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Inflation, rate hike won't knock out Indian Inc: Report
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IANS | 26 Aug, 2022
Indian companies and banks is expected to feel the bite of high
inflation and rising interest rates, but rated issuers are generally
better cushioned to withstand, S&P Global Ratings said in a report.
However, renewables are relatively more exposed to rising rates due to large capital expenditure.
The report do not expect any default in the rated portfolio, which benefits from access to domestic banks and capital markets.
"Banks will not be immune, but we expect that in the stress scenario NPLs could rise modestly," the report added.
Corporate sector:
Large
rated corporate credits in general have adequate cushion to withstand
rising rates, widening credit spreads and increasing input costs. This
is mainly due to the significant de-leveraging and improvement in
operating fundamentals over the past two years.
Most companies
also do not need meaningful funding for capex or financing, shielding
them from the increase in funding cost. Further, only about 30 per cent
of debt of the rated issuers is floating rate in nature, limiting the
effect of the increase in interest rates.
Infrastructure sector:
Infrastructure
sector is more exposed to the rising interest rates because higher
capex plans and some upcoming re-financing will result in
higher-than-anticipated interest burden.
This is despite a high
proportion of existing fixed rate debt being largely insulated from
rising interest rates. The ratings agency believe some of the renewable
projects undertaken in the past few years were premised on rates
remaining low. Returns for these projects will be anemic, if not
loss-making.
Nevertheless, generally high operating margins will
limit damage from inflationary pressures. The high proportion of US
dollar-denominated debt with aggressive hedging through call options
with knock-in-knock-out options exposes the issuers to higher hedging
costs to roll the hedge for higher strike price (hedge falls off on
reaching the strike price). We expect all players to remain covered by
incremental hedges. But rising hedge costs could further strain weak
financials, with the existing ratio of debt to EBITDA at about 7x.
Banking Sector:
The ratings agency expect Indian banking sector to solidify its position.
It
projects the sector's weak loans (NPLs and performing restructured
loans) will continue to decline to 4.5 per cent-5 per cent of gross
loans by March 31, 2024. This projection takes into account continued
resolution and recovery of legacy problem loans.
Likewise,
S&P Global forecast credit costs to normalise to 1.2 per cent for
fiscal 2023 and stabilize at about 1.1 per cent-1.2 per cent for the
next couple of years. This makes credit costs comparable to those of
other emerging markets and to India's 15-year average.
The small
and midsize enterprise (SME) sector and low-income households are
vulnerable to rising interest rates and high inflation. But, in our base
case of moderate interest rate hikes, we view these risks as limited.
Likewise, we expect the return on average assets to normalize to 1 per
cent in fiscal 2023 -- an eight-year high.
The ratings agency expected inflation ot 6.8 per cent for the current fiscal and 5.8 per cent in January-March 2023. India's initial rise in inflation was fuelled by high fuel and commodity prices. Inflation has since become broad-based and persistent.
Consumer
demand is weak in many pockets, yet core inflation remains elevated as
companies seek to protect margins by passing on rising input costs to
consumers. Also stoking inflation is the rebound in contact-based
services.
Meanwhile, they expect India's GDP to grow by 7.3 per
cent in fiscal 2023 (for year ended March 31, 2023) compared with 7.8
per cent six months ago. The causes of this downward pressure on growth
are high oil prices, slowing global demand for India's exports, and of
course high inflation. This inflation is eroding the purchasing power of
the poor because energy and food account for a chunk of their
consumption basket.
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Customs Exchange Rates |
Currency |
Import |
Export |
US Dollar
|
84.35
|
82.60 |
UK Pound
|
106.35
|
102.90 |
Euro
|
92.50
|
89.35 |
Japanese
Yen |
55.05 |
53.40 |
As on 12 Oct, 2024 |
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