The Top 10 Hotspots Of Indian Microfinance

The Top 10 Hotspots Of Indian Microfinance

P. Satish, executive director of Sa-Dhan, the oldest industry body for Indian microfinance, and Ratna Vishwanathan, chief executive of Microfinance Institutions Network (MFIN), a relatively younger body which has all large for-profit microfinance institutions (MFIs) as its members, aren’t very happy these days.

Yes, the historic decision to ban Rs1,000 and Rs500 notes has contributed to their unhappiness as this has affected the entire industry—particularly those entities which operate in rural India. However, this could be a temporary phenomenon. The reason behind their grumpiness is something that the industry has been grappling with for quite some time now. An October newspaper report spoke about this—loan defaults in 10 villages of Wardha district in Maharashtra.

A very high level of  indebtedness and tough recovery techniques adopted by MFIs have led to many villagers seeking government intervention, regional daily Loksatta reported. Quoting the report, a flash note by Religare Institutional Research in the last week of October (written by Parag Jariwala and Vikesh Mehta) said the Wardha phenomenon “epitomises a widespread problem for the MFIs, placing the sector on the brink of a sharp correction that will ratchet up NPAs and credit costs”.

Vishwanathan organized a meeting of the for-profit MFIs, small finance banks, business correspondents and the banks—all lenders to low-income clients—in Mumbai in the first week of November to frame a common set of principles or compliance framework, even as Satish sent a Sa-Dhan inspection team to Tamil Nadu, Madhya Pradesh and West Bengal, where certain districts are being overheated by aggressive lending. This is the third such on-field inspection being undertaken by Sa-Dhan.

As self-regulatory organizations (SROs), both Sa-Dhan and MFIN have tough tasks ahead as the Rs64,000 crore Indian microfinance industry has started seeing defaults, pipelining (a group of borrowers being used as a proxy for one person who is taking the money), and over-lending in some pockets.

What was complicating the situation further was that many money lenders were masquerading as MFIs. During the field visits, the Sa-Dhan team identified at least 20 such entities operating in Mysuru. Sri Chamundeshwari Finance, Sri Siddarameshwara Finance, Sowbhagya Laxmi, Srirama Finance, Kaveri Sphoorthi Finance, Mahalaxmi Finance and many others, posing as MFIs, were charging more than 40% interest and also collecting a security deposit of 7% on loan amount and a service charge of 3.5%.

Under the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) guidelines, an MFI cannot charge more than 26% interest rate; for relatively large MFIs, the spread between the cost of money taken from banks and interest rate charged on the borrowers is kept at 10%. Besides, they are also not allowed to ask for security deposits. Almost 70% of large MFIs currently charge an interest rate of 24% or below.

Armed with political links, these unregulated entities are creating huge reputation risks for the responsible MFIs. Similar outfits are reported from Uttar Pradesh (UP) and West Bengal also. One such entity is ‘Turanta’ in Mirzapur in eastern UP. The lending and recovery by this entity are both ‘turant’ (fast), being implemented with strong-arm tactics.

While this is a law and order issue and the SROs can do very little except for seeking help from the local administration, another area of concern is the high growth of some of the MFIs. At least 14 MFIs have grown at least 100% and up to 421% in fiscal 2016, even as the industry grew 31% with the share of the for-profit MFIs at least 88%. The top 10 MFIs account for 69%, or Rs43,887 crore, of the loan portfolio. The total number of clients served by the industry rose to 39.9 million last year and a majority of these clients are being served by large for-profit MFIs. In fact, large MFIs with at least Rs500 crore loan portfolios are responsible for reaching out to a little more than 85% of the clients.

The list of MFIs that had been growing very aggressively till the recent turmoil includes Hindusthan Microfinance Pvt. Ltd (421%), Janalakshmi Financial Services Ltd (191%), Sarala Development and Microfinance Pvt. Ltd (175%), SV Creditline Pvt. Ltd (142%), Annapurna Micro Finance Pvt. Ltd (132%), Samasta Microfinance Ltd (128%), Village Financial Services Pvt. Ltd and ASA International India Microfinance Pvt. Ltd (both 126%). These figures pertain to fiscal year 2016, ending in March.

While Janalakshmi will soon become a small finance bank, another small finance bank licence holder, RGVN (NE) Microfinance Ltd too has reported more than 100% loan growth (113%).

Based on data from credit information bureaus in terms of the number of MFIs present in a district, growth in loan portfolios, active clients and disbursements, Sa-Dhan had identified 10 districts as overheated. They were North 24 Parganas and South 24 Parganas (West Bengal); Kanchipuram, Cuddalore and Coimbatore (Tamil Nadu); Mysuru and Hasan (Karnataka); Indore (Madhya Pradesh); Pune (Maharashtra); and Thrissur (Kerala). State-wise, Himachal Pradesh recorded the maximum loan growth last year (1,075%) albeit on a minuscule base, followed by Haryana (129%), Punjab (120%), Puducherry (115%) and Kerala (105%).

Two disturbing trends were being noticed. One, some of the large MFIs had started playing the role of predators. They were swooping on the customers brought to the credit fold and nurtured by relatively smaller not-for-profit MFIs. And, two, the growth in the loan portfolio of some of the large MFIs was not in sync with the growth in their customer base.

Last year, the RBI had raised the maximum loan limit for a single borrower from Rs50,000 to Rs1 lakh. That encouraged many large MFIs to push more money down the throats of borrowers, leading to over-indebtedness, even though some of them have voluntarily capped the exposure to individual borrowers at Rs60,000, following the code of conduct devised by the SROs.

Indeed, more than 80% of the MFIs have bad loans or the so-called portfolio at risk (when a loan instalment is not paid for more than 30 days) of less than 1%, and only 6% of MFIs have such loans exceeding 5% of their loan books, but the emerging trends can play spoilsport.

RBI’s silence on a critical issue is also adding to the complications. Currently, a borrower cannot take money from more than two MFIs, but once eight large MFIs become small finance banks, can a customer continue with her loan exposure to such entities and raise fresh loans from other MFIs? Technically, she can as small finance banks and MFIs are different entities. If RBI allows this, we may find many small borrowers being over-leveraged and not in a position to pay back. Not a happy omen for an industry that came back from the brink of collapse just five years ago.

Of course, both Satish and Vishwanathan have a bigger task in hand. They need to find ways to tide over the latest crisis, however temporary it is, arising out of the demonetization move. The RBI too has stepped in, relaxing the income recognition norms. For all you know, this could be a blessing in disguise for the industry—the over-aggressiveness of some of the MFIs will abate and hotspots will get cooler after this.

Tamal Bandyopadhyay, consulting editor at Mint, is adviser to Bandhan Bank. He is also the author of A Bank for the Buck, Sahara: The Untold Story and Bandhan: The Making of a Bank.

His Twitter handle is @tamalbandyo

Comments are welcome at tamal.b@livemint.com

This column first appeared in www.livemint.com

Photo courtesy: Mint/ HT Media Ltd

 

Devarsi Negi

Corporate Debt Syndicator & Corporate Finance

8y

Dear Tamal Bandyopadhyay, I do not agree with the views expressed in this article. This article is misleading and my views are as follows. Let me answer you point by point:- You think Industry is grappling under over indebtedness. This is factually incorrect. As per MFIN as on 31st march 2016 total MFI borrower is around 35 Mn which is around 2.5% of the total population. In any developed MFI market (e.g. Bangladesh) market the number is above 10%. In Bangladesh it is around 14%. so in terms of number of client we can grow at least 4 times. Average ticket size as on 31st march is around Rs.16500/-, Anyone who understand finance will tell you to get Rs.8000 pm income one need investment of Rs.120000/-. So we can grow here around 15 times. Still 2/3rd of micro lending market space is controlled by direct lending from Banks and NABARD like sponsored skims. So here we have head room of 66%. So this industry can grow at least 50times than the current size. Where is overheating. You should not generalize an incident of a specific region for the entire country. The loan absorbing capacities of the clients have improved, this should rejoice than alarm. Secondly demonetization has surprisingly not affected much; in most of the places collection % it is above 90 %( baring few segments, which was directly depending on trading, and where cash flow is affected by non-payment of trader. Livelihood support program note ban affect is not severe. I think you are underestimating the typical Indian virtue of "Jugad". But industry is hurt by bank not giving money to MFI for disbursement. MFI charging higher rate of interest is a legal problem and must be dealt like any delinquent criminal why should be industry be blamed for an individual mistake. This is a pure individual breach of law than a systematic failure. The law breaker must be punished. Growth of the Industry:-Growth of industry is highly debatable as there is no clarity on how to treat the business of entities who got converted to bank. You can not include them last year and exclude them this year. To a practicenor like me it(MF-Industry) grew more than 100% in last financial year. If industry grew more than 100% it is natural some will have more than 100% growth and that is not a crime. Over Heating: - This is again misleading. How can you generalize happening of 10 districts for 650 districts (of India). Moreover, if you study the name you will find these are the place which should have huge demand for micro loan. 24 Pragans(North &South) covers a metro city(Kolkata) with population of around 2 Cr. Do you think this can be compared with any other district of India. Kanchipuram also hub of garment industry with large number of weavers and small traders, I am sure the other mentioned district also have some unique feature to absorb credit. Ability to absorb credit and overheating is two different things. We can safely say that we have long way to go for overheating and the industry will grow at least 10 time in next 5 years. Please note that we are talking about an industry which serves more than 70 Cr people with unique requirements. We have just skimmed the market with one product (livelihood support). There are at least 10 products which will be introduced soon to cater this market. Housing, Crop Loan, Education loans are few examples.

Debasish Majumder

Ambassador at beBee, Inc. Global Goodwill Ambassador.

8y

nice insight! enjoyed read. thank you Tamal Bandyopadhyay for sharing the informative post.

Vijay manikandan

Student at shivani Engineering college

8y

yes

NARENDRA GAJIPARA

at TAFE MOTORS AND TRACTORS LTD

8y

Very good information and truth.... Thanks Sir...

Madhavikutty V

Senior Banking Professional /30 years expertise in 3 Banks both Conv & New Gen/Top Performer/All Star Linked in ranking

8y

Informative read !

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