Hindustan Times (Noida)

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 nonmicrofi­nance 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. The lender wants to scale this loan book and hive it off as a non-banking financial company.

Experts said there used to be a huge concentrat­ion of noncollate­ralized assets on the book of MFIS, and increasing secured loans would help them diversify. In addition, loan ticket sizes under the secured categories would be more than what microfinan­ce allows and in products that MFIS cannot venture into otherwise.

While the Reserve Bank circular has been beneficial to an extent, industry experts said that there are some areas that microlende­rs have approached the regulator about.

 ?? 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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