DHFL plunges 44%; Indiabulls Housing down 8%: Why NBFC stocks fell like ninepins

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
NEW DELHI: Shares of housing finance companies came under sudden heavy selling pressure on Friday as investors raised concerns over rising
cost of borrowing for the companies amid continuing financial crisis at ILFS. Shares of Dewan Housing Finance Corporation (DHFL)
The company lost nearly Rs 10,000 crore worth in market cap. Tightness in money market and a lack of clarity on ILFS exposure has led to a
sudden sell-off in NBFCs
"There is pressure on short-term money both in the short-term and longer-term debt flows
The cost of money has escalated and there is tightness in the money market
The lack of clarity about ILFS exposure is leading to the knee-jerk reaction
There is no clarity on government's bailout for the company so far
However, the fear will subside after the government steps in
Once there is stability in the money market, things will be as usual," Sanjiv Bhasin, Executive VP-Markets Corporate Affairs, India
Infoline told to ETMarkets.com
"The cost of borrowing for NBFCs is going to shoot up and they may face challenge in raising money in the light of recent news on ILFS
However, this knee-jerk reaction is baffling," Hitesh Agrawal, EVP head - retail research at Religare Securities told ETMarkets.com. The
entire NBFC space looked like a red sea
Shares of VLS Finance (down 16.73 per cent), LT Finance Holdings (down 15.81 per cent), Crest Ventures (down 15.66 per cent), Centrum
Capital (down 15.36 per cent) and SREI Infrastructure Finance (down 15.35 per cent) cracked over 15 per cent. Magma Fincorp (down 15 per
cent), Shriram Transport Finance (down 14.99 per cent), Reliance Home Finance (down 14.71 per cent), Reliance Capital (down 14.55 per cent),
Bajaj Finserv (down 14.42 per cent), Capri Global Capital (down 14.20 per cent), Bajaj Finance (down 14.01 per cent), LIC Housing Finance
(down 13.54 per cent), IDFC (down 13.23 per cent), Reliance Nippon (down 12.76 per cent) and Can Fin Homes (down 12.72 per cent) nosedived
R Varadarajan, MD, Repco Home Finance denied any liquidity concerns, sayingcost of funds is increasing because of the bond market price
"I feel that most of the NBFCs are capable to take it and pass it on to the customers without much affecting the quality of the assets as
well as the growth," Vardarajan added
However, few stocks such as India Cements Capital (up 11.28 per cent), Mukesh Babu Financial Services (up 9.78 per cent), Meenakshi Entp
(up 6.97 per cent), AIIL (up 5.67 per cent), First Custodian Fund India (up 5.00 per cent), Jindal Capital (up 4.99 per cent), GILADAFINS
(up 4.97 per cent), Times Guaranty (up 4.92 per cent), Suchitra Finance Trading Company (up 4.90 per cent) and Gogia Capital Services (up
4.89 per cent) were in the green around that time. The 30-share BSE Sensex, after falling about 1,128 points, recovered and was down 267
points at 36,854.