For HDFC Bank, the weaker economy had led to a slowdown in loan growth, which eased to 15 per cent in the September quarter from 23 per cent a year earlier.
Business
Standard : HDFC Bank, India’s most valuable lender by
market capitalisation, sees tentative signs of a revival in rural
areas at a time when the wider economy is sputtering.
“The
recent loan outreach programs underway in rural areas have given us
the sense that the consumption in rural and semi-urban areas is
turning more positive,” HDFC Bank Executive Director Kaizad
Bharucha said in an interview last week. As of end-September, 52 per
cent of the bank’s outlets were in rural and semi-urban India, a
part of the economy that accounts for at least half of the national
output.
Prime
Minister Narendra Modi’s government has unveiled several steps to
boost the economy, which is growing at its weakest pace in more than
six years, including a surprise $20 billion corporate tax cut. The
Reserve
Bank of India is expected to cut interest rates again this week,
after Friday’s report that gross domestic product growth slowed to
4.5 per cent in the September quarter.
For
HDFC
Bank, the weaker economy had led to a slowdown in loan growth,
which eased to 15 per cent in the September quarter from 23 per cent
a year earlier. But it remained healthy compared with the overall
banking system which saw credit growth slowing to a two-year low just
above 8 per cent.
“As
a bank we are well positioned to offset a slowdown in either the
consumption or investment side as we are present across the
spectrum,” Bharucha said. “The demand for credit is not going
away. It may just be subdued for a period of time,” he added.
He’s
also cautiously optimistic about the outlook for corporate
investment, based on the bank’s soundings with Indian executives.
Muted
loan growth has hardly dented the upward march in HDFC Bank’s
shares, which are about 19 per cent higher so far this year. Now
valued at about $96 billion, the company trades around 26 times
projected 12 month earnings. That’s almost three times more
expensive than the Bloomberg World Banks Index and is the biggest
valuation premium on record.
World’s
most-loved megabank is surrounded by a lending crisis
Meanwhile,
non-bank lenders from Dewan Housing Finance Corp Ltd. to Reliance
Capital Ltd. have been reeling under a 17-month credit crisis after
Infrastructure Leasing & Financial Services Ltd. defaulted on its
debt last year. In a further blow to confidence, the Securities and
Exchange Board of India placed curbs on operations of Karvy Stock
Broking Ltd. after finding evidence it misused client funds.
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