homefinance NewsHow serious is the scare about unsecured loans?

How serious is the scare about unsecured loans?

Financial markets have been abuzz with speculation as to how big the problem of unsecured loans is. CNBC-TV18's Latha Venkatesh explains the issue with all the data available on the matter so readers can judge for themselves.

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By Latha Venkatesh  Oct 27, 2023 6:40:15 PM IST (Published)

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Ever since the RBI governor expressed his worries over the fast pace of growth of unsecured debt in banks and NBFCs, financial markets have been abuzz with speculation as to how big the problem is. The following is an effort to put all the data available on the matter so readers can judge for themselves.

First, let us note what the RBI governor said: He importantly didn’t say that NPAs are rising. Quite the contrary. The governor said, “In certain segments of retail credit, we saw high credit growth. So, it is only to caution the banks to strengthen their internal surveillance systems, watch the trends, and take whatever measures are required".
Elaborating on the point, Deputy Governor Swaminathan said, “Unsecured loans have been growing at 23% for the last couple of years; while other verticals like corporate, SME are growing by 12–14%. We want to sensitise banks that this is an outlier."
So for starters, the RBI’s worry is the pace of growth of unsecured credit, and the numbers justify the worries. Table 1 shows that unsecured loans have consistently grown close to 25% since FY19 (barring the one COVID-19 year), while retail loans have grown only in high teens and overall credit even more slowly, i.e., in low teens, except for the latest year.
% GROWTH OF TYPES OF LOANS
Total bank loansRetail loansUnsecured loans
FY1913.418.624.7
FY206.015.426.6
FY215.412.313.8
FY2211.513.523.9
FY231619.719.7
Not surprisingly, the share of unsecured loans in total retail loans has been climbing, as Table 2 shows (Source: Crisil). Unsecured loans are also growing as a share of overall credit.
%SHARE OF UNSECURED LOANS IN BANKS
In retail loansIn total bank loans
FY1819.64.5
FY1920.65
FY2022.66
FY2122.96.4
FY22257.1
FY2325.27.4
So should we worry? "No", says SBI economist Soumyokanti Ghosh. In a recent report, Ghosh shows that banks are already bringing down the number of first-time loanees or what are called new-to-credit customers (these typically don’t have credit scores and can be risky). Table 3 (taken from Ghosh’s report) shows that banks have also brought down their exposure to subprime borrowers and increased loans to prime, prime-plus, and super-prime borrowers.
BANKS LOANS CLASSIFIED BY EXTENT OF RISK (%)
March 2022March 2023
New-to-credit13.48.1`
Subprime8.76.7
Near Prime1919.4
Prime38.142
Prime Plus6.19.5
Super Prime14.714.3
Ghosh argues that individual banks that have reported Q2 results have all shown a fall in NPAs. (See Table 4).
NPAs OF BANKS (RESULTS REPORTED SO FAR)
Q1FY24Q2FY24
Bandhan6.87.2
HDFC1.21.3
IndusInd1.941.93
Federal2.382.26
Bank of Maha2.282.19
ICICI2.762.48
Axis1.961.73
Canara5.154.76
PNB7.736.96
Crisil’s Krishnan Sitaraman points out that not just for individual banks, but even for the banking system as a whole, NPAs have come down, and what’s more, NPAs in the retail category and the unsecured retail category have also come down. (See table 5). Even potentially stressed loans like SMS1 & SMA2 loans have come down from 4.2% as of March 2021 to 2.3% as of March 2023 ( Alert: SMA1 refers to loans where interest hasn’t been paid for over 30 days & SMA2 is loans where dues are unpaid for over 60 days).
% SHARE OF UNSECURED RETAIL LOANS IN BANK NPAs
March 21March 23
Total bank GNPA7.33.9
Retail loans GNPA2.11.4
Unsecured   GNPA3.22.0
SMA1+SMA2 loans4.22.3
As for NBFCs, SBI’s Ghosh says, yes, retail loans are rising, but they are nowhere near their past highs.
GROWTH IN RETAIL LOANS OF NBFCs(% yoy)
FY1966.6
FY2022.7
FY217.5
FY225.9
FY2331.3
(TABLE Source: SBI Report)
NPAs with NBFCs too have been coming down from 6% of the book in mid-2021 to 4% of the book in mid-2023, as Table 7 shows. (Source: SBI Report)
GROSS NPAs IN RETAIL LOANS OF NBFCs(% OF TOTAL)
Sept 216
March 225.2
Sept 224.7
March 234.1
Then why the worry? Credit bureau CIBIL shared some numbers which may be considered red flags: CIBIL says all the 3 major subcategories of retail unsecured loans – i.e. credit cards, personal loans, and consumer durable loans have seen their NPAs rising (albeit modestly) in the past one year as Table 7 shows. (Source: CIBIL)
% OF NPAs (LOANS NOT PAID BACK FOR 90 DAYS)
Credit CardPersonal LoansConsumer Durables
JUN '221.46%0.80%1.69%
JUN '231.63%0.84%1.68%
CIBIL pointed out another worrying data set. It says loans under 50,000 are a specially stressed category. The NPAs in this category have risen from an already high 4.2% in June 2022 to 5.4% in June 2023.
% RISE IN NPAS IN PERSONAL LOANS BASED ON TICKET SIZE
Personal Loan<50K>50K
JUN '224.20%0.71%
JUN '235.40%0.74%
Also, in this under-50,000 loan category,  one person is taking more loans because of credit cards, BNPL (buy now, pay later schemes), P2P loans from fintechs etc. CIBIL says people with 4 or more loans have jumped to 51% of this universe.
PROPORTION OF CUSTOMERS WHO HAVE 4 OR MORE LOANS OPENED IN THE LAST 6 MONTHS
Personal Loans <50KQ2 2021Q2 2022Q2 2023
JUNE '2239%45%51%
Okay so how worried should we be—let me put it all together: On the positive side:
Banks and NBFCs are still showing declining overall NPAs.
The problem of the sub-50,000 loans is very small in scale. Total retail loans in the country are 90 lakh crore; of which 24% or 21.6 lakh crore are unsecured retail; and of this only 0.3% are in the so-called worrying category of under 50,000 loans i.e. all of 27,000. Even if all of it went bad, it won't move the needle much on overall NPAs.
Then why is the regulator warning, and warning repeatedly?
Firstly, they worry that these small loanees (taking loans under 50,000) from fintechs may have an auto loan with a bank, which will go bad due to over-borrowing.
The second and bigger worry is, when something grows too fast, it may hide problems. For instance, all banks are now growing their retail portfolio— both secured and unsecured. Some banks are new to retail, or their deposit costs are high. So, to undercut rivals, these banks are giving personal loans for seven years. Uncollateralised loans solely for consumption must never be given for such long tenors, Rajnish Kumar, former SBI Chairman, told CNBC-TV18. The longer the tenor, the greater the uncertainty—the risk of job loss, illness, or accidents.
It is these wrong tendencies that RBI wants to curb.
In short, no, the unsecured loans do not pose a systemic threat. In fact, as the RBI DG Swaminathan clarified they do not want to impose risk weights (i.e., ask banks to set aside more capital per loan). They think an advisory is enough. That by itself reflects the regulator’s confidence that the problem is not severe. An advisory to banks to strengthen their internal surveillance and due diligence should suffice for now says the regulator. But if the unsecured loans continue to grow at a faster clip and banks or NBFCs show some unsavoury practices, the regulator may act at a future date.
For now, the health of the banking and NBFC sectors seems to be robust.

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