Business Standard

Microcredi­t logging 40% year-on-year growth since March

- NAMRATA ACHARYA

Outpacing the overall credit growth, microcredi­t has been witnessing 40 per cent year-onyear growth for the last few months. Much of the growth is being funded by private institutio­ns, according to industry experts.

While banks, both private and public sector ones, themselves are chasing microfinan­ce borrowers for direct loans (apart from indirect loans by on-lending to MFIs) to due to low delinquenc­y rates, in the last few months, several non-banking finance companies have also increased lending to MFIs. For most MFIs, debt accounts for majority of their fund requiremen­ts.

According to the data from Reserve Bank of India (RBI), at the end of May, 2018, the loan outstandin­g in microcredi­t segment was close to ~197 billion, against ~142 billion in May, 2017, representi­ng a growth of about 38 per cent. Against this, the gross bank credit growth in the industry in the same period has been around 11 per cent.

“There has been a larger interest among NBFCs to fund MFIs, although PSBs are still reluctant to lend. At present, about 30-35 per cent of our fund requiremen­t are met by NBFCs,” according to H P Singh, chairman and managing director, Satincare Creditcare Network.

MFIs logged a nearly 40 per cent rise in equity investment­s during the last financial year. However, debt funding by banks, which registered around 20 per cent growth, remained confined to a top few MFIs last year. Data from Microfinan­ce

Institutio­n Network ( MFIN) shows that total equity funding for MFIs stood at ~96.31 billion in 2017-18 against ~68.85 billion in 2016-17. This is a substantia­l rise of 39.88 per cent.

“The MFI sector has seen good growth in equity funding. While public sector banks are not funding much to MFIs, the NBFCs are taking advantage. Also, the growth can also be attributed to the fact that last year, there was hardly any growth in the microfinan­ce sector. Now, most MFIs have cleaned their balance sheets and funds, are flowing in. Also, there has been a lot of foreign fund raising through non-convertibl­e debentures,” according to Rakesh Dubey, the president of MFIN.

Foreign investors accounted for nearly 45 per cent equity funding in MFIs as on March 31, 2018. “Investment­s are once again coming in the MFI sector, and it is poised to grow in the coming days. Much of the funding is coming from the private sector. While public sector banks only lend to high-rated MFIs, private sector banks, have their own mechanism of due diligence, which takes into account pure profit and performanc­e, apart from credit rating,” according to Ratna Vishwanath­an, former CEO, MFIN.

According to Manoj Nambiar, MD, Arohan Financial Services, margins for MFIs have improved as cost of funds have come down.

“After the portfolio clean-up post demonetisa­tion, lenders are comfortabl­e with lending to MFIs, For us, the pricing to end customers has come down to about 20.70 per cent in the last few months,” according to Nambiar.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India