Business Standard

Auto-debit bounces dip in July as stress eases for borrowers

- SUBRATA PANDA Mumbai, 17 August

In an indication of easing financial stress among borrowers, the number of unsuccessf­ul auto-debit requests through the National Automated Clearing House (NACH) platform declined in July, reversing a three-month trend that started with the second wave of the Covid-19 pandemic.

According to the NACH data, of the 86.4-million transactio­ns initiated in July, 33.23 per cent, or 28.7 million transactio­ns, failed, while 57.7 million were successful.

Compared to June, this is a significan­t improvemen­t in bounce rates. In June, of a total of 87.8-million transactio­ns initiated, over 36.5 per cent, or 32 million initiated, failed.

In May, 35.91 per cent, or 30.8 million transactio­ns, failed.

In April, of the 85.4-million auto-debit transactio­ns initiated, 56.3 million were successful, while 29.08 million failed, which makes up for 34.05 per cent of the total transactio­ns.

“Bounce rates - both in value and volume terms - are down in July, and the recovery has been good. This time, the lockdowns were not as restrictiv­e as they were during the first wave. The economic impact was lesser. This downward turn in bounce rates should sustain. We have not reached pre-covid levels of bounce rates so far. There is still some stress in the system,” said Anil Gupta, vice-president, ICRA.

The unsuccessf­ul autodebit requests through the NACH platform are generally referred to as bounce rates. NACH, a bulk payment system operated by the National Payments Corporatio­n of India, facilitate­s one-to-many credit transfers, such as payment of dividend, interest, salary, pension, as also collection of payments towards electricit­y, gas, telephone, water, and periodic instalment­s towards loans, investment­s in mutual funds, and insurance premium. These are applicable for inter-bank mandates or between a bank and a nonbanking financial company (NBFC) or a financial technology (fintech) lender.

In March, before the second wave reared its ugly head, autodebit payment bounces - as a percentage of total transactio­ns initiated - touched a low since the start of the pandemic. Only 32.7 per cent of all auto-debit payment transactio­ns initiated failed.

Since December, the share of unsuccessf­ul auto-debit requests - as a percentage - had been declining steadily and was below 40 per cent, indicating higher regularity in equated monthly instalment­s, utility and insurance premium payments by consumers.

After touching a low of 32.7 per cent in March, auto-debit payment bounces started rising from April onwards due to the second wave and remained elevated in May and June, but came down in July, as the impact of the second wave started receding gradually.

The decline in auto-debit transactio­ns had peaked in June last year, when the failure rate was over 45 per cent. Despite the bounce rate gradually declining from the peak seen during the initial months of the pandemic, it has remained higher than the precovid levels.

In January and February 2020, the bounce rate was around 31 per cent. In 2020-21, the unsuccessf­ul auto-debit requests constitute­d 38.91 per cent of total requests. In 201920, it was 30.3 per cent; in 201819, it was 23.3 per cent.

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