IANS | 19 Nov, 2023
There has been a sharp growth in unsecured lending in the past few
years and the unsecured personal loan portfolio of the banking system
has more than doubled from Rs 6 trillion in FY19 to Rs 13 trillion
currently. Credit cards have grown at a faster pace, but off of a lower
base, CLSA said in a report.
The RBI is indirectly telling banks to slow unsecured loans and credit cards, foreign brokerage, CLSA said in a report.
The
RBI, on somewhat expected lines, increased the risk-weights on
unsecured credit and bank loans to non-banking financial corporations
(NBFCs). This was in response to its concern over the rapid growth in
unsecured loans over the past four to five years, CLSA said.
This
risk-weight increase is applicable to outstanding as well as fresh
loans. We estimate the direct impact at a 40-80bp reduction in Tier I
capital for banks and 230bp and 415bp reductions for Bajaj Finance and
SBI Cards. However, even after that, banks are likely well capitalised
and should not need to raise additional capital. The other direct impact
would be an increase in the cost of borrowing for NBFCs (which is hard
to quantify).
“We expect the indirect impact to be a moderation in unsecured loan growth for banks over the quarters to come,” CLSA said.
Care
Edge Ratings said in a note that the personal loans as well as advances
to NBFCs have been growing strongly and have been the primary driver of
incremental bank credit.
“We see this as a strong signalling
impact to deter growth in the unsecured space while lenders are
well-capitalised to manage decrease in CRAR which is anticipated to be
around 25-45 bps. Meanwhile, the proportion of bank lending to larger
NBFCs could be pared down as they approach the capital market, while
aggregate dependence of mid-sized NBFCs on the banking sector for
funding is likely to remain high despite an anticipated increase in
lending cost by 25-30 bps,” the note said.
Strong signalling
impact to deter growth in consumer credit while banks well-capitalised
to manage impact on CRAR, Care Edge Ratings said. Banks and larger NBFCs
could witness a partial slow down, while Fintechs which operate in the
comparatively higher yield segment too would likely see an impact on
growth, the impact on margin would not be similar.
Soumya Kanti
Ghosh, Group Chief Economic Adviser, State Bank of India, said in a
report that the immediate impact of the enhanced risk weights is the
excess capital now that banks would require. As per our calculation, the
banking industry needs Rs 84,000 crore of excess capital 5 per cent
increase on Rs 15.2 trillion capital requirement of banking system
approx /55-60 bps increase in CRAR due to these regulatory measures.
Secondly,
the RBI circular impacts consumer loans in general but excluding
housing loans, education loans, vehicle loans and loans secured by gold
and gold jewellery.
Filtering out the exclusions, the trends in
consumer credit shows that it was growing at 25 per cent plus since May
2022. The share of these loans impacted by RBI circular (Rs 14.8 lakh
crore) to total outstanding loan (Rs 151.5 lakh crore) is only around
9.8 per cent in September’23.
The impacted portion of the personal
loans category is only 31 per cent of the total personal loans (Rs 48.3
lakh crore), Ghosh said.