Corporate Update

Corporate India: Ignoring the world’s challenges?

Published: April 3, 2023
Author: DIGITAL MEDIA EXECUTIVE

CareEdge Ratings’ credit ratio, which measures the ratio of upgrades to downgrades, normalised to 2.72 in H2FY23  after reaching an all-time high of 3.74 in H1FY23. During H2FY23, CareEdge Ratings upgraded the ratings of 383 entities  and downgraded the ratings of 141 entities. While the credit ratios for both, Investment Grade (IG)1 and Below  Investment Grade (BIG)2 portfolios saw a moderation in H2FY23, the IG portfolio’s credit ratio continues to remain  superior at 2.99 (down from 3.90 in H1FY23), indicating that our investment-grade portfolio has exhibited higher  resilience. On the other hand, the credit ratio for the BIG portfolio decreased to 2.22 in H2FY23 from its peak of 3.54  in H1FY23. 

The normalisation in the credit ratio is in the backdrop of global headwinds with slowdown in external demand, rising  interest rates, spill-overs from the Russia-Ukraine conflict and uncertainties in the financial system. Amid these  uncertainties, India’s economy has shown relatively greater resilience with the high-frequency economic indicators like  Goods & Services Tax (GST) collections, Electronic Way (E-way) bill generation, services Purchasing Managers Index  (PMI), and retail credit growth pointing to healthy consumption demand. 

According to Sachin Gupta, Executive Director and Chief Rating Officer-CareEdge Ratings, “The credit ratio for H2FY23  has normalised but remained resilient as expected, despite slowdown in the global economy and uncertainties in the  financial system as manifested in the recent streak of bank collapses. The Indian economy is relatively better placed  with GDP growth estimated at 7% in FY23, which is expected to moderate to 6.1% in FY24. CareEdge Ratings believes  that corporate India has managed to dodge the global headwinds for now and is likely to continue to grow at a steady  pace. However, we remain mindful of the prevailing uncertainties and continuously track their implications on the Indian  corporates”.  

CareEdge Ratings’ credit ratio for the manufacturing and services sector during H2FY23 was at its second highest in the  past five years at 2.69 (down from the peak of 4.59 in H1FY23). The sectors that saw high upgrades in this period were  healthcare, auto, hospitality, pharmaceuticals, textiles and steel. “The pace of upgrades in the manufacturing and  services sector has moderated but upgrades continued to significantly outnumber downgrades backed by robust  domestic demand, deleveraged balance sheets and some easing of commodity cost pressures,” said Padmanabh  Bhagavath, Senior Director – CareEdge Ratings (Corporate Ratings).  

The infrastructure sector witnessed improvement in the credit ratio which surged to 3.10 in H2FY23 from 2.24 in H1FY23,  driven by higher number of upgrades in the power and transport infrastructure segments. Commissioning of projects  especially in the road Hybrid Annuity Model (HAM) segment & solar power generation space, improvement in collection  efficiency supported by the equated monthly instalments (EMI) scheme in the power sector, robust toll revenue  performance and refinancing at better interest rates were the prominent drivers. “Infrastructure entities are poised for  robust performance in FY24 with likely increase in thermal Plant Load Factors (PLFs), favourable Wholesale Price Index  (WPI) led toll growth, competitive renewable energy tariffs and strong revenue visibility aided by government’s focus  on infrastructure. Rising interest rates in the economy may, however, dampen the buoyancy to some extent”, said  Rajashree Murkute, Senior Director – CareEdge Ratings (Infrastructure Ratings).  

The credit ratio for the Banking & Financial Services (BFSI) sector moderated to 1.91 in H2FY23 from 4.0 in H1FY23  with downgrades on account of some weaker companies experiencing a deterioration of their liability franchise and  regulatory changes affecting entities in the unsecured personal loan space. Upgrades in the BFSI sector remained high,  triggered by better capitalisation levels and improved profitability as a result of scaling benefits. In the view of Sanjay  Agarwal, Senior Director – CareEdge Ratings (BFSI Ratings), “The credit outlook is expected to be stable for Banks and  Financial services with high growth, supported by strong capitalisation levels and reducing Gross Non-Performing Assets

(GNPAs). An increase in credit deposit ratio and thrust for deposits are however, likely to impact the Net interest margin  (NIM) of banks in the immediate term. Rising interest rates are also expected to impact interest spreads of NBFCs in  the near term, with part of the impact likely to be offset by increasing operating leverage and reduction in credit cost.” 

Overall, despite the slowdown in the global economy and uncertainties in the financial system, CareEdge Ratings believes  that Corporate India has remained relatively resilient. Going forward, CareEdge Ratings expects the credit outlook to be  stable, aided by robust growth in domestic demand, deleveraged balance sheets, easing of commodity cost pressures  and government’s thrust on infrastructure spending. However, increasing interest rates, prolonged slowdown in global  demand, spill overs from the Russia-Ukraine war, inflationary pressures and emerging uncertainties in the global financial  system are the key monitorables on the credit risk

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