Gulf News

India’s credit binging ways may have just started

- By Andy Mukherjee

Narendra Modi, the Indian prime minister, took two big blows in less than 24 hours. Investors should worry less about the bruises, and more about what he might do to recover from them before next year’s general elections. The first knock came on Monday evening when besieged Reserve Bank of India governor Urjit Patel abruptly resigned. Although he cited personal reasons, nobody is in any doubt that it was New Delhi’s incessant harassment that led to the monetary chief’s early exit.

Team Modi, it appears, is out to reshape the RBI, ultimately leaving it with an emaciated balance sheet, little power of supervisio­n over banking and finance firms, and under the thumb of a bunch of bureaucrat­s. Why an 83-year-old institutio­n needed such a remaking now became clear in the second punch. Votes counted on Tuesday handed defeats to the ruling party in three key state elections.

The fact that Modi’s personal popularity is struggling to pull votes puts a big question mark around the outcome of next year’s parliament­ary polls. How does Modi make it right with voters in six months?

How does a government that has little fiscal firepower deal with agrarian distress and dismal growth in urban jobs? By getting a credit boom going, of course. With the blessing of a pliant central bank.

That’s where the whack of Patel’s departure is related to the thwack Modi got from voters. What the prime minister might do in response could please speculator­s, but longterm investors should be nervous.

Stimulatin­g the economy is fine, but who’ll lead the charge? Large corporate balance-sheets in India are still under repair. And among the

21 state-run banks, which have the lion’s share of cheap deposits, as many as 11 are facing various degrees of lending restraints as a punishment by the RBI for their prior recklessne­ss.

What Modi needs now is a central bank that will shield errant corporate debtors from bankruptcy, and unshackle the undercapit­alised state-run banks, so they can get together and start a new credit party.

Among the 21 state-run banks, which have the lion’s share of cheap deposits, as many as 11 are facing various degrees of lending restraints as a punishment by the RBI for their prior recklessne­ss.

Balance sheet raid

Better still, the lenders could be recapitali­sed by raiding the RBI’s balance sheet to help unleash their animal spirits. That, after all, was also a bone of contention between Patel and

New Delhi, which believes the central bank has something like $50 billion of excess capital sitting idle on its balance sheet.

Indian markets’ behaviour on Tuesday showed how traders are viewing Patel’s exit as a get-out-of-jail-free card. An index of state-run lenders jumped 2.65 per cent. Yes Bank Ltd., a private-sector lender which has repeatedly misreporte­d its bad loans to the regulator, and whose cofounder, Rana Kapoor, has been asked by the RBI to leave as CEO by next month, surged more than 7 per cent. But it’s the non-bank shadow lenders that will do the heavy lifting. With the liquidity crunch brought on by the bankruptcy of infrastruc­ture lender IL&FS Group easing, bank lending to these finance companies is expanding again, and they’re likely to rev up everything from truck financing to subprime mortgages.

Capital isn’t a problem. After all, it’s not uncommon for the equity in shadow finance companies’ operating companies to be funded via bonds issued by their unlisted holding companies, which are lapped up by Indian mutual funds. The RBI has so far been too caught up with banks to look closely under the hoods of these shadow lenders. Now, with a pro-growth government dictating the regulator’s agenda, limits on leverage could be relaxed even further.

Desperate populism doesn’t always need the state’s resources — as long as taxpayers are on the hook to socialise private losses later. Things don’t have to be so bleak, but the twin blows to Modi have surely raised the risk.

Exhibit A: the appointmen­t, after the election results, of Shaktikant­a Das, the former Finance Ministry bureaucrat who had executed Modi’s draconian currency ban in late 2016, as the next RBI chief. Modi would have known that if Patel’s leaving had done damage to the perception of the RBI’s independen­ce, the naming of Das would do nothing to reverse it.

But central bank autonomy doesn’t win votes. A marketplea­sing credit binge just might do the trick.

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