BusinessLine (Delhi)

BFSI sector may face headwinds

Regulatory tightening by RBI, SEBI could impact the entire sector, not just NBFCs and fintechs

- DHANANJAY SINHA Sinha is Co Head of Equities & Head of Research Strategy & Economics, Systematix Group

The RBI wasn't giving us false warnings when it woke up to systemic risks associated with reckless uncollater­alised retail lending by banks and NBFCs. Following the initial regulatory tightening starting in November 2023 it was predictabl­e that the intensity would increase.

Now, there have been actions against specific finance companies involved in rigging up prices of IPOs and debt instrument­s using the lending route. Recently, even SEBI has initiated tighter surveillan­ce on MFs regarding their exposures, specially regarding small and midcaps (SMID).

The central bank has also tightened the screws on fintech companies leveraging digital lending and payments aggregator space using cobranded credit card business. These measures have triggered a fall in the equity markets.

It would be naive to consider these episodes as isolated; a sharper decline in financial asset prices can cause capital erosion thereby triggering a chain reaction. Compared to the 201718 SMID meltdown, the current situation looks more vulnerable. Unlike the previous episode, which was dominated by investment through mutual funds, the current exuberance is pivoted on greater direct retail participat­ion catalysed by the digitisati­on boom.

NBFCs face a double whammy as RBI increased risk weights for both bank exposures on NBFCs and separately on retail lending of NBFCs as well. The latest actions are a fallout of companyspe­cific surveillan­ce.

Earlier, RBI had also warned about the overrelian­ce of NBFCs on borrowing from banks and overexposu­re of banks in the NBFC sector. NBFCs form the biggest chunk of services sector lending of banks; it is de facto retail lending. As the risks come to the fore, more actions may follow, impacting the BFSI space.

These regulatory actions may impact bank lending to NBFCs, resulting in higher credit costs.

Will banks be insulated? The view that banks will benefit from the RBI actions by gaining market share from

NBFCs is a simplistic one. The RBI is concerned about reckless uncollater­alized lending, including that by banks. Will that be reflected in the next Financial Stability Report?

SPILLOVER EFFECTS

What happens to the NBFC portfolio will have a spillover effect on banks as well. Lending to NBFCs typically serves as a via media to earn higher yield without taking the underwriti­ng risk, even as NBFCs are growing their uncollater­alized retail portfolio.

In addition, the rising defaults as a result of credit tightening would also have a spillover effect on banks if defaulters have borrowed from both

NBFCs and banks. In fact, a recent CAFRAL study shows that interconne­ction between banks and NBFCs has been growing significan­tly. This heightenin­g interconne­ction has been due to the various support mechanisms allowed by RBI, including the LTRO and TLTRO instrument­s, in the postCovid era allowing banks to buy asset portfolios of the NBFCs.

Separately, RBI is also working towards reducing the elevated credit deposit (CD) ratio of the banking sector, accentuate­d due to lagging deposit growth and exuberant retail lending. Our estimates show that the systemic CD ratio has risen closer to 80 per cent or a 30year peak (adjusted for the recent HDFC merger); bankspecif­ic data shows that for most large banks the CD ratios have risen by 700800 bps over the past 24 months.

Including credit, investment­s in government bonds, and cash, the overall allocation has risen close to 115 per cent, which is also a peak (ex HDFC merger). Hence, it is quite unlikely that banks can further increase their creditdepo­sit ratio by gaining market share from NBFCs even as they reduce lending to NBFCs. On the contrary, they may also see their exuberant retail lending slowing, due to rising default risk and the tightening measures initiated by the RBI.

The widening web of regulatory tightening by the RBI and SEBI forebodes that the next financial stability report of the RBI would be far more nuanced than the usual “all is well” grandstand­ing.

As the readjustme­nt process unfolds, sectors dependent on leveraged spending may slow down. India’s private final consumptio­n expenditur­e has been growing modestly at 3.03.5 per cent, much lower than the estimated real GDP growth of over 8 per cent and despite the exuberant retail lending. Consumptio­n demand might start aligning with a lower growth path determined by by household real income situation.

RBI has also been working towards reducing the credit-deposit ratio of banks, thanks to lagging deposit growth and rising uncollater­alised lending

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