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Business News/ Industry / Goldman spotlights India debt risk amid high-profile defaults
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Goldman spotlights India debt risk amid high-profile defaults

Corporates with debt-to-equity ratios exceeding 200% rose to 476 from 36 in 2005, according to Bloomberg analysts

More delinquencies won’t come as a surprise for the Goldman Sachs analysts, who’ve warned of worsening credit profiles at least twice this year. Photo: Getty ImagesPremium
More delinquencies won’t come as a surprise for the Goldman Sachs analysts, who’ve warned of worsening credit profiles at least twice this year. Photo: Getty Images

Singapore: The number of Indian companies with twice as much debt than equity jumped tenfold in the past decade. Two defaults this month suggest that credit binge may end in regret.

Corporates with debt-to-equity ratios exceeding 200% rose to 476 from 36 in 2005, data compiled by Bloomberg on 3,820 publicly traded non-bank entities show. Jaiprakash Associates Ltd, a power and property group, had the rating on its bank loans lowered to default last week due to a delay in servicing. Soma Isolux Surat Hazira Tollway’s debt was also cut to a D.

“The stressed debt increase mainly comes from investment heavy sectors," Goldman Sachs Group Inc. analysts led by Kenneth Ho wrote in a report this month. “The weakness in commodity prices has been a contributing factor and we are also seeing stress among overcapacity sectors."

The fallout adds pressure on Prime Minister Narendra Modi to unclog some $212 billion of stalled infrastructure projects to bolster growth. Even billionaires at Tata Steel Ltd and Hindalco Industries Ltd are negotiating with banks to cut their interest burden as an economic slowdown and commodity price slump worsen finances.

‘More problems’

The stressed asset ratio at Indian banks climbed to 10.9% as of 31 March, up from 10.8% on 31 December and 10% as of 31 March 2014. More delinquencies won’t come as a surprise for the Goldman Sachs analysts, who’ve warned of worsening credit profiles at least twice this year.

Since 2012, listed companies in India have experienced the fastest increase in leverage among Asian borrowers through mid-2014, the New York-based investment bank said in a report in February. Those with the weakest interest-coverage ratio—or an Ebitda-to-interest expense of less than one time—took on 20% more debt over the period, the most at any point over the past decade, it said in a 17 July note.

Credit Analysis and Research Ltd, or CARE, downgraded Jaiprakash’s debt to default after delays in servicing obligations on some 29,300 crore of facilities. The company’s debt-to-equity ratio jumped to 416% as of 31 March from as low as 206% in 2008, Bloomberg data show.

Bonds slump

The downgrade came after Jaiprakash, based in Noida in India’s north, restructured $200 million of convertible bonds before their maturity in February to avert a default. The 5.75% 2017 notes slumped to a record-low 70.43 cents on the dollar Wednesday.

ICICI Bank Ltd, State Bank of India, IDBI Bank Ltd and Standard Chartered Plc are the four biggest lenders to Jaiprakash, accounting for about two-thirds of its 18,000 crore in bank debt in 2014, Morgan Stanley said in a 24 July report.

“Given the slowdown in the power and real estate markets, there would be pressure on liquidity, especially so when the company has substantial leverage," said D.R. Dogra, a Mumbai-based managing director at CARE. “While an asset sale is an option, it would take time to materialize for any company under the stable but conservative economic environment." As such, there needs to be a speeding up of projects, he said.

Stalled projects

Some 46,000 megawatts of power projects in India face viability issues due to the lack of long-term power buyers, putting about 75,000 crore of loans that funded them at risk, local ratings firm Crisil Ltd said in a report last week.

Modi plans to spend another 70,000 crore on roads, ports and airports this fiscal year to reverse an investment slowdown in Asia’s third-largest economy. The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has cut its reverse repurchase rate three times in 2015, to 6.25% from 7%.

India’s housing market is also sluggish, with home sales decreasing 20% in the first half from a year ago, Knight Frank Llp said 28 July.

“Many companies in India are leveraged and some pain is visible," said Abhishek Bhalotia, the London-based chief executive of Kotak Mahindra UK Ltd, part of the banking group that manages about $11 billion of assets globally. “Further rate cuts will help the situation." Bloomberg

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Published: 31 Jul 2015, 09:39 AM IST
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