"The pain is still not over. Even in FY17, we will see pressure in credit quality especially due to the weakness in the infrastructure and metals sectors," the domestic credit rating agency's senior director Somasekhar Vemuri told reporters on a conference call.
The number of companies downgraded moved up to 1,177 from the year ago's 902, while the debt rated credit ratio slipped to three-year low of 0.31 per cent as against 0.62 for 2014-15, the agency said.
Chief analytical officer Pawan Agrawal said companies in the metals and infrastructure are the ones under pressure due to external factors like depressed prices, over leveraging and difficulties to raise capital, while the consumption oriented ones like auto, auto ancillaries and pharma companies are doing good.
On the outlook for 2016-17, he said, "We do not expect much of a material change" as the detrimental conditions are likely to continue.
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The troubled metals and infra space accounted for half of the Rs 3.8 lakh in debt downgraded in 2015-16, it said.
There were 265 defaults involving loans of Rs 53,000 crore by Crisil rated companies in the fiscal --- the highest in nearly three hours --- and over 80 per cent of the amount came from a single company.
The agency, however, said that its portfolio was stable as only 99 of the 1,000 ratings in the categories A and above were downgraded. Even in those, 95 per cent were just by one notch, Vemuri added.