According to the global financial services firm, the distress in corporate India's balance sheet is unchanged for the past four years.
"Even as the consensus thinks that distress in Corporate India's balance sheet has been rising persistently over the past seven years since the global financial crisis, our work shows that the distress is unchanged for the past four years," the report said.
"It peaked in 2012 and has held steady at that level. Indeed the pace of debt accretion on corporate balance sheets has fallen sharply. This is good news for a turn in the debt cycle," it said.
The report noted the risks to the above view is that the pace of balance sheet recovery depends on the global outlook for growth and disinflation. Second, the government is unlikely to front-load the recapitalisation of state owned banks, and third concentration of debt is high, which in turn might impede a faster resolution.
According to Morgan Stanley, India does not arguably have an aggregate debt problem. The problem of leverage is concentrated in the private corporate sector.
