The fastest pace of growth since 2013 at India’s non-bank financiers is about to come to a grinding halt A spate of money market defaults by Infrastructure Leasing & Financial Services Ltd. has put the spotlight on non-bank finance companies. With banks struggling with bad loans and low capital buffers, non-bank lenders had rushed to tap demand for long-term financing to build roads, power plants and homes. But these lenders borrowed from the short-term money markets to finance long-term loans, raising the risk of defaults should cash flows take a hit. The central bank last week warned stricter regulations are in the offing to ward off default risks rising from the so-called asset liability mismatch. Depending on short-term debt to garner a bigger share of the South Asian nation’s lending market is a myopic strategy, Viral Acharya said in a briefing on Friday.
The regulator is looking at strengthening guidelines for non-bank lenders to avoid rollover risks, Deputy Governor NS Vishwanathan said. Borrowing rates in India’s money markets climbed to a four-year high this month following IL&FS’s defaults. Non-bank lenders have been hit by the rise in funding costs and by caution among mutual funds in buying more of their debt. Stricter rules at a juncture when funding is becoming difficult may force smaller NBFCs to shut. As investors focus on non-bank financiers it is creating incentives for bond fund managers to not buy NBFC paper, Neelkanth Mishra, said. For some of the smaller NBFCs there is going to be no option to survive. The good thing is that, systemically it doesn’t matter. It hurts those firms, which is fine. Fears of rising costs and tougher regulations led to a selloff in non-bank finance companies on Friday. Bajaj Holdings & Investment Ltd., Religare Enterprises Ltd, Mahindra & Mahindra Financial Services Ltd. and Edelweiss Financial Services Ltd. slumped more than 7 percent in Mumbai. Analysts are concerned they may fall further. Non-bank finance companies expanded their assets by an average 18 percent over the past year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. IL&FS, a huge borrower, accounted for 2 percent of outstanding commercial paper, 1 percent of debentures and as much as 0.7 percent of banking system loans. It amassed debt of $12.6 billion as of March 31.
Defaults at the company cased panic in the market prompting the government to seize control of the lender last week. Firms will need to raise retail bonds to maintain the growth rates but there would be an increase in the cost of funds, said Umesh Revankar, adding that his company focuses on retail and long-term funds Non-bank financiers say the crisis has hit them at a very inopportune time. Borrowings rise as India enters into the busy festival and wedding season in October. Buyers of homes, vehicles and even farm and factory equipment may slow purchases. This could also pose challenges to Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s efforts to bolster the economy and create more jobs before he seeks re-election next year. My worst fear is prolonged doubts and impression on this sector may increase borrowing and lending rates, that too during the festive period, Shriram’s Revankar said. It will slow down the economy, he said