RBI likely to tighten norms for unsecured lending portfolios of banks
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) is looking to tighten scrutiny on the unsecured lending portfolios of banks amid the growing risk of potential defaults, four banking sources told Reuters.
“Some action from the RBI on unsecured lending, credit cards, etc. could be seen,” a senior source aware of the central bank’s thinking said. “Excessive growth is the first sign of potential delinquencies.”
“We can expect the RBI to increase risk weights on unsecured personal loans and credit cards and, or, float a discussion paper on how to monitor the space more efficiently,” said the head of credit card vertical at a private sector bank.
“The RBI has enough options with it for stricter vigilance,” said a senior official at a large private sector bank. “We are bracing for tighter norms, it’s a matter of time,” the executive said.
Indian banks have been expanding their unsecured lending portfolio as the pandemic-induced stress began easing.
Banks’ outstanding on credit cards stood at 2 trillion rupees as of April. 21, up from 1.54 trillion rupees a year earlier, the latest RBI data showed.
Vintage delinquencies in April stood at 9% and 4% for personal loans and credit cards respectively, in the October-December quarter, compared with 5% each in the pre-pandemic period, per a TransUnion CIBIL report.
Collection efficiencies have also deteriorated for these loan products, the report showed.
The RBI has been cautioning banks on unsecured lending amid rising interest rates and high inflation, Reuters reported in April.