Indian gold lenders cut tenure, watch collateral as price falls
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[MUMBAI] Indian firms that lend against gold are cutting tenures and seeking more collateral to protect against the plunge in prices of the precious metal.
Market leader Muthoot Finance Ltd. has been offering discounts on interest rates and other incentives to borrowers who chose to repay monthly or more frequently.
Rival Muthoottu Mini Financiers Ltd. is mostly lending for 90 days now versus 270 previously, and most large firms are disbursing amounts well below regulatory limits, which was 75 per cent of the metal's value for shadow lenders and 90 per cent for traditional banks through March 31.
Gold loans had boomed over the past year as small businesses tried to revive themselves from lockdowns by pledging family jewelry that's a staple of almost all Indian households. Muthoot Finance, for instance, saw such lending increase 25 per cent over the period and the company holds 146 tons of gold, higher than the official reserves of Singapore and Sweden.
"People are sentimental about their jewelery," said George Muthoot Alexander, managing director at Muthoot Finance. "They will never want to default despite a fall in gold prices as they intend to get back their pledged ornaments."
Gold posted its first quarterly drop in more than two years amid improving expectations for the global economy and fading demand from exchange-traded funds. The metal has fallen about 10 per cent in 2021 as investors trade their havens for assets that will benefit from the economic recovery.
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The biggest concern though is that a fresh wave of infections in India could scuttle business plans and force even the most diligent repayers to default.
"We are reviewing our portfolio and mark-to-market levels daily to see if further steps are needed," said Mathew Muthoottu, managing director of Muthoottu Mini Financiers.
India's market for gold lending will expand by at least 34 per cent to 4.6 trillion rupees (S$84 billion) in the two years to March 2022, according to an estimate by KPMG. The segment's bad-loan ratio is about 1 per cent compared with 7.5 per cent for the entire banking sector.
"While there is a gold price fall and among the normal risk parameters the security would have reduced, the economy is opening up and it is a not crisis situation," said World Gold Council India managing director PR Somasundaram.
"People are keen to take loans because every business is coming back and small businesses do depend on gold loans for quick access to capital."
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