Outlook 2019: Men will get separated from the boys in NBFC space and grow stronger

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
By Nirmal JainIn the past few years, NBFCs have filled the void created by PSU banks, which have been crippled for capital
These so-called shadow bankers bring new borrowers into the ambit of formal finance by developing unique underwriting standards and
inculcating financial discipline
Although NBFCs do not have access to RBI as lenders of last resort or for liquidity; they are much lesser leveraged than banks. Banks
require lesser capital adequacy and have lesser risk weightage for most assets
NBFCs had debt-equity ratio of 5.4 times at the end of March 2018 and banks had twice that much
In last 20 years, many banks had to be rescued by forced merger into larger banks, whereas no large NBFC has faced solvency risk yet. NBFCs
have demonstrated superior asset quality with gross NPL ratio of 4.3 per cent at end March 2018
As NBFCs grow in size, market capitalisation and reach faster than most other sectors, they deserve a larger share of bank credit as
well. For the economy, credit delivery through NBFCs is superior for two levels of capital cushion, lower cost of last mile delivery and
specialised underwriting and collection skills. NBFCs now account for more than one-third of incremental credit
2019will pan out But the latest regulatory crisis has been a wake-up call
People who have been trying to work on the edge in terms of liquidity or in terms of managing their cost of funds have got a wakeup call and
hopefully some balance will be achieved
As the dust settles, we will see the men getting separated from boys and the good players becoming stronger and playing a more meaningful
role. The liquidity situation has improved significantly since the last fortnight of September, immediately following the ILFS default
Availability of funds has improved, and the rate of interest has dropped
The scare of default by some NBFCs or HFCs (housing finance companies) has now passed. It seems, the industry has been able to tide over the
short-term liquidity crunch. Regardless of recent panic and meltdown in the market values of NBFCs, they are here to stay and will play an
important role in the economic growth and financial inclusion
In fact, as the economy becomes larger and grows faster, the need for credit will rise disproportionately
We need both banks and NBFCs to rise to the occasion and provide the economy with its lifeblood, i.e., credit. (Nirmal Jain is Founder
Chairman of IIFL Group
Views are his own)