Mumbai: Reserve Bank of India governor Shaktikanta Das issued a strong warning to non-banks, particularly microfinance institutions and housing finance companies, for aggressively chasing “growth at any cost” that could pose a risk to the economy’s financial stability.
Das’s message to non-banking financial companies came as RBI’s monetary policy committee on Wednesday softened its policy stance to ‘neutral’ from ‘withdrawal of accommodation’, while keeping the key policy rate unchanged and reiterating inflation as a key risk.
“It is observed that some NBFCs are aggressively pursuing growth without building up sustainable business practices and risk management frameworks commensurate with the scale and complexity of their portfolio. An imprudent ‘growth at any cost’ approach would be counterproductive for their own health,” Das said in his monetary policy statement.
Das also raised concerns about microfinance institutions (MFIs) and housing finance companies (HFCs) imposing usurious interest rates and frivolous penalties on their customers.
“These practices are sometimes further accentuated by what appears to be a ‘push effect’, as business targets drive retail credit growth rather than its actual demand. The consequent high cost and high indebtedness could pose financial stability risks if not addressed by these NBFCs,” added Das.
“The Reserve Bank is closely monitoring these areas and will not hesitate to take appropriate action if necessary,” he warned. “Self-correction by the NBFCs would, however, be the desired option.”
The ‘push effect’ refers to lenders pushing retail credit as per their business targets rather than actual demand. The consequent high-cost and high indebtedness could pose financial stability risks, if not addressed by these NBFCs, Das added.
“The push effect is confined to certain NBFCs. I am not generalising for the whole sector, which overall remains stable and has good health,” Das said at the post-policy briefing.
He clarified that RBI does not treat banks and NBFCs as adversaries, and rather works closely with them in a spirit of cooperation.
“Given the wider purpose for credit inclusion served by MFIs and HFCs, we don’t expect a general tightening of guidelines for the sector,” said Anil Gupta, senior vice president, co-group head-financial sector ratings, ICRA.
“However, given the cautionary statements by the regulator, there could be more regulatory scrutiny around the business models and risk practices of some specific NBFCs. If the regulatory concerns remain unaddressed, entity-specific action cannot be ruled out,” he said.
RBI deputy governor J. Swaminathan said the central bank’s messaging was targeted at a certain set of players, in particular segments that have seen outlier growth.
“The commentary from June-August numbers is that there are certain elevated slippages and little higher credit costs being seen in some segments. The messaging is targeted towards such NBFCs that are pursuing a high-risk, high-growth strategy and also to certain segments which are likely to get into stress in our estimate,” he said.
Stress building up
RBI’s warning comes after the central bank flagged certain similar risks by way of unprecedented growth seen in some unsecured loan segments such as personal loans and credit cards. In November last year, RBI increased the risk weights on certain categories of unsecured loans by 25 percentage points to 125%.
“RBI’s comments showcase that stress in unsecured lending segments such as credit cards and microfinance remains an ongoing theme and that RBI deems these segments important enough for specific attention,” said Shivaji Thapliyal, head of research (overall), YES Securities. “Unsecured ‘consumption’ loans also deserve monitoring, in RBI’s opinion, and these would include sub-segments such as consumer durable loans and BNPL (buy-now-pay-later) loans.”
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