MANAGING CREDIT- PART III-NON-BANK CREDIT IN INDIA
MANAGING
CREDIT- PART III
(In Times of Disruption Caused by
Covid-19 and Economic Lockdown)
NON-BANK
CREDIT IN INDIA
Non-Banks and Credit in
India
As noted in first two
parts of this series of blogs, credit outstanding to governments, businesses
and households at the end of financial year 2020-21 is about Rs. 300 lakh crore
or $4 trillion @ Rs. 75 to a dollar. Half of this credit is owned by the banking
systems- banks and the central bank put together. The remaining half of the
credit is provided by all types of the non-banks, the savers directly and the
rest of the world.
Institutional players
in this space are non-bank finance companies (NBFCs), housing finance companies
(HFCs), retirement savings funds (RSFs) like Employees Provident Fund
Organisation (EPFO) and New Pension Scheme (NPS), insurance companies, most
prominently the Life Insurance Corporation (LIC) and Mutual Funds (MFs).
Households invests
their savings in different forms in many of these institutional players. Almost
the entire resources of RSFs and LIC comes from households. Households also
provide a significant part of the resources of Mutual Funds. Most of savings is
invested in the form of deposits, though not termed as such. Households also
provide some resources to NBFCs and HFCs in deposits (in NBFCs-Deposit taking
e.g.) and by subscribing to their bonds and in units of debt mutual funds.
Households also provide credit directly to government though various small
savings schemes.
The rest of the world
provides credit to government by investing in the government securities and to
businesses directly by buying their bonds and providing loans in the form of
external commercial borrowings (ECBs) and indirectly by investing in bonds of
and providing ECBs to financial intermediaries like NBFCs, SFCs and MFs.
Bulk of the credit
provided by all these lenders/investors is to the government- estimated at
about Rs. 100 lakh crores at end March 2020. Estimated credit of about Rs. 30
lakh crores from all these players is to the businesses and remaining Rs. 20
lakh crores to the households.
Covid-19 and economic
lockdown has not affected credit to the government. Risk to the credit extended
to household is also much lower. It is the business credit portfolio of about
Rs. 30 lakh crore which is the most affected. As credit portfolio of NBFCs has
concentration of loans provided to businesses, the NBFCs are facing the utmost
heat. HFCs, Mutual Funds and LIC provide credit (loans, bonds, commercial paper
etc.) to some niche kinds of businesses; these are also impacted to different
degrees.
We discuss the impact
of covid-19 and economic lockdown in this Part III of the series of blogs of
Managing Credit in India.
Funding Credit
Requirement of Governments
The non-bank credit
providers hold 2/3rd of government debt- Rs. 100 lakh crores out of
total government debt of about Rs. 150 lakh crores.
A little over Rs. 100
lakh crore of government debt is in the form of securities. At end February
2020, the outstanding stock of central government dated securities was Rs. 65
lakh crores, that of state government securities Rs. 30 lakh crore and treasury
bills outstanding were of the order of about Rs. 5 lakh crores.
A little less than 50%
of the central government securities, more than 67% of state government
securities and more than 50% of the treasury bills were held by the investors
other than the banks. In all, about Rs. 60 lakh crores of credit in government
securities was provided by non-banks.
Most prominent
investors were insurance companies which held approximately Rs. 30 lakh crores
of the government debt of Rs. 150 lakh crore or about 20%. Retirement Savings
Funds look for better secure yields. They held about 1/4th of the
entire stock of state government securities. Their investment in central and
state government securities approximates about Rs. 10 lakh crores. Rest Rs. 20
lakh crores credit is held by mutual funds, foreign investors, primary dealers
and other non-bank players.
Rest of the central
government debt of approximately Rs. 30 lakh crores (Rs. 100 lakh crore-
government securities Rs. 65 lakh crore- treasury bills of Rs. 5 lakh crore)
comes from non-financial market sources. Approximately Rs. 15 lakh crores in
different forms of small savings, about Rs. 6 lakh crores of external loans,
over Rs. 2.5 lakh crore of recapitalisation bonds of public sector banks and
non-market securities like oil bonds etc. of about Rs. 2.5 lakh crores
contribute about Rs. 25 lakh crores. Rest Rs. 5 lakh crore comes from provident
funds deposits, public account surplus and numerous other small heads.
Likewise, remaining
borrowings of about Rs. 20 lakh crores of the state governments are contributed
by multiple sources.
Issues Connected with
Government Borrowing
There are three major
issues connected with the borrowings of the central government- how to fund
additional fiscal deficit caused by the economic lockdown imposed and covid-19
shock, streamlining of small savings and dealing with foreign investors in
government securities.
Financing
additional deficit
In order not to crowd
out credit resources to the private sector and to discipline its expenditures,
the central government has bound itself with some key binding constraints.
Fiscal deficit is to be contained to 3%, total outstanding debt and liabilities
are to be brought down to 40% of GDP by 2024-25 and the deficit is not to be
monetised.
Extraordinary
requirement of 3-5% of GDP on account of pressures on both sides (revenue
shortfall may be up to 2.5% of GDP and expenditure requirements might shoot up
by another up to 2.5%) cannot be raised from the market without disturbing its
equilibrium.
Government has so far
opted for backdoor monetisation. Ways and Means Advance limit has been
increased from Rs. 75000 crores to Rs. 2 lakh crores. As revenue position is
unlikely to improve, sooner or later this WMA would have to be converted into
dated securities. Government raised about Rs. 15000 crores in short term
treasury bills which were subscribed by RBI indirectly through Primary Dealers.
These are now being converted into dated securities through modified twist
programme.
Uncertainty in the financial
markets about government’s additional borrowing programme and monetisation
strategy has made market participants cautious, including banks. RBI reduced
the repo and reverse repo rates drastically in last one month, but the yields
on central government only moved up. There is a strong likelihood of trading in
secondary government securities market sputtering.
It would be better if
the government were to inform more clearly about what additional borrowing it
expects to make and whether it would monetise the deficit or not. While I find
that monetising the additional deficit would be the least bad option in the
circumstances, making the borrowing path and strategy clearer, even if it is
for non-monetising the deficit would be better than the uncertainty.
Streamlining
small savings
Central government and
the states together hold stock of about Rs. 15 lakh crore borrowings from small
savings out of their total debt stock of about Rs. 1.5 lakh crore. Small
savings sourced borrowings now make up only about 10% of total government
borrowings. It used to be quite different 20 years ago.
State governments used
to have more than 50% of their borrowings from the small-savings based loans
provided to them by the central government. Almost all state governments have
stopped borrowing from small savings (these borrowings are costlier).
The governments have
also dismantled the network of small savings agents which used to source these
savings from small savers. Additionally, the banks and non-banks, especially
micro-finance institutions, have fanned out in the entire country side. The
small savings programme is essentially serving the middle class only and is
providing them off-market higher returns. This has created its own distortions.
It is time to wind up
the small savings programme.
Foreign
investors in government securities
Foreign institutional
investors were permitted to invest in debt securities of government of India in
1993. Foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) hold about Rs. 4 lakh crore of central
government securities. They have almost no investment in state government
securities. The policy relating to their investment has undergone several
changes.
Recently, the
government and RBI have created a special window ‘fully accessible route’ for
investment by FPIs in central government securities. While there are limits on
FPIs’ investment in government securities, these specified securities would
have no restrictions of FPIs ownership. Theoretically, entire stock of a
specified security can be held by FPIs.
Intention behind
creating this special structure is to enable India’s participation in global
debt indices. Lot of money globally is invested following these indices. If
Indian debt securities are part of these indices, the funds which mimic the
indices pattern would invest in Indian debt securities to the extent of weight
of India in the indices and the additional flows in such indices- based
investment vehicles would also be invested in Indian securities in the same
ratio.
Last year, the
government had made a proposal in the budget to issue foreign currency
denominated sovereign bonds. That proposal seems to have been shelved and new
‘fully accessible route’, in some manner, substitutes for such sovereign bonds.
Fully accessible route
of encourage foreign debt flows in government securities suffers from all the
problems which current system suffers from. It will only accentuate these
problems. A good part of the FPI investments in Indian debt is a fair-weather
friend. As long as foreigners get good steady dollar return on their
investment, such investment stays or even grows. Such times happen to be ones
when there is excess capital inflow and RBI is in the market for sucking the
excess dollar supply. Rupee tends to appreciate during these times making the
returns of FPIs rise. As soon as the tide turns and rupee comes under pressure
for any reason (high fiscal deficit, high oil prices etc.), the FPIs start
selling debt and taking their money back. In such times, when India needs
additional inflows, FPIs’ sales adds to the woes of RBI, government and the
market.
This new route of
making foreigners’ investment in Indian debt without any limits and
restrictions does not seem to be in larger interest of the country.
Credit to Businesses and Non-Bank Finance
Companies (NBFCs)
Outstanding credit to
businesses from all the non-banks is around Rs. 30 lakh crores, less than half
of the credit provided to businesses by the banks.
Amongst the Non-Banks,
NBFCs are major providers of credit to businesses in India. Gross outstanding
credit by NBFCs as on 30th September 2019 to businesses was of the
order of Rs. 18.79 lakh crore. Approximately, 2/3rd of non-banks
credit to businesses comes from NBFCs. The rest of credit flows from Housing
Finance Companies (to real estate companies/ builders), Life Insurance
Corporation (loans to some companies and investment in their corporate bonds),
Mutual Funds (loans against shares etc.) and investment by retirement savings
organisations (RSOs), FPIs and savers directly in the corporate bonds.
HFCs provide loans to
households primarily with some accommodation to the real estate businesses. As
per NHB’s Report total loans and advances of HFCs were Rs. 10.38 lakh crores as
on 31st March, 2018. Of that Rs. 7.53 lakh crore were for housing
loans and Rs. 2.86 lakh crore to others- essentially to builders and
real-estate companies.
The insurance
companies, mostly LIC, find much more comfort in routing their credit to public
sector entities and authorities like NHAI, HUDCO and others.
NBFCs credit to
businesses was growing at a much faster rate than banks prior to blow-out of
IL&FS. NBFCs were able to leverage cheaper resources from mutual funds.
NBFCs are also able to reach to businesses which the mainstream banks find
difficult or costlier to reach. NBFCs are also not restrained in providing
credit to certain sectors like real estate which the banks are literally
prohibited to do so. NBFCs are also digitally nimble and have much lower cost
of doing business.
Impact of covid-19 and Economic
Lockdown on NBFCs
NBFCs do not have
access to steady resource of deposits from households. They do raise some
borrowings in the form of long-term debentures. However, bulk of their
resources comes from credit provided by banks and other players in the
financial landscape like Mutual Funds. The NBFCs had seen their access to such
funds becoming costlier (spreads had risen sharply) and in some cases totally
denied in the wake of ILFS blow-up. The NBFCs are facing a kind of ILFS replay
in the wake of covid-19 crisis.
NBFCs are also
dependent upon constant reflows from their existing portfolio of loan assets.
If the reflows get affected, their ability to service their resource providers and
to provider fresh loans suffer. The moratorium granted by RBI on the servicing
of loans given by NBFCs has created a lot of problems, more particularly on
account of the fact that there is no clarity on the applicability of moratorium
on loans which NBFCs have to service.
NBFCs’ loan to
businesses suffer precisely from the same problems, only in a more accentuated
form, what banks’ portfolio of loans is going to suffer from the impact of
covid-19 and economic lockdown. NBFCs’ loan portfolio has smaller proportion of
gross non-performing loans- in the range of 5-6% as against 10-20% in case of
banks. The portfolio of NBFC business loans is riskier both on business risk
and credit risk. It is likely to see a sharp uptick.
The NBFCs are facing a
double whammy. Their loans to businesses are likely to turn bad in greater proportion
but they would have to give moratorium to all these businesses and they would
not be able to enforce their security or approach IBC courts. On the other
hand, the NBFCs will have to service their loans to banks, pay regularly on
debentures issued and likely to see funding cut from mutual funds.
The NBFCs in India are
in existential crisis.
Credit to Households
Banks have credit
outstanding towards households of about Rs. 25 lakh crores. Non-Banks have
another Rs. 20 lakh crore of credit outstanding to the households.
The largest share of
credit to households comes from Housing Finance Companies. Mortgage loans by
HFCs to households are about Rs. 10 lakh crores. NBFCs outstanding credit of
about Rs. 5 lakh crores is primarily for household loans for vehicles and other
consumer durable assets. The remaining credit comes from other non-bank
sources.
The delinquency in
household credit portfolio is quite small. The credit portfolio, except for the
Micro Finance Institutions (MFI)- NBFCs, is relatively concentrated in
households with steady incomes, only marginally affected during the covid-19
induced crisis.
CONCLUSION
Credit outstanding to
governments, businesses and households at the end of financial year 2020-21 is
about Rs. 300 lakh crore or $4 trillion @ Rs. 75 to a dollar. Half of this
credit is owned by the banking systems- banks and the central bank put together.
The remaining half of the credit i.e. Rs. 150 lakh crores have been provided by
all types of the non-banks, the savers directly and the rest of the world.
The bulk of the credit
provided by all these lenders/investors is to the governments- at about Rs. 100
lakh crores at end March 2020. Estimated credit of about Rs. 30 lakh crores have
been provided by all these players to the businesses and remaining Rs. 20 lakh
crores to the households.
Covid-19 and economic
lockdown cannot affect quality of credit to the governments, though there is
likely to be some pressure on state governments’ borrowings. Risk to the credit
extended to the households is also much lower. It is the business credit
portfolio of about Rs. 30 lakh crore which is the most affected. As credit
portfolio of NBFCs is majorly concentrated on loans to businesses, the NBFCs
are facing the utmost heat.
There are three major
issues connected with the borrowings of the central government- how to fund
additional fiscal deficit caused by the economic lockdown and covid-19 shock,
desirability of continuance of small savings programme and investment of the
foreign investors in government securities.
Extraordinary deficit
financing requirement of 3-5% of GDP seems to have arisen on account of
pressures on both sides (likely revenue shortfall of up to 2.5% of GDP and
expenditure requirements shooting up to 2.5%). This cannot be raised from the
market without disturbing its equilibrium.
Uncertainty in the
financial markets about government’s additional borrowing programme and
monetisation strategy has made market participants, including banks, cautious.
RBI reduced the repo and reverse repo rates drastically in last one month, but
the yields on central government only moved up. There is a strong likelihood of
trading in secondary government securities market sputtering.
It would be better if
the government were to inform more clearly about what additional borrowing it
expects to make and whether it would monetise the deficit or not. While
monetising the additional deficit would be the least bad option in the
circumstances, making the borrowing path and strategy clearer, even if the
choice is not to monetise deficit, would be better than continuing with the
uncertainty.
New fully accessible
route for permitting foreign debt flows in government securities has been
created on 31st March, 2020. It suffers from all the problems of
existing framework. A good part of the FPI investments in Indian debt is a
fair-weather friend. As long as foreigners get good steady dollar return on
their debt investment, such investment stays or even grows. Such times happen
to be ones when there is excess capital inflows and RBI has to go to the market
for sucking the excess dollar supply. Rupee tends to appreciate during these
times making the returns of FPIs rise. As soon as the tide turns and rupee
comes under pressure for any reason (high fiscal deficit, high oil prices
etc.), the FPIs start selling debt and taking their money back. In such times,
when India needs additional inflows, FPIs’ debt sales adds to the woes of RBI,
government and the market.
This new route of
making foreigners’ investment in Indian debt without any limits and restrictions
does not seem to be in larger interest of the country.
The governments have
dismantled the network of small savings agents which used to source these
savings from small savers. The banks and non-banks, especially micro-finance
institutions, have fanned out in the entire country side. The small savings
programme is essentially serving the middle class and is providing them
off-market higher returns. This has created its own distortions. It is time to
wind up the small savings programme.
The NBFCs, which
provide 2/3d of non-bank credit to businesses, are facing a double whammy.
Their loans to businesses are likely to turn bad in greater proportion than
banks but they would have to give moratorium to all these businesses. They
would not be able to enforce their security or approach IBC courts as well. On
the other hand, the NBFCs will have to service their loans to banks, pay
regularly on debentures issued and likely to see funding cut from mutual funds.
The NBFCs have to be dealt with fairly and to be provided a level playing
field.
The delinquency in
household credit portfolio is quite small. The credit portfolio, except for the
Micro Finance Institutions (MFI)- NBFCs, is relatively concentrated in
households with steady incomes, only marginally affected during the covid-19
induced crisis.
SUBHASH CHANDRA GARG
APRIL 24, 2020
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