Loans against shares now a pricier affair

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Mumbai: Interest rates on loans against shares (LAS) have surged about 300 basis points in the past three months despite the RBI’s soft
rate regime as some highprofile defaults have heightened the associated risk
Promoters of companies raise such loans for short tenors because they can’t arrange other credit lines or to invest in other businesses
With mutual funds turning risk-averse and NBFCs struggling for liquidity, the hitherto lucrative segment has turned sour
A basis point is 0.01 percentage point. The RBI has cut the repo, or benchmark, rate by 110 basis points in its past four monetary policy
reviews
However, the interest rate on LAS, which was at 8- 12 per cent three months ago, has gone up to 10-15 per cent, depending on the profile of
the company and promoters, said lenders. “Interest on LAS has significantly surged in past three months as MFs who lend to firms against
collateralised shares have turned risk-averse with plunging stock prices,” said Vikrant Narang, CEO, structured finance, Ambit
Capital. Lenders Seek More Cover, Higher Rates“Lenders are now demanding even more cover along with higher rates,” said Narang of Ambit
Capital. The BSE MidCap and Small-Cap indices have fallen 18 per cent and 25 per cent, respectively, in the past year amid a liquidity
squeeze that has gripped NBFCs
That was sparked by the default by Infrastructure Leasing - Financial Services (IL-FS) in September last year
Dewan Housing Finance Corp Ltd (DHFL) has struggled to make repayments as has the Essel Group, which was forced to reach a standstill
agreement with some lenders after stocks crashed. Several lenders that have given loans to small and mid-sized companies are sitting on
losses as the market has fallen sharply in the past few weeks
Yes Bank recently invoked pledged shares in Cox - Kings, giving it a nearly 18.5 per cent stake in the travel company
The private sector lender has also acquired stakes in Eveready, Reliance Power, CG Power and several other companies after promoters failed
to arrange funds following a crash in share prices. The promoters of 830 listed companies had pledged shares worth Rs 1.86 lakh crore as of
August 13
In about 80 companies, including Bajaj Hindusthan, Reliance Naval, IVRCL, Asian Hotels, McLeod Russel and Reliance Capital, promoters have
pledged more than 90 per cent of their holding. Loans against shares are normally of tenors ranging from six to 24 months
As banks cannot lend more than Rs 20 lakh to a single entity under LAS, promoters raise funds from NBFCs by pledging their shares. Interest
rates have increased by 200-400 basis points versus a year ago, dealers said
The tight market liquidity has also fuelled this trend, according to dealers. “Investors are demanding risk premium amid a volatile stock
market,” said Lakshmi Iyer, chief investment officer, debt, at Kotak Mutual Fund. “Many small or mid-size company promoter pledges are
also rising, which in turn also stokes fears among investors and this has led to higher LAS rates.” Promoters of some large and midcap
companies including Sterlite Technologies, Adani Ports, GMR Infra, Emami, Indiabulls Housing, Indiabulls Real Estate and Jubilant FoodWorks
redeemed pledged shares recently amid liquidity stress and a drop in stock prices. “Fund houses seem to be attracting regulatory attention
on LAS due to collapse of some latest corporate deals,” said Vikram Dalal, founder, Synergee Capital
“All investors are now seeking risk aversion with companies running for credit lines
This has made money costly for those mid to small size promoters who used to approach NBFCs to pledge their shares in order to raise funds
for their business.”