current surge subsides. Just 9.4% of the population had received at least one vaccine dose as of May 5, according to figures from Our World in Data,” it added.

Fitch had last month said that the surge in Covid-19 cases could add to headwinds facing India’s banks and non-banking financial companies (NBFCs) if it led to a resurgence in asset quality pressures. The latest data suggest that this risk is mounting, the agency said. “There are growing indication­s that India’s latest wave of Covid-19 infections will add to risks among financial institutio­ns by sapping nearterm momentum from the economic recovery,” it said.

The measures announced by the RBI on May 5 will provide some relief to financial institutio­ns in the next 12-24 months, but largely at the expense of postponing the recognitio­n and resolution of underlying assetquali­ty problems.

Among the RBI’s measures, the reintroduc­tion of a restructur­ing scheme for individual­s, small businesses and MSMEs may be significan­t for financial institutio­ns.

 ??  ?? Slow pace of vaccinatio­n means India remains vulnerable to further waves, warned Fitch.
Slow pace of vaccinatio­n means India remains vulnerable to further waves, warned Fitch.

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