Ratings company cuts India's outlook to negative, says fewer jobs will be created.
Moody’s
Investors Service said it doesn’t expect the credit squeeze
among Indian shadow lenders to be resolved quickly, and warned that
the squeeze may actually worsen and add to risks in the already
flagging economy.
“Stress
among non-bank financial institutions with the possibility of a more
severe credit crunch that would affect credit supply, both directly
and indirectly through linkages with non-banks and banks, adds to the
downside risks to the medium-term growth outlook,” the ratings
company said in a statement. It cut India’s outlook to negative,
the first step toward a downgrade.
Moody’s
comments come days after S&P Global Ratings warned that risks of
contagion are rising in the Indian financial sector. The credit
quality of Indian companies has plummeted to a record low as Prime
Minister Narendra Modi’s government struggles to revive economic
growth from a six-year-low.
With
state-run banks still grappling with a pile of bad
loans, credit supply is likely to remain impaired for “some
time,” Moody’s said. Loan-growth in Asia’s No. 3 economy
slumped to 8.8% in October, the lowest level in two years, RBI data
show. Bank credit to private, non-financial companies accounts for
more than half of India’s gross domestic product, according to data
from the Bank for International Settlements.
The
spread between the RBI’s key policy rate and the weighted average
lending rate on outstanding loans from commercial banks is the
highest in data going back to February 2012.
Indian
households, which already have among the lowest per capita incomes
for emerging markets, can’t fully absorb such shocks as fewer jobs
will be created, Moody’s said.
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