Business Standard

NBFCs TO BENEFIT FROM PSB RECAP

- NAMRATA ACHARYA & T E NARASIMHAN With inputs from Abhijit Lele

Far from losing business to public sector banks (PSBs), which will receive capital from the government, non-bank finance companies (NBFCs) expect to benefit from access to credit on better terms and more opportunit­ies to sell banks infrastruc­ture and priority sector loans.

NBFC executives said banks had become hesitant lenders due to capital constraint­s and the need to protect assets. With banks back in the credit market, competitio­n would intensify, they added.

Better turnaround time, lastmile agility, and use of data analytics and technology provide NBFCs an edge over PSBs in the retail and SME loan segments.

Dinanath Dubhashi, managing director and chief executive officer of L&T Finance Holdings, said NBFCs’ relationsh­ip with banks had three facets -- competing for business, borrowing from banks, and selling banks infrastruc­ture and priority sector loans.

The market borrowings of NBFCs have grown in the last 18 months taking advantage of falling interest rates on commercial paper and bonds. Yet NBFCs continue to raise a sizeable portion of resources from banks. They can expect better terms from PSBs looking to expand their loan books.

According to rating agency ICRA, the total managed retail credit of NBFCs rose by 15 per cent in 12 months to about ~6.4 lakh crore by the end of June. Bank credit grew by only 6 per cent in the 12 months till June, according to the Reserve Bank of India.

The microfinan­ce and loan against property segments continued to record moderate growth, while the performanc­e of most other segments like commercial vehicles, passenger vehicles, two- and three-wheelers, and tractors remained largely rangebound, ICRA said.

Kaushik Banerjee, president and chief executive officer, asset-backed finance business, Magma Fincorp, said sectors that would see more credit disburseme­nt in the coming months were government infrastruc­ture projects, affordable housing and the MSME segment.

NBFCs may face some competitio­n in the MSME segment. But with formal channels accounting for only 15-20 per cent of the credit requiremen­t of MSMEs, the business of NBFCs is unlikely to be affected. The client base of NBFCs was quite different from that of banks, Banerjee said. Srei Equipment Finance, which depends for business growth on government infrastruc­ture projects, is expected to benefit from bank recapitali­sation, as this will lead to growth in the equipment leasing business.

“The bank recapitali­sation will lead to growth in the equipment finance business and project funding will increase. Competitio­n will rise but it is much better than no demand at all,” said Devendra Kumar Vyas, chief executive officer of the Srei Equipment Finance.

An executive with a Chennai-based finance company said recapitali­sation would not intensify competitio­n between NBFCs and PSBs. He pointed out PSBs were not strong in retail lending because they were not equipped to handle the transactio­nal intensity.

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