Meanwhile, one segment where HFCs have been growing relatively faster is affordable housing loans, where competition from banks is limited
Also, despite heightened competition from quick commerce players, revenue of food and grocery retailers will be higher by 38% over FY20
Container shipping charter rates are set for a course correction after touching historical highs in 2021 and staying elevated so far this year, according to a report. It also expects margins of the Indian shippers squeezing this fiscal even as they will be higher than the pre-Covid level. Charter rates were up 156 per cent year-on-year for the first seven months of this year, according to Crisil Research. Over the remaining months, however, the rates are expected to decline, though still ending the year 40-70 per cent higher, it said. These rates are likely to slide a further 30-50 per cent in 2023 on account of the expected recessionary environment in the majority of the consumption economies and consequent fall in demand for discretionary goods, according to the report. It also noted that a widely anticipated recessionary environment is expected to weigh on demand in key consumption countries in the West towards the end of the year, among other factors for the anticipated furthe
Non-bank lenders' asset growth will jump to a four-year high of 11-12 per cent this fiscal, a ratings agency said on Monday. The non-bank finance companies (NBFCs) segment has witnessed three consecutive years of constrained asset growth due to the COVID-19 pandemic, with the growth coming at 5 per cent in FY22, Crisil Ratings said. However, its deputy chief ratings officer Krishnan Sitaraman said that even as the asset growth jumps to double digits, it will still be lower than the pre-pandemic levels which witnessed a 20 per cent growth during the three years to FY19. "Intense competition from banks and the rising interest rate scenario will limit the competitiveness of NBFCs in certain segments, leading them to focus on higher-yield segments for growth," he said. Vehicle finance, which constitutes nearly half of the assets for NBFCs, will grow at 11-13 per cent in FY23, as against 3-4 per cent in FY22 and FY21, the agency said. Used vehicle financing, with its higher yields, wil
Despite increasing margin pressure, the consumer durables sector is likely to witness a double-digit volume growth, pushing its revenue up by 15-18 per cent to Rs 1 lakh crore this fiscal, according to a report. According to the report, a 10-13 per cent spike in demand/volume, which will be driven by both urban and rural segments -- led mostly by the AC and refrigerator segments, though rural demand will come into play in the second half of the fiscal. The industry had crossed the pre-pandemic mark in value terms last fiscal, and this fiscal, it will scale past the pre-pandemic volume mark by 3 per cent, a Crisil report said on Wednesday. The Crisil report said a 10-13 per cent spike in volume will boost the top-line of the sector by 15 to 18 per cent this fiscal, taking past the size of the durables industry to over Rs 1 lakh crore, which will be 3 per cent above the pre-pandemic size. However, margins are under pressure given the run-away commodity prices of inputs like copper, .
Receivables of leading renewable companies will shrink 20 per cent during this financial year, Crisil Ratings said. Leading renewable energy (RE) companies are set to see their receivables reduce a fifth from 180 days a year ago to 140 days as of March 2023, a level last visible pre-COVID, the agency said in a statement. According to the statement, two-thirds of the improvement will be because of increasing central counter-party offtake, and the rest due to state discoms implementing the late payment surcharge (LPS) scheme. The incremental cash flow will allow RE companies to build capacity for growth and reduce leverage, it opined. Payment cycles had stretched in the past two fiscals because state discoms such as Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Telangana and Andhra Pradesh (accounting for 23 per cent of the overall capacity exposure) held back payments to RE developers following liquidity crunch or contractual disagreements, it added. This increased the overall cycle for the 10 asse
The state-run financer for generators and distributors is struggling under a record debt burden even as it is being asked to underwrite the government's latest scheme to rescue inefficient discoms
The price of aluminium is likely to go up in the medium term due to factors like surge in demand, Crisil Research on Tuesday said. The price of the metal fell 45 per cent from the March 2022 peak to around 2,400 dollar per tonne now due to factors like lockdown in China. "Aluminium prices have likely bottomed out and should rise over the medium term, supported by two structural drivers: limited smelter capacity additions and uptick in demand," it said in a statement. Limited capacity additions over the next five years will be crucial to pick up in the prices of aluminium, it said. The demand for aluminium is likely to see a structural growth over the medium term on account of global green investments, including electric vehicles, solar panels and renewable energy grids, most of which have high intensity of aluminium use. "Green investments across major economies will lead to a strong uptick in demand for aluminium, but global capacity addition is expected to fall from 20 MT during
MSMEs, which make up 90-95 per cent of re-rollers, witnessed a sharp margin contraction in FY21 owing to iron ore unavailability, and logistics and labour issues, among other factors
Decrease in slippages and higher recoveries to help state-owned lender, says agency
It also intends to invest some money into co-investment opportunities available from such investee funds
Due to global risk aversion on the back of geo-political tensions and aggressive policy tightening by the Fed, the dollar has appreciated against most currencies, including the rupee
India's national highway construction will likely reach only 32-34 km per day during the current financial year as input prices are expected to remain elevated, said rating agency Crisil
The Reserve Bank of India defines securitisation as transactions where credit risks in assets are redistributed by repackaging them into tradable securities
India Inc is staring at the third consecutive quarter of a year-on-year drop in profit margins for the April-June 2022 period, a Crisil Ratings arm said on Monday. Operating profit margins have likely fallen by 2-3 percentage points for the June quarter as compared to the year-ago period, Crisil Research said after analysing 300 companies excluding those from financial services and oil and gas sectors. It said almost half of the 47 sectors it tracks are likely to show a contraction in margins. Corporate revenues are estimated to have logged a healthy growth of 30 per cent on-year in the first quarter, largely supported by price hikes and moderately rising volumes, it said. The rating agency estimates come ahead of earnings for the June quarter by a majority of companies, which come amid adverse events like the impact on commodities because of the geopolitical tensions and depreciation in the Indian rupee to record lows. Operating profit margins in construction-linked sectors are ..
However, national highway projects are typically executed by large contractors, with only a small proportion sub-contracted to SMEs
This growth is in spite of the ongoing chip shortage, and three of the global manufacturers met the PLI production targets in FY22
Sub-investment grade MSMEs are at high risk; sunset for pandemic-induced relief measures to have a bearing too
Crisil warned of more companies defaulting on their debt obligations as it expects withdrawal of pandemic-induced relief measures coupled with volatile input prices creating cost pressures
India's steel exports is expected to come down by 40% to 12 million tonnes (MT) in the ongoing fiscal, as a result of the duty-related measures taken by the government last month, according to CRISIL