The micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs) affected the most belong to traditional sectors with high reliance on cash transactions such as textiles, agricultural products, steel, consumer durables, construction and automobiles.
Unorganised players (less than 10 employees) are expected to struggle more than their organised counterparts, with 37 per cent of them likely to report negative revenue growth in the second half compared with a quarter of organised players.
However, the gain has not come without its share of pain. Demonetisation, said those surveyed, will lead to lower growth, mostly on account of its impact on day-to-day operations.
"Typically, MSMEs perform better in the second half (October-March), which means annual growth will be muted," the survey by the rating agency pointed out.
Yet, despite the hiccups, as many as 41 per cent of those surveyed expect to do better in the second half of this fiscal, while 29 per cent expect de-growth.
Most of them see only a short-term impact of demonetisation, and more than three-fourths believe it will be business as usual by June 2017, the survey found.
Demonetisation has also impacted the liquidity of MSMEs. At least 9 per cent of those surveyed, accounting for 6 per cent of outstanding debt of the sample, said they will face issues in debt repayment. Most of these are micro enterprises with revenues below Rs 2 crore.
"Every fifth MSME surveyed planned to raise additional funding in the coming months, half of it for working capital. Interestingly, with unsecured loans from friends and associates drying up, 3 out of 4 respondents plan to approach banks for loans, while the rest will rely on internal accrual. That opens up a massive opportunity to banks currently awash in liquidity," Manish Jaiswal, Head-SME Ratings, Crisil said.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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