Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

Loan moratorium, Covid-19 hit EMI recovery biz

- Shayan Ghosh shayan.g@livemint.com ■

MUMBAI: Debt collectors in India have suddenly found themselves jobless, ironically at a time when lenders are grappling with rising cases of overdue loans, as the country’s central bank has offered a temporary reprieve to companies and individual­s from making loan repayments because of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Collection agencies, which solely depend on lenders for recovery assignment­s, have seen business dry up abruptly.

Four agencies Mint spoke to said their revenues have dropped more than 90% as banks have stopped giving any new business since the lockdown started on March 25.

Sanjeeb Manoranjan Saha, the owner of Storm Financial Services, said his company now only has a handful of pending non-performing asset cases. The company, based in Thane near Mumbai, takes assignment­s from private banks and nonbanking financial companies, to recover both bad loans and loans that are overdue but not yet classified as non-performing.

“We are not able to make any money as there are no new cases allocated by banks since the lockdown. That apart, manpower is one of the primary resources of this industry and 40% of my employees have gone back home. While some of them are willing to work from home, others are reluctant,” said Saha.

Recovery agencies are paid a commission of at least 3% on the amount recovered and it changes depending on how long the loan was delinquent and its size. The moratorium, Saha said, has caused a lot of disruption in the industry. In some instances, the moratorium led to customers thinking it is a waiver of equated monthly instalment­s and not a mere deferment.

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