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Lender bullish on Indian villages

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MUMBAI: The recovery in India’s rural economy is likely to curb bad loans and boost profit at financial companies that specialise in credit to the country’s villages, according to one of the biggest such lenders.

Mahindra & Mahindra Financial Services Ltd, which offers loans for equipment and vehicles in 330,000 of India’s roughly 600,000 villages, is seeing business growing and bad loans dropping since the middle of 2017.

That’s because the crucial monsoon rainfall was normal last year and the negative effects of the government’s shock decision to invalidate high-value currency notes is fading as authoritie­s step up spending on roads and healthcare across the hinterland, said M&M Financial managing director Ramesh Iyer.

“We have a bullish forecast for the agrarian economy,” Iyer said in an interview at the company’s headquarte­rs in Mumbai, adding that delinquent customers are now resuming loan repayments.

“The twin cash flow – income from farm produce and government’s infra spend – is leading to an improvemen­t in rural sentiment.”

India had been ravaged by insufficie­nt rainfall since 2015 and Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s cash ban the following year caused crop prices to crash, triggering a wave of farmer protests across India.

That pushed authoritie­s to shift policy from keeping food costs low for consumers to offering farmers higher prices for their produce, and last week the government of Maharashtr­a state – epicentre of the agrarian crisis -- agreed to consider forgiving the debt of more farmers.

More money in the hands of farmers stands to boost demand for tractors and trucks, benefiting companies like M&M Financial.

The market for agricultur­al credit in India is dominated by state-run banks, which are used as policy tools given that the bulk of India’s population depends on agricultur­e for their livelihood.

However, government-controlled lenders have been hit by the souring of the credit they extended to industrial companies, which has curbed new loans. This has allowed nonbank financial companies to grab a bigger market share, with M&M Financial and its peers accounting for about 21% of loans in the year to March 2017.

M&M Financial last quarter reported its strongest growth in profits since at least 2010 due to recoveries in non-performing loans, and management expects lower fresh delinquenc­ies going forward, analysts at Emkay Global said in January. — Bloomberg

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