HomeNewsBusinessEMI bounces rose in June despite easing of COVID curbs, shows NPCI data

EMI bounces rose in June despite easing of COVID curbs, shows NPCI data

Analysts are of the view that the stress on lenders’ balance sheets will appear gradually over the course of FY22 as the impact of regulatory forbearances wears off.

July 08, 2021 / 16:01 IST
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The Reserve Bank of India has flagged the risks that the second COVID wave poses to retail and micro, small and medium enterprises accounts.
The Reserve Bank of India has flagged the risks that the second COVID wave poses to retail and micro, small and medium enterprises accounts.

The bounce rate, or failure rate, of auto-debit transactions rose in June from the previous month, despite the easing of lockdowns across states. Many of these transactions are debit requests for EMIs and their failure indicates an increase in stress among retail borrowers.

As per data released by the National Payments Corporation of India, of the 87.87 million debit requests made in June over the National Automated Clearing House (NACH) platform, 32.08 million, or 36.51 percent, bounced. The comparable bounce rate for May was 35.91 percent and in April, it was even lower at 34.05 percent. The second wave of the COVID pandemic was at its peak during April and May.

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In terms of value, the bounce rate on auto-debit requests stood at 30.27 percent in June, marginally better than 30.74 percent in May but still much higher than the 27.99 percent level seen in April.

Data from the NACH platform does not capture intra-bank transactions. This means that borrowers who have loans from the same bank where they have their EMI debit account are not accounted for in the data. Many of the transactions on NACH are for EMI payments to smaller non-banking financial companies (NBFCs) and fintech lenders.