Business Standard

MSMES, REALTORS GET A HELPING HAND

EXTENDS RESTRUCTUR­ING WINDOW FOR MSME LOANS ALLOWS EXTENSION OF DCCO OF PROJECT LOANS FOR COMMERCIAL REALTORS

- SUBRATA PANDA & NAMRATA ACHARYA

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) on Thursday extended the window for one-time restructur­ing of loans given to micro, small and medium enterprise­s (MSMES) to December 31. Earlier, it was on March 31.

Under this plan, lenders can essentiall­y restructur­e the loans to MSMES without reclassify­ing their asset class.

Also, in a major relief to the real estate sector, the RBI allowed extending the date of commenceme­nt of commercial operations (DCCO) of project loans for commercial real estate by a year without downgradin­g the asset.

The extension of restructur­ing window for MSME loans by the RBI comes after the Budget announceme­nt, wherein Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman had urged the central bank to extend the window until March 31, 2021. She in her Budget speech had said the restructur­ing window provided by the RBI helped more than 500,000 MSMES in the last one year.

“…It has been decided to extend the benefit of one-time restructur­ing without an asset classifica­tion downgrade to standard accounts of GST registered MSMES that were in default as on January 1, 2020. The restructur­ing under the scheme has to be implemente­d latest by December 31, 2020”, the RBI said.

This window given by the RBI will enable lenders to restructur­e MSME loans without re-classifica­tion of the accounts, which were in default as of January 1, 2020. Earlier, the RBI had allowed a one-time restructur­ing of MSME loans that were in default but “standard” as of January 1, 2019, without an asset classifica­tion downgrade. But the RBI has added a caveat — the restructur­ing window will only apply to good services tax (Gst)-registered MSMES. Experts believe had the restructur­ing scheme came without the GST caveat, the quantum of loans restructur­ed under the scheme would have been much higher.

“Those MSMES which are on the verge of becoming NPAS will be saved,” said Ashok Kumar Pradhan, MD and CEO of United Bank of India.

According to Rajnish Kumar, chairman, State Bank of India: “Extending the date of restructur­ing of MSME advances will also help the sector navigate the current business downturn and is a logical corollary of the Budget announceme­nt”.

The RBI data suggests in the micro and small segment, credit growth has been negative (-3.4 per cent) in the first eight months of the current fiscal year (until November end). For medium enterprise­s, it was -3.6 per cent. On a year-onyear basis, credit growth until November end in micro and small, as well as medium enterprise­s, has been negative 0.1 per cent and 2.4 per cent, respective­ly. Also, the Transunion Cibil data shows non-performing assets (NPAS) in the MSME segment rose from 11.7 per cent in September 2018 to 12.2 per cent in September 2019.

According to experts, the MSME sector has been grappling with issues like delayed repayments and muted demand in the current economic environmen­t. Meanwhile, the RBI also said to further strengthen monetary transmissi­on; it has decided to link pricing of loans by scheduled commercial banks for medium enterprise­s to an external benchmark, effective April 1, 2020.

“The move will accelerate the transmissi­on of interest rate movement to the (MSME) sector and lighten interest burden on them (MSMES). Further, the extension of the one-time restructur­ing window for MSMES will bring some relief to the sector and keep sectoral NPAS under control,” said Krishnan Sitaraman, senior director, CRISIL Ratings.

As far as extending the DCCO of project loans for commercial real estate by a year without downgradin­g the asset is concerned, the experts believe this will nudge developers to complete the stuck projects, rather than focus on their liquidity issues. “The extension of DCCO of project loans for commercial real estate by another year will allow the real estate sector to focus on project completion,” Kumar said.

This move will come in handy for both developers and housing finance companies (HFCS), which have a considerab­le wholesale portfolio. Shares of HFCS rallied sharply after the RBI’S relief to the real estate sector. Shares of Indiabulls Housing Finance gained the most (15.3 per cent), followed by LIC Housing Finance and PNB Housing Finance which rose 8.2 per cent and 4.9 per cent, respective­ly.

The RBI has said this move will complement the steps the government has taken to ease the stress in the sector. The government last year had announced the setting up of an alternativ­e investment fund to give a cushion to developers for their unfinished projects. SBICAP Ventures, a fund management arm of SBI, is managing the realty fund.

Shishir Baijal, chairman and managing director, Knight Frank, said: The RBI has taken note of the concerns of the real estate sector. The long-standing industry demand for asset classifica­tion has been addressed. This will augment the liquidity situation for developers, too.

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