Rising cost pressure brought on by volatile input prices, and withdrawal of pandemic-induced relief measures may further increase default rates especially among sub-investment-grade firms, or those with a rating of “BB” and below, according to CRISIL Ratings.
This category is dominated by MSMEs-- those with turnover less than or equal to Rs 250 crore.
The annual default rate rose to 5.24 per cent in FY22 from 3.9 per cent in FY21, but lower than the 6.1 per cent average between fiscals 2011 and 2020. About 90 per cent of the entities that defaulted last fiscal were MSMEs.
The default rate in the investment grade entities–-those with “BBB” and above--is typically lower (average 0.5 per cent between fiscals 2011 and 2020). It touched a decadal low of 0.03 per cent in FY22, from an already low 0.17 per cent in fiscal 2021, Crisil said.
Somasekhar Vemuri, Senior Director, Crisil Ratings, said recent trends in the default rate reflect a K-shaped recovery. The recovery has been faster and sharper for larger and mid-sized corporates, whereas MSMEs have borne a disproportionate impact of the pandemic.
Elevated level of stressed assets in the MSME loan-books of banks and non-banks, and a large number of MSMEs availing of restructuring schemes are also indicative of their stress, he added.
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