Business Standard

Retail, MSMES may see rise in slippages

- ABHIJIT LELE

Asset quality of lenders did not see a sharp uptick despite severe economic disruption­s due to Covid-19 in 2020 and 2021 on timely regulatory steps like restructur­ing and liquidity support.

Now, owing to the present economic recovery phase, households and micro, small and medium enterprise­s (MSMES) saw a rise in defaults due to the end of payment moratorium and delayed business payments, said bankers.

Rating agency CRISIL has estimated that stressed assets — non-performing assets and restructur­ed loans — in banks’ portfolios could touch 11 per cent by March 2022, up from 9 per cent in March 2021.

The current level of NPAS masks the actual pain due to restructur­ing done under regulatory packages, both in 2020 and this year. After the first wave, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) allowed a blanket moratorium on payments. There was no dispensati­on this time, resulting in a spike in slippages during Q1 of FY22. There was a rise in NPAS in the retail and MSME segments, across public and private sector banks.

CARE Ratings review of Q1FY22 showed that gross non-performing assets (gross NPAS) in retail and MSME loan books of public sector banks rose to 7.28 per cent in June 2021 from about six per cent in June 2020. The incidence of bad loans was comparativ­ely less intense for private banks with GNPAS at 3.32 per cent in June, up from 2.01 per cent a year ago.

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