Business Standard

‘P2P firms need entry into secured lending’

- RAJAT GANDHI Founder & Chief Executive Officer, Faircent

Peer-to-peer (P2P) lending, basically crowd-funding, has seen exponentia­l growth in recent years with aggregate exposure now close to ~5,000 crore — more than double the projection made in the Financial Stability Report (FSR) of December 2021. This is mainly because lenders on these platforms are searching for higher yields. RAJAT GANDHI, founder and chief executive officer of Faircent, the country’s largest P2P firm, spoke with Raghu Mohan. Edited excerpts:

What explains the exponentia­l growth in P2P lending, even as legacy lenders are growing their footprint?

There’s a huge underserve­d and unserved market. That’s why P2P firms came into play in the first place and during Covid, this trend accelerate­d. And we are no more an “alternativ­e” platform, but very much part of the lending ecosystem. Banks and non-bank lenders place primacy on their existing relationsh­ips. But from a fresh originatio­n point and expansion of the market, we are doing it in a big way. This is not to suggest that others are not.

The other aspect is that with the flux around digital lending, many P2P players started to fill this vacuum. As a lot of digital transactio­ns were happening anyway, customers started moving towards P2P players.

Please profile the typical P2P customer.

On the supply side (those who lend on the platform), typically, this customer is either self-employed with enough cash, or is in business with investment­s of up to ~10 million, which could be a mix of stocks and fixed assets. In our case, we have a skew towards the self-employed, businessme­n and profession­als.

Those are the people who have the capital and cash-flows to invest. As for borrowers, our average loan ticket-size is around ~120,000, availed of by small businesses like mobile outlets, kirana stores, or rice mills. The average tenure of a loan is around 18-20 months, though we do give loans of up to 36 months.

What is in it for people to lend through a P2P platform when they can invest elsewhere – say, in debt mutual funds or stocks?

Even when you invest in a debt mutual fund, it typically has exposure to two, five or ten companies. You have a huge concentrat­ion risk. The stock markets are volatile and not everybody can take that risk. P2P is a relatively new asset class. So, I think it does have a certain amount of attraction. And, most importantl­y, it doesn’t have the stock markets’ volatility which is influenced by global factors, something most retail investors don’t understand anyway.

The Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI’S) FSR of December 2021 had also highlighte­d that given the level of inflation, investors are looking for a certain level of returns, and P2P platforms offer an incentive. The point is, it removes the instabilit­y of the markets. It’s not something which you have to monitor on a daily basis. You basically know what returns you are going to get, be it 10, 12 or 15 per cent — unless, of course, a lot of borrowers were to default at the same time.

Is there an auction system at work here — meaning, how do you match lenders with borrowers?

We started with auctions, but discontinu­ed it because not much of it was taking place. And the customers out here are very different. They want money quickly, and auctions take time. They didn’t have the patience to wait for 24 hours for offers to be accepted, rejected and get defined.

Another aspect was that borrowers would agree to loan pricing in the hope that they could service it and lenders were greedy. Price discovery (through auctions) was not happening, and we did away with it. We now have a straightfo­rward model wherein we fix the price (interest rate). It’s for borrowers to accept or reject the offer. The platform decides the pricing with borrowers rather than being settled between lenders (on the platform) and borrowers.

The loan-book of P2P firms is entirely unsecured as on date. Do you think there’s a case for stipulatin­g that a part of it be secured from a risk perspectiv­e?

In the long term, I think, the RBI should allow us to get into asset-based lending. This will help the loan portfolio to be stabilised, enable the longer-term to be extended and better-set borrowers to come in. So, for profitabil­ity, feasibilit­y and stability of P2P platforms, secured lending will help. A single product profile — unsecured — is unviable, and a threat to the platforms.

Full interview on www.business-standard.com

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