Mutual Funds Commodities Research Tax Planning IPO Our Team Contact Us  
Google
Web www.equitybulls.com
Research

| More

Declining liquidity coverage ratios to slow down credit growth for banks: ICRA

Posted On: 2024-08-29 19:12:40 (Time Zone: IST)


In its recent report, ICRA highlighted that the share of deposits from retail customers and small businesses declined by almost 4.8% since its peak in June 2021 to 59.5% of total deposits by March 2024. This reflects a relatively higher growth in wholesale deposits for banks, when compared to retail deposits. Since such wholesale deposits have higher run-off factors, a larger share of such deposits adversely impacts the reported liquidity coverage ratio (LCR) for banks. A decline in LCR would need banks to place a higher share of their incremental deposits towards high quality liquid assets (HQLA) instead of deploying these deposits for credit growth.

Additionally, the proposed changes by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) in its draft circular dated July 25, 2024 to review the LCR guidelines will reduce the system-wide reported LCR by 14-17%, i.e., from 130% reported during Q4 FY2024 to 113-116%, on account of the higher run-off factors for certain deposits and haircuts on the HQLA. Banks would then need to rework their strategy on credit and deposit growth, especially where the LCR declines to a level closer to the regulatory requirement of 100%. To recoup the LCR loss, banks may focus more on retail deposits, reducing the share of wholesale deposits, moderating credit growth and deploying a higher share of deposits to the HQLA.

Sachin Sachdeva, Vice President & Sector Head - Financial Sector Ratings, ICRA said: "With the declining share of retail and small business deposits of banks, ICRA expects the interest rate on retail deposits to remain elevated even if the credit growth slows down. The peak deposit rates for banks, hence, may stay elevated despite expected rate cuts in H2 FY2025, implying delayed transmission. In such a scenario, the banks may cut down low-yielding wholesale exposures, who will then have to shift to the debt capital markets or external commercial borrowings."

As per ICRA's assessment, the recent regulatory actions like urging banks to reduce their credit-to-deposit (CD) ratio, increasing risk weights towards high growing loan segments, and the proposal to review the LCR framework, all point to the need to align credit growth with deposit growth while focusing on growing retail deposits. ICRA expects the non-food bank credit (NFBC) growth to slow down to Rs. 19.0-20.5 trillion (11.6-12.5% YoY) in FY2025 from Rs. 22.3 trillion (16.3% YoY) in FY2024. Incremental deposit growth is expected to moderate to Rs. 19.4-20.0 trillion (9.5-9.8% YoY) in FY2025 from Rs. 23.2 trillion (12.9% YoY) in FY2024.

With credit growth outpacing deposit growth, the CD ratio reached an all-time high of 78.0% (80.2% including impact of HDFC merger) as of March 2024 in the last five years. Thereafter, following the regulatory nudge to banks to moderate their CD ratio, there has been a slight dip to 77.1% as of June 2024 with incremental CD ratio declining to 60% in Q1 FY2025.

Overall, ICRA anticipates that banks will moderate their credit growth targets in the run-up to the proposed implementation of revised LCR norms w.e.f. April 01, 2025, resulting in an improvement (i.e., decline) in the CD ratio and increase in liquidity buffers. ICRA views these as positive developments from the banks' risk perspective, however, at the same time the negative impact on Return on Asset (RoA) and Return on Equity (RoE) can be 6-7 basis points (bps) and 70-90 bps, respectively.

"With lower growth aspirations, banks can be selective with the lending segments they choose to grow, for improved pricing power. To neutralise the impact on profitability because of the proposed LCR guidelines, banks will need to hike their lending rates by 10 bps. This could mean a higher cost for the borrowers," Sachdeva added.


Click here to send ur comments or to feedback@equitybulls.com

Disclaimer:The article above is a gist / extract of the original report prepared by the research firm / brokerage firm. This article is not to be considered as an offer to sell or a solicitation to buy any securities. This article is meant for general information only. www.equitybulls.com, its employees or owners or the research firms, its employees or owners won't be responsible for any liability that may arise from information, errors or omissions in these articles. www.equitybulls.com or its employees or owners / the research firms or its employees or clients or owners may from time to time hold positions in securities referred in this article. For detailed research reports, please contact the concerned research firm directly.





Other Headlines:

CRISIL Ratings: Agrochemicals sector to see 7-9% growth amid modest exports

SBI Capital Markets: RBI Monetary Policy Dec'24 - RBI faces arduous task of managing all dynamics: Liquidity, Currency, Growth and Inflation

SBICAPS Monthly Ecocapsule Dec'24 : FY25 - A TALE OF TWO HALVES OR ONE OF FULL DESPAIR? - Executive Summary

CRISIL Ratings: Revenue growth of organised luggage makers to halve to 8-10%

CRISIL Ratings - Cement demand to grow at a moderate pace of 7-8% this fiscal

CRISIL Ratings: For small finance banks, RoA to dip ~40 bps this fiscal

Securitisation volumes witness strong growth; likely to reach ~Rs. 60,000 crore in Q2 FY2025: ICRA

CRISIL Ratings: Operating losses of state discoms to stay high despite 15-20% dip

CRISIL Ratings: Tamil Nadu garment exporters to see 8-10% revenue growth

CRISIL MI&A: Inflated natural rubber prices to puncture tyre maker margins

Infrastructure bond issuances by public sector banks to drive banks' bond issuances to an all-time high in FY2025: ICRA

CRISIL Ratings: Apparel retailers to stitch 8-10% growth with festivals, fast fashion

CRISIL Ratings: For ARCs, rising power consumption to boost recoveries from stressed operational thermal plants

Views of ICAI on SA 600 vs ISA 600

CRISIL Ratings: Wagon makers set to roll in ~20% revenue growth this fiscal

CRISIL Ratings: Basmati industry to see revenue grow ~4% on a high base this fiscal

CRISIL: Pharmaceutical sector set for 8-10% revenue growth this fiscal

CRISIL Ratings: Flexible packaging players' credit profiles to stay subdued this fiscal

Industry credit expected to grow over 12 per cent: FICCI-IBA Bankers' Survey

CRISIL Ratings: Decadal-low duty to push gold jewellery retailers' revenues up by 22-25%

CRISIL Ratings: Education loan AUM of NBFCs to top Rs 60,000 crore this fiscal

Evolving asset quality risks to impact growth and profitability of microfinance: ICRA

Near-term Consolidation; Focus Remains on Style & Sector Rotation - Axis Securities

CRISIL Ratings: Paper packaging volume to grow, but profitability to plumb lows

CRISIL MI&A: Corporate revenue growth likely moderated to 5-7% in April-June, the slowest in 15 quarters

CRISIL Ratings: Revenue growth of auto dealers to enter the slow lane this fiscal

CRISIL Ratings: Road developers to see slower revenue growth of 5-7% next fiscal

CRISIL Ratings: Small finance banks to grow advances 25-27% this fiscal

Global monetary easing to pick up pace - Puneet Pal, Head-Fixed Income, PGIM India Mutual Fund

Kotak Institutional Equities: Strategy: 1QFY25: Converging trends

CRISIL Ratings: Cement makers line up ~Rs 1.25 lakh crore capex over fiscals 2025-27

CRISIL Ratings: Urea import dependency to fall to 10-15% from this fiscal

CRISIL Ratings: 20% ethanol blending goal means more sugarcane utilisation

Kotak Institutional Equities: Automobiles & Components: 1QFY25 review: Steady quarter; demand outlook weakening

CRISIL MI&A: Macroeconomics First Cut - Goods exports fall, services soften

Kotak Institutional Equities: Consumer: 1QFY25 review- Uptick in staples, continued weakness in discretionary

CRISIL Ratings: Despite cash disbursement restriction gold-loan NBFCs shine

SBICAPS Report - The Green Pill: Labelled Bond Issuances, ESG Indices, Global Sustainable Funds

We expect the 10 yr benchmark bond yield to keep drifting lower gradually - PGIM India Mutual Fund

Strategy: Faith, froth and fundamentals by Kotak Institutional Equities

Earnings growth should be the key driver of returns hereon - Vinay Paharia - CIO, PGIM India Mutual Fund

IT Services: ERD services: Auto pulse-challenges ahead - Kotak Institutional Equities

Banks, Diversified Financials : Strong on expected lines across BFSI - Quarterly Review - Kotak Institutional Equities

Metals & Mining: SC ruling-empowers the states; marginal negative impact - Kotak Institutional Equities

CRISIL Ratings: Revised deposit norms unlikely to be onerous for HFCs

CRISIL Ratings: 6 gigawatt renewable energy storage to be added by fiscal 2028

CRISIL Ratings: Thermal share in power generation to dip over 500 bps next fiscal

Indian bond market issuances exceeded $105 billion, $25 billion new equity issued in FY24 - Shri Pramod Rao, ED, SEBI

One third of Nifty 100 companies hire thousands of young talent on apna.co

CRISIL MI&A: Sector Vector - Reading the topical trends - Power demand in India moderates as monsoon coverage improves


Website Created & Maintained by : Chennai Scripts
West Mambalam, Chennai - 600 033,
Tamil Nadu, India

disclaimer copyright © 2005 - 2020