Banks' unsecured loan book has grown four times the bank
credit during the past three years, helped by a rise in discretionary
spending, technology-driven disbursements and lower interest rates, says
a report.
Unsecured loans are the loans where individual exposures are smaller
and more distributed and given without any collaterals but banks get
higher margins. Typically personal loan, education loans and credit card spends fall under this category of loans.
"Between fiscals 2015 and 2018, unsecured credit - comprising
personal, small and medium enterprise (SME), and credit card loans -
clocked a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 27 per cent, or almost
four times growth in bank credit," Crisil said in a report today.
As of March 2018, outstanding unsecured loans stood at around Rs 5
trillion, accounting for 26 per cent of retail lending, compared to 21
per cent three years ago.
Growth in unsecured loans is on account of a surge in discretionary
spending, increased availability of customer data, faster disbursements
driven by technology, and lower interest rates in some segments.
The report said financiers are expected to focus more on this segment due to attractive yields.
Return on assets are 2.5-3 per cent for personal and SME loans, and
3-4 per cent for credit cards, compared to under 2 per cent for home
loans and new passenger vehicle loans, it said, adding rising
competition has led to lower rates in some segments such as personal
loans.
In unsecured SME loans, rates have remained sticky, but average
tenure and commissions paid to direct selling agents have increased, it
said.
Source- Economic Times
Source- Economic Times
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