Democracy enhances education growth –Don
Date Posted: 28/07/2013
Indian banks’ profitability, already at the
lowest since 2009, is poised to decline further after measures to stem the
rupee’s record slump drove up borrowing costs and exacerbated rising bad loans
and slowing loan growth.
Return on equity, which measures profit generated
with shareholders’ funds, may fall below 10 per cent in the year to March for
banks from last year’s 12.8 per cent, said Vibha Batra, co-head of
financial-sector ratings in New Delhi at a unit of Moody’s Investors
Service.
Bloomberg News reported on Monday that
stressed assets are approaching levels last seen in 2002, she said on August
21.
India’s banking index, which tracks lenders
including State Bank of India, has lost 19 percent since July 15 following
liquidity tightening measures from the central bank, which caused interbank
rates to surge to a 17-month high last week.
Those steps may drive up the risk of defaults in
an economy that expanded last year at the weakest pace in a decade.
“With the rise in interest rates, the cash crunch
and forex volatility, the evolving operating environment for banks in India is
worrying,” Batra said. “With the operating environment becoming tougher,
stressed assets in the banking system are rising.”
Interbank funding costs jumped after the Reserve
Bank of India raised two interest rates and capped cash injections into the
banking system to stem the rupee’s 19 per cent slide against the dollar since
the end of April.
The rupee’s slump is part of a sell-off in
emerging-market assets as growth in the biggest developing nations slow and
speculation increases the United States will start tapering its stimulus
program.
The MSCI Emerging Markets Index of stocks slumped
2.7 per cent last week, the most in two months, while a gauge of a currencies in
Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa touched its lowest level versus
the dollar since June 2010.
The rate at which Indian banks lend to each other
for three months climbed to 11.2 per cent on August 23, the highest level since
March 2012, compared with 8.52 per cent at the end of June, National Stock
Exchange of India Ltd. data show.
The RBI’s attempt to check the rupee’s slide
threatens to curtail lending that has already slowed in an economy that expanded
five per cent in the year ended March 31.
Loan growth at Indian lenders fell to 13.7 per
cent in the 12 months to June 14, the lowest since December 2009, before rising
to 16.6 per cent as of August 9, central bank data show.
“We reduced our exposure to Indian banks in
recent months,” David Gaud, a Hong Kong-based senior portfolio manager at the
asset management unit of Edmond de Rothschild Group, which oversees more than
$157bn, said by phone on August 21.
“Nonperforming assets will rise and loan growth
will be slower. There will be further pressure on return on equity.”
SOURCE: PUNCH
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