Muted government spending and high election-linked expenditure have created a cash deficit in India's banking system in the past few months.
Business
Standard : India needs to pump more cash into its financial
system to prevent a worsening of the funding crisis among shadow
banks and the corporate sector, according to one of the nation’s
biggest money managers.
Non-banking
financial companies had served as a “surrogate womb” for banks,
who face regulatory limits on how much they can lend, but that
“surrogacy has stopped,’’ Lakshmi Iyer, chief investment
officer for debt at Kotak Mahindra Asset Management Co., said in an
interview at her office in Mumbai. “If the liquidity the system
requires is not provided sooner or later, this could morph itself
into something beyond NBFCs.’’
The
non-bank lenders, which have been hit by high borrowing costs and
largely shut out from the bond market after the crisis at shadow
lender IL&FS
Group broke out last year, are facing the risk that more
borrowers will be unable to repay their debt as the cash crunch drags
on. Oil industry firms, steel producers and mineral companies, all of
which rely on NBFCs for funding, are finding it difficult to raise
money, Iyer said.
Muted
government spending and high election-linked expenditure have created
a cash deficit in India’s banking system in the past few months.
Authorities are already using open-market debt purchase operations
and currency swaps as a “potent liquidity tool,” but more is
needed to get enough cash into the system, Iyer said.
India’s
cash deficit, measured by how much lenders need to borrow from the
central bank to carry out their operations, is the worst since 2016,
according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The banking system has
experienced a liquidity deficit for all but 10 days so far in 2019,
the data show.
Policy
makers appear to be aware of the potential risks. The nation’s top
bureaucrat for corporate affairs, Injeti Srinivas, warned of an
imminent crisis in NBFCs
due to over-leveraging and a credit squeeze among other reasons, and
those are “a perfect recipe for disaster,” the Press Trust of
India reported.
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