Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

MFIS enter secured loans biz to pare risk

- Shayan Ghosh shayan.g@livemint.com

A clutch of microfinan­ciers is venturing into secured asset classes such as mortgages and gold loans to diversify their portfolio and balance the risk of unsecured microlendi­ng with loans that require collateral.

The strategy change took shape after a Reserve Bank of India (RBI) circular in March allowed microfinan­ce institutio­ns (MFIS) to lend 25% of their total assets in non-microfinan­ce loans. Before that, they were allowed to lend 15% to non-mfi customers.

A loan has to be towards a borrower with an annual household income of up to ₹3 lakh to qualify as microfinan­ce.

The loans should also be devoid of collateral, and customers must not be penalized for paying ahead of the original tenure.

For instance, Creditacce­ss Grameen, a Bengaluru-based microlende­r, is entering the secured lending segment, including mortgages, gold and two-wheeler loans.

While mortgage ticket sizes will be in the range of ₹6-8 lakh, gold loans will be about ₹45,000-50,000, and ticket sizes of two-wheeler loans will be in the range of ₹70,000-75,000.

“First, we want to get into this from a pure diversific­ation angle because beyond a certain size, we did not want to have just one class of asset, and that, too, completely unsecured,” said Ganesh Narayanan, deputy chief executive and chief business officer, Creditacce­ss Grameen.

That apart, it is also a natural progressio­n for customers, Narayanan

said. The lender, Narayanan said, loses around 15% of its customers annually, and 5-6% of them tend to move to other institutio­ns because the microfinan­cier cannot meet their growing demand. In five years, it expects to build a non-microfinan­ce book of ₹5,000-6,000 crore, most of which will be secured loans. “I am sourcing a fresh customer and then giving it to somebody else. That is not something we want to do,” he said.

Others are in the fray as well. Fusion Microfinan­ce, which made its public trading debut recently, wants to drive a secured business but only target small businesses, news agency Press Trust of India reported on October 30.

As of June 30, its total assets under management were at ₹7,389 crore, and it had 2.9 million active borrowers. Devesh Sachdev, founder and chief executive of the microlende­r, was cited by PTI as saying that Fusion has been lending to small businesses for some time now and currently has ₹200 crore of such assets.

 ?? MINT ?? MFIS are entering segments including mortgages, gold and two-wheeler loans.
MINT MFIS are entering segments including mortgages, gold and two-wheeler loans.

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