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Contagion's No Longer the Biggest Problem in India's IL&FS Saga

India’s shock seizure of a troubled shadow bank on Monday means contagion’s off the table. It doesn’t mean the saga’s over.

Contagion's No Longer the Biggest Problem in India's IL&FS Saga
Road construction takes place near the IL&FS building, in Mumbai, India. (Photographer: Abhijit Bhatlekar/Bloomberg News)

(Bloomberg) -- India’s shock seizure of a troubled shadow bank on Monday means contagion’s off the table. It doesn’t mean the saga’s over.

That’s the verdict of strategists and investors after Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government took control of Infrastructure Leasing & Financial Services Ltd., promising to end the group’s string of defaults.

But the giant IL&FS group still owns long-term infrastructure financed with short-term funding, and its new board will need to make progress selling assets to pare $12.6 billion of debt. Getting it right is key for India to avoid further financial sector angst, which the nation hardly needs as it grapples with surging bond yields and a record-low rupee.

The government’s move on IL&FS is “a step in the right direction and will calm investor nerves to some extent,” said Lakshmi Iyer, chief investment officer of debt at Mumbai-based Kotak Mahindra Asset Management Co. In terms of ending the contagion risk for good, “a lot of that will depend on the new management’s plans to turn the company around.”

Contagion's No Longer the Biggest Problem in India's IL&FS Saga

The company’s new leaders face a whirlwind month ahead, after inheriting a restructuring process that just saw IL&FS shareholders sign off on a non-convertible debt sale, a higher borrowing limit and a rights offering. To add to that, an investigation by the federal Serious Fraud Investigation Office has been ordered.

The new board will meet before Oct. 8, the National Company Law Tribunal said on Monday. It must devise a plan and file a response to NCLT by Oct. 15. The tribunal will next hear the matter on Oct. 31.

The fallout from IL&FS’s saga means that the central bank, which meets later this week, must also strike the right balance after the conglomerate’s shock defaults stirred unease. It needs to supply enough liquidity to turn around the worst cash crunch in a couple years, while also keeping interest rates high enough to fight inflation amid a tumble in the rupee.

For sure, initial market reactions indicated optimism. The government put in place a new board that included India’s richest banker Uday Kotak, which brought instant name recognition. The pledge to avoid more nonpayments also now allows creditors to posit that IL&FS’s debt is as unlikely to default as the government’s own borrowings.

Support from the government and key shareholders will “help tide” IL&FS through and allow an organized sale of its infrastructure assets, according to Siddharth Bhargava, CIO India Credit at investment firm Samena Capital Hong Kong Ltd.

Financials Rebound

After jumping on Monday, shares of group companies surged again Wednesday after a holiday Tuesday: IL&FS Transportation Networks Ltd. rose 20 percent, IL&FS Engineering & Construction Co. increased 21 percent and IL&FS Investment Managers Ltd. gained 10 percent.

Financial stocks may also now find more support after a battering last month. And borrowing costs for non-bank lenders are unlikely to rise sharply for now, analysts say.

“This ends the contagion stemming from IL&FS,” said Alexander Zeeh, chief executive officer of Singapore-based S.E.A. Asset Management. “However, there is still a large degree of uncertainty especially as the government is starting a corruption probe into IL&FS.”

The group’s defaults from August on commercial paper, considered rock-solid until just weeks before that, have also led to criticism that rating companies missed an epic failure.

The problems sparked concern among households holding mutual funds invested in such debt, and forced money managers to brace for further losses.

Lingering Concerns

“From what we know now, it’s a welcome move,” said Aashish Somaiyaa, chief executive officer at Motilal Oswal Asset Management Co. in Mumbai.

But the government’s step alone won’t allay all fears concerning non-bank financing companies, he said. Some of them relied on issuing commercial paper to mutual funds, whose investors are now more cautious after the IL&FS defaults. There are also asset-liability mismatches. And higher interest rates impact their profitability, according to Somaiyaa.

That’s where the Reserve Bank of India comes into the picture. The central bank has raised interest rates twice this year -- and is likely to do so again on Friday -- to ward off inflation pressures. At the same time, it has allowed banks to dip further into statutory liquidity reserves.

“There will be some improvement in market sentiment but it will also be determined by how liquidity is in the market,” said Karthik Srinivasan, the Mumbai-based group head of financial sector ratings at ICRA Ltd.

--With assistance from Nasreen Seria.

To contact the reporters on this story: Ameya Karve in Mumbai at akarve@bloomberg.net;Denise Wee in Hong Kong at dwee10@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Andrew Monahan at amonahan@bloomberg.net, ;Divya Balji at dbalji1@bloomberg.net, Ken McCallum

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