"The microfinance sector has made a strong come back after the Andhra Pradesh crisis and is poised to grow at a CAGR (compound annual growth rate) of 24 per cent over FY15- FY19," said the report by India Ratings and Research.
In 2010, microfinance institutions (MFIs) came under the scanner of authorities in Andhra Pradesh, a key market for them, after reports of suicide by borrowers due to alleged coercive recovery methods adopted by them.
Credit checks of borrowers with agencies like Equifax and Highmark, in line with the Reserve Bank guidelines issued in FY12, would also contribute towards the growth.
The report said though the sector may not witness the over 100 per cent growth prevalent before FY11, it can expand faster than banks and most other non-banking financial companies (NBFCs). The sector could require an equity infusion of Rs 2,700 crore to achieve the expected growth.
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MFIs, which give small loans to low-income borrowers, have expanded in Uttar Pradesh, Maharashtra, MP, and Bihar, and continue to grow in their traditional strongholds of Tamil Nadu, Karnataka and West Bengal.
"MFIs need to be careful of the portfolio quality as the newer states have exhibited higher non-performing assets in self-help group-bank linkage programme," the report said.
MFIs require to evolve their models to provide range of services to their clients to remain competitive, it said.
They may require to compete with some of these models on interest rates. The competing models could provide loans at interest rates of 12-18 per cent per annum as against 23-26 per cent by microfinance players, the rating outfit said.
It said a conversion to small bank can provide an MFI access to low-cost funds (savings) and reduce costs which could translate to lower interest rates on loans.