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Mission 2019: Ensuring payments and price transparency
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SME Times News Bureau | 06 Apr, 2019
The importance of the flow of capital into the power and housing sectors
in India cannot be overemphasised. Recent developments in both sectors
once again bring to the fore the critical issues of effective payment
mechanisms and price transparency as vital factors to boost the economy.
Let us examine the issue in the two sectors separately.
The
Supreme Court striking down the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) circular
giving stressed power companies more time to find resolutions outside
the bankruptcy court has started debates around paths that are ideal for
resolving woes of the power sector. Amid the din and noise, it is
essential to not lose sight of the core issues at hand, i.e., the late
and in many cases non-payment of dues by state-run power distribution
companies (discoms) in India.
While not all the stressed assets
of thermal power sector are attributable to non-payment issues from
discoms, delayed payments are significant contributors to the mess. Late
payments lead to debt servicing issues and major negative working
capital problems. The most critical aspect of the problem is that not
just thermal power sector assets but energy sector assets in general,
including the high-growth renewable energy sector, will face identical
or similar issues in the foreseeable future unless the delayed payments
issue is gradually sorted out.
For instance, in the solar energy
sector, which is known for its high capital intensity with the majority
of the capital expenditure required upfront, the entire business model
is highly dependent on the power purchase agreement (PPA) being
honoured. Given the fixed-income nature of payments, it is only natural
that debt is utilised to fund a significant component of the business.
Delays in payments from discoms will lead to solar energy developers
facing debt-servicing issues and therefore, eventually adding to the
non-performing assets (NPAs).
The issues around debt-servicing
and NPAs has serious ramifications from a cost of capital perspective.
An improved payment mechanism, timely payment of interest coupons and
lower-risk have the cascading positive effect of the lower cost of
capital for any given sector. Hence, as the cost of capital in general
declines, energy projects with a lower return on asset become viable.
Therefore, a lowering of the cost of capital in the energy sector
provides a significant boost to asset creation. The reverse holds true:
when risk perceptions amongst investors for a sector rise, they reduce
the flow of capital to the sector and thus render projects unviable.
Resolving
issues around discom payments is critical for India's push towards
renewable energy. While solutions will require some hard decisions to be
taken, the government must push in the right direction. Most
importantly, the new sunrise sectors such as renewable energy must learn
lessons from the thermal power sector of avoiding payment delays,
excessive leverage and unsustainable tariffs. Issues in the thermal
power sector provide a template of the pitfalls to avoid in energy
sectors across the spectrum.
The second sector of our concern
here that has seen interesting developments of late is housing finance.
Given the recent liquidity crunch faced by the Non-Banking Financial
Companies (NBFCs), the news that the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has set
up a panel to review the development of the housing finance
securitisation market is a welcome step. The broader aim of the panel is
to facilitate the flow of high-quality capital to the NBFC sector to
boost credit creation in India.
Of all the steps towards the
standardisation of the housing finance securitisation market, one that
deserves most attention is ensuring a mechanism that allows for
mark-to-market valuation of the securitised loans. In the long-run for
the housing finance securitisation market to indeed facilitate the flow
of sizeable quantities of capital and yet avoid major mishaps during
periods of credit busts, access to constant pricing information in the
market is vital.
Standardisation of the pricing of
debt-securities can be more challenging than that for equity-based
securities. The difficulty arises from the fact that debt-based
instruments are issued for multiple tenures as opposed to equity that
does not have a maturity date. Hence, standardisation is harder in the
case of debt-instruments.
Lessons from credit markets in the
developed economies in creating credit-based indices that assist the
market in pricing loans in the secondary market are crucial.
Going
forward we must not lose focus on the core issues of "ensuring payment
mechanisms" and "price transparency" to boost investor sentiment
regarding the crucial power and housing markets in India.
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Customs Exchange Rates |
Currency |
Import |
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