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    Hit by lockdown, MFIs apprehensive for growth, likely to shelve expansion plans

    Synopsis

    During the lockdown period, the operations of the MFIs have been mostly suspended. Branches are closed and no field-work is going on.

    ThinkstockPhotos-134452994ThinkStock Photos
    Collections from borrowers have also been affected during the 21-day lockdown imposed to contain the COVID-19 pandemic.
    KOLKATA: The microfinance institutions (MFIs), which are currently feeling the pinch of the coronavirus pandemic with their operations being suspended during the nationwide lockdown, are concerned about the near-term growth of the industry, officials said on Monday.
    The MFIs will concentrate more on protecting their existing portfolios, once the lockdown will be lifted, and many of them may shelve their expansion plans for the time being, a self-regulatory organisation of the sector, Microfinance Institutions Network (MFIN) chairperson Manoj Kumar Nambiar said.

    Speaking on the outlook for the industry, he said,"Performance of the MFIs in the current fiscal which has just begun, will depend on when the lockdown will be lifted and how quickly the governments, both the Centre and the states,arrest the pandemic.

    "The first quarter will certainly get affected as collections will fall in April and May because many borrowers will opt for the moratorium package."

    Nambiar, further said, disbursements to existing customers will continue but micro-lenders will be cautions to extend credit to the new ones during this crisis period.

    "The short-to-medium-term impact of the coronavirus out break and the subsequent measure of the lockdown to combat the pandemic seems to be more on the urban in-formal sector as compared to agriculture-based rural activities, another self regulatory organisation of the sector,"said Sa-Dhan executive director P Satish.

    "MFIs with more exposure in urban informal sectors will face more difficulties than an lending institution having a large number of rural sector borrowers," he said.

    The Association of Microfinance Institutions, West Bengal member and Village Financial Institution's managing director Kuldip Maity said it will take at least six months for non-agro portfolios to get into normalcy and the overall industry growth for the FY 21 may slip to 15 per cent.

    Ruling out any possibility of retrenchment in the sector amid the threat that the economic growth will be adversely impacted due to COVID-19 crisis, Nambiar said, "The industry will need to retain their staff so that the collection and the recovery activities can start once thelockdown is over."

    However, he said, "expansion plan of many institutions will either be put on hold for the time being or required to be tweaked as the MFIs will try to protect their existing portfolio and concentrate more on the steadying the ships."

    "Certainly, they do not want to expand into new geographies in this point of time," he added.

    Despite the disruption in the second half of March,the last month for a financial year, due to the coronavirus pandemic, Satish is, however, optimistic that the microfinance industry will clock an growth of about 20 per cent in FY20 over the previous year, but apprehensive about the same in the current fiscal.

    During the lockdown period, the operations of the MFIs have been mostly suspended. Branches are closed and no field-work is going on. Staff of the institutions are currently working from home and engaging with the customers over phone,Nambiar said.

    "Microfinance is basically a group-based lending approach. Since there are restrictions on movement, neither members of small borrowers' groups, nor loan officers of microfinance institutions are able to meet.

    "Almost everything becomes standstill. Loandisbursement as well as collections from borrowers came to ahalt during the lockdown," Satish said.

    A few organisations are disbursing advances through online arrangement, which accounts for not even 10 per cent of the business, he said.

    The disbursements as well as collections were adversely impacted due to the coronavirus outbreak and the ongoing nationwide lockdown, the officials said.

    Usually, the disbursements reach its peak before closing of a business year, and last week of March is always hectic, Nambiar, who is also managing director of Arohan Financial Services, said.

    "A rough estimate suggests that Rs 500 crore of money is usually disbursed to micro borrowers by the MFIs on a day in the last week March. Owning to the lockdown, around Rs 3,500 crore could not be disbursed to borrowers by 75-80 entities in the last seven days of FY20," he said.

    He added that the first half of April is, however,considered to be a "slow period" in terms of disbursement. Collections from borrowers have also been affected during the 21-day lockdown imposed to contain the COVID-19 pandemic, he said.

    "The loan portfolio of the microfinance industry by end of December 2019, was about Rs 2.12 lakh crore and the collections per month typically stands at an average 9-10 percent of that.

    "Again, a rough estimate indicates that around 5,000 crore of money could not be collected during the last week of March," Nambiar said.

    Asked whether the three-month moratorium, as per RBI's guideline, will be extended to the micro borrowers, he said,the package will be "offered to small borrowers and it is upto them whether they will opt for it or not".

    "The scheme is about extending the loan tenure by three months. There is a cost implication in the form of interest rates, if one opts for the moratorium package. But no borrowers will be penalised for delay in payments for March, April and May," he said.

    MFIs also started seeking the 3-month moratorium on loan repayment from their lenders such as banks and other financial institutions, Satish said.

    "The MFIs expect a back-to-back moratorium from their lenders who are banks and financial institutions. This is very important as without that the micro lenders would not be able to extend loans to their end clients who need it the most in this difficult period," Nambiar said.

    Satish predicted the micro credit demand will hopefully pick up with the progress of the current financial year, as small borrowers will need fund to reorganise their businesses as and when the normalcy in the economy is restored.
    The Economic Times

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