Latest News

S&P says that India's new gold lending rules will reshape the business models of lenders.

S&P says that India's new gold lending rules will reshape the business models of lenders.

S&P Global Ratings warned in a Wednesday note that new rules by India's central banks will force lenders to rethink their underwriting procedures and prepare for higher costs in the near term.

The Reserve Bank of India released its final guidelines for gold-backed loans earlier this month. They mandated a move to cash-flow-based credit assessment and tighter monitoring of the loan-to value (LTV).

S&P stated that these changes would have the most impact on nonbank lenders who are heavily dependent on gold loan portfolios.

The first is that the finance companies will incur upfront costs when they switch to a cash-flow-based assessment of borrowers' creditworthiness, said Shinoy Varghese. Credit analyst at S&P Global Ratings.

Lenders must comply with the new standards by April 1, 2026. The new rules give lenders more flexibility when it comes to offering short-term loans for consumption borrowing. However, including interest rates into LTV calculations could reduce actual payments made to borrowers.

S&P stated that the biggest changes will be for gold-loan specialist companies like Muthoot Finance, Manappuram Finance, and Manappuram Finance.

The report also warns that the gold sector could be more susceptible to sharp price corrections as lenders expand their risk appetite and explore different loan structures. Nishit Navin, Bengaluru. Edited by Nivedita Battacharjee.

(source: Reuters)