The upcoming quarter is likely to be a difficult one for MSMEs as credit supply for micro and small
businesses has started thinning with lenders turning cautious following the
increase in risk weights on unsecured consumer loans.
“MSMEs form a huge part of this unsecured funding
and they will get affected to an extent directly or indirectly. There’s a lot of overlap in retail financing and
micro lending segments, and no way to distinguish which funds are going towards
proprietorship,†said KalyanBasu, MD and CEO of VayanaTradeXchange.
The increased risk weights and resultant higher capital requirements,
has prompted several lenders, including digital lenders, to go slower on
unsecured small ticket loans, to avoid any risk build-up amid increased
regulatory scrutiny. Fintechs too have
said they will go slower on small ticket loans.
“There’s a lot of demand for credit but people are a bit cautious as to
how to read the statements coming from banks about slowing down credit and
hiking rates. Even a bit of confusion can re-trigger credit policy making and
lending approach. From what we see, lenders want to go slower on small ticket
as well as overall retail lending,†said ArunPoojari, Co- founder and CEO,
Cashinvoice.
Given that a lot of the MSMEs get funded through personal and unsecured
business loans, generally catered to by NBFCs, this decline in credit supply
and the resultant rise in cost of capital, will transmit to borrowers over the
next few months. Add to the fact that the last quarter traditionally tends to
be credit heavy, could translate to significant funding shortages for small
businesses, market participants said.
“Once lending gets expensive, it will percolate to borrowers in 3-4
months and impact their overall balance sheet and profitability because their
competitiveness will also get impacted,†Basu said, adding that it will be
unsustainable for MSMEs to borrow at 16-18 per cent rates given that over 90
per cent fall in the micro category and operate on thin margins.
Because the lines in small ticket loans are often
blurred between personal and business loans, lenders are then likely looking
for some communication or clarification on identifying the right categories of
borrowers and pricing it appropriately to ensure they are on the “right side of
regulationsâ€, Poojari said.
Last month, NBFC industry body Finance Industry Development Council
(FIDC) had warned that the higher risk weights could sharply reduce credit flow
to MSMEs, self-employed and other sectors which rely upon unsecured credit from
NBFCs, especially at a time when they are emerging from the COVID and rural
economy-related slowdowns.