"As many as 240 of the largest 500 corporate borrowers, contributing Rs 11.8 trillion to the total debt of Rs 28.1 trillion corporate loans, are exposed to significant risks of refinancing worth Rs 1.4 trillion debt this year," India Ratings said in a report today.
The report has listed these 240 entities into elevated risk of refinancing (ERR) and stressed (already in default) categories.
It said nearly Rs 5.1 trillion debt falls under the stressed category and another Rs 6.7 trillion is under ERR.
"The entities in the ERR category whose total asset coverage ratio or interest cover ratio are below 1x will face difficulties in debt refinancing, given banks' (especially public sector banks) risk aversion to such stressed assets and capital unavailability," the report said.
The agency further said entities in the HER (high ease of refinancing) and MER (medium ease of refinancing) categories (52 per cent of total debt) have refinancing requirements of Rs 15,300 crore and Rs 55,700 crore, respectively, for the year.
"These entities have stronger business and financial profiles, additional collateral or parental or group support to manage repayments as well as plan for the next phase of growth capex and investments and acquisitions," it said.
The report said capital intensive and commodity-linked
sectors are primarily in the stressed and ERR categories and would continue to pose risks to creditors during the course of this fiscal.
It said the banking sector's exposure to the ERR (24.9 per cent in 2014-15, 26.8 per cent in 2011-12) and stressed groups (18.7 per cent in 2014-15, 19.5 per cent in 2011-12) has grown at a muted level since 2011-12, while the exposure to HER (31.2 per cent, 29.7 per cent) and MER (25.2 per cent, 24 per cent) categories has increased.
It further said the top 10 mutual funds houses have an exposure of Rs 67,000 crore in the top 500 corporates.
The exposure in the ERR category is 4 per cent and in the stressed category is negligible at 0.3 per cent, while it is significant in the HER (45 per cent) and MER (51 per cent) categories.
