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HomeIndiaCar loan lender to target low-cost homes buyers with Rs 1.5 crore...

Car loan lender to target low-cost homes buyers with Rs 1.5 crore fund

A government plan to provide benefits, including interest subsidies, has seen a surge in funding for affordable homes and lured buyers and financiers.

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Cholamandalam Investment & Finance Co., an Indian financier for vehicles, is persisting with its plan to set up a mortgage-finance unit undeterred by a credit crunch that’s roiling shadow banks in the nation.

A housing finance subsidiary will help the company grow its loan book faster, said Cholamandalam’s Executive Director Arun Alagappan. The company will target buyers of low-cost homes and offer loans of as much as Rs 1.5 million ($21,000), he said.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s administration has pledged to build homes for poor Indian families by 2022. A government plan to provide benefits including interest subsidies has seen a surge in funding for affordable homes and lured buyers and financiers such as Cholamandalam, even as the collapse of Infrastructure Leasing & Financial Services Ltd. led to a cash squeeze at shadow lenders.

“We see a huge opportunity,” Alagappan said in an interview in his office in Chennai. “We are doing loans where we have the capability to underwrite loans.”

India plans to build 10 million houses in urban areas by 2022. It managed to build 2.64 million until Aug. 13, according to data available from the Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs. That compares with a shortage of 18.78 million homes in towns and cities and 43.67 million in rural areas, according to the National Housing Bank.


Also read: Restrictions on home loans likely to worsen liquidity crunch in real estate sector


Cholamandalam will transfer its 26 billion rupee housing loan portfolio to the new housing subsidiary once it gets its license, Alagappan said.

The housing finance license will also help Cholamandalam take advantage of refinancing options from National Housing Bank, which supervises housing finance companies.

There are other incentives as well. Under the government’s Pradhan Mantri Awas Yojana — prime minister’s housing program — for urban areas, the state will subsidize interest on mortgages of as much as 1.8 million rupees.

Still, bad loans are the highest among borrowers who have taken loans of up to 200,000 rupees, according to the NHB. Soured debt is lowest in the 1 million rupees to 2.5 million rupees bracket.

Meanwhile, a malaise that’s hit luxury homes has started afflicting affordable property as well — unsold inventory. India’s nine major cities at the end of June had more than 400,000 low-cost units priced below 4.5 million rupees that couldn’t be sold, according to data available with PropTiger.com.

Mortgage finance companies including Dewan Housing Finance Corp. and Indiabulls Housing Finance Ltd. have had their credit rating cut. Mumbai-based Dewan has been trying to sell-off assets to raise funds, while its shares have tumbled.

“Even at the time of crisis when we went to banks for fundraising, we did not have any issues of raising money,” Alagappan said. “For more than 20 quarters, Cholamandalam hasn’t had an asset liability mismatch,” which has been the cause for trouble for many non-bank firms, he said. – Bloomberg 


Also read: NBFC crisis threatens another bad loan crunch for Indian banks


 

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