Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Working capital pain adds to firms’ stress

CASH CRUNCH India Inc is trying to avail of bridge funding

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NEW Mondal, the company’s Network DELHI: chief Every Logistics, executive cash time flow looks Anjani of forecasts, Fortigo at Since the he worries lockdown a little started more. last month, customer payments have been hard to come by.

Mondal has been struggling to manage spiralling receivable­s. He knows that cash is oxygen for his business, a logistics service provider with annual sales of close to ₹250 crore. result “Several do our systems not outstandin­g have customer in online place dues organisati­ons bill and processing have as a grown said. “Our substantia­lly,” payment cycle Mondal has stretched from the usual 60 days to 85.” With the lockdown now almost certain to be extended, companies are increasing­ly finding it hard to raise cash to pay employees and spend on other necessitie­s.

With payments now unlikely to come soon, executives such as Mondal are trying to avail of bridge funding to overcome the current cash crunch. Working capital is the money that companies need to run day-to-day operations such as paying suppliers and holding inventorie­s as they await payments from customers.

Industry watchers said while the current lockdown has impacted everyone, it has hurt the labour- and raw material-intensive manufactur­ing sector the most, prompting many to stop payments. That is creating a domino effect on other industries.

“We are not being able to generate revenues, as costs are being locked up in inventorie­s even though raw material is coming, leaving the overall working capital requiremen­t higher by at least 35%,” said Kartik Johari, vice president, Nobel Hygiene, a Mumbai-based diaper maker. To help ease the pain, Johari said that banks should increase working capital limits immediatel­y.

While banks are seemingly aware of the seriousnes­s of the situation, experts said that lenders may need instructio­ns from the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) and the government to go ahead.

“My sense is that working capital cycles will be extended. For whatever period, there is a standstill, at least for that period, the working capital cycle will get extended,” said Pallav Mohapatra, managing director and chief executive of Central Bank of India.

“The three-month moratorium announced by RBI on loan repayments may not be enough and in most cases, businesses may require forbearanc­es up to year, by when things should be back to normal hopefully,” said Sudhir Dash, chief executive and founder Unaprime Investment Advisors, a Mumbai-based investment bank.

“In whichever way you look at it, the cycle will be extended for most sectors. At an industry level, I believe, working capital margins are falling by 10-15 percentage points,” Central Bank’s

Mohapatra pointed out when asked about the measures taken. “We have framed the guidelines for easing of working capital requiremen­ts through reduction in margins, extension of the cover period on receivable­s and also on interchang­eability between fundbased working capital and nonfund based working capital.”

But even as more liquidity-easing measures are awaited, many have begun borrowing at high rates, which according to estimates, currently hover at 11-18%.

“Our working capital period cycle is typically 30-40 days including stocks and sold products in transit,” said Alok Chawla, chief executive officer and co-founder, Gizmobaba.com. “This is expected to temporaril­y double if we want to continue at the same scale and with no schemes from the government forthcomin­g, we, just like many other start-up entreprene­urs are considerin­g borrowing at high interest unsecured personal loans and taking advances from credit cards which could double the interest costs to us over the next two quarters.” he added.

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Industry watchers said the lockdown has hurt the manufactur­ing sector the most, prompting many to stop payments.
BLOOMBERG ■ Industry watchers said the lockdown has hurt the manufactur­ing sector the most, prompting many to stop payments.

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