‘Consumer lending growth slips to 13 pc in Dec quarter’
   Date :16-Jan-2020
Business Bureau :
 
CONSUMER lending growth slipped for the sixth consecutive quarter to 13.1 per cent in December 2019 quarter, as compared to 23.2 per cent in the year-ago period, a credit information company said on Wednesday. Amid the slowing growth, consumer loan delinquencies showed an uptick, with the NBFC (non-bank financial company) sector experiencing an aggravation of troubles and the loans against property (LAP) segment being most impacted, the data by Transunion Cibil showed.
 
It can be noted that retail or consumer credit has been pursued aggressively by lenders in the face of stress in the large ticket advances partly because of the segment's resilience. However, the overall economic growth has slid to six-year low of 5 per cent and unemployment has risen to four decade high. From a growth perspective, credit card and personal loan segments recorded growth rates of 40.7 per cent and 28 per cent, respectively, while auto loans, LAP and home loans recorded comparatively more moderate rates, it said.
 
The company’s Vice President of Research Abhay Kelkar said consumer sentiment and wider macroeconomic pressures is dictating the demand scenario. “Flattening demand for large-ticket asset purchases is causing slower asset finance loan originations, while consumers may be increasingly turning to consumption credit products to help finance day-to-day living expenses,” he said. In what can be a result of weak car sales, loan growth for auto sector slowed down to 10.3 per cent during December quarter.