Mumbai: With a slower pace of resolution of bad loans, banks are staring at a spike in their credit cost, which is set to rise in the range of 1.9-4.6 per cent for the second half of the current fiscal, says report.
In its earlier assessment, India Rating had estimated the system-wide credit cost floor at 1.9 percent and capped it at 4.4 percent for the second half of FY19 and whole of FY20 (rpt for the second half of FY19 and whole of FY20).
"Given that the pace of resolutions has slowed down significantly since then, credit cost is expected to be marginally higher than the earlier estimate, while the floor will be irrelevant. On a bottom-up basis, credit cost is set to rise to 4.6 percent for the system for the period H2FY19 and FY20 (rpt for the period H2FY19 and FY20)," an India Rating report said Tuesday.
For the second half, it has revised upwards the credit cost estimate for state-run banks by 30 basis points to 5.2 percent, while for private sector banks it is pegged at 3.2 percent at the same level as the previous estimate.
"Any pick up in stressed asset resolutions may result in lower net credit cost," it added.
The agency said material incremental NPA generation for fiscal 2020 and 2021 may come from the agriculture and MSME sectors.
With the RBI giving forbearance to MSMEs until March 2020, some of the incremental stress in this segment can show up in FY21, unless the economy picks up, the report said.