View: The murky uses of India’s private credit funds (2024)

There are plenty of high-performing private investment vehicles in India, but it’s the few that are being set up for dubious purposes that may bring harsher regulatory scrutiny to the country’s most rapidly expanding asset class.

So far, the most egregious use of these so-called alternative investment funds has been by nonbank finance companies, several of whom have employed these bespoke structures for pure regulatory arbitrage.

When it looked like their big-ticket borrowers, especially real-estate projects, were going to default, some financiers took recourse to new funds tailormade for them by Wall Street firms. Investors who pooled money were issued senior securities, earning them interest. The finance company also contributed, but in a smaller junior tranche that ranks lower down in the repayment pecking order and is the first to absorb any losses.

The private funds then lent money to the same stressed borrowers who, in turn, repaid their original loans and avoided bankruptcy proceedings. Finance companies were happy, too, since any mark-to-market losses on the securities they now held would be far lower than the provisioning burden they would have had to bear in case of soured credit.

This is how at least some shadow lenders in India have “evergreened” their loan books to avoid being on the radar of the Reserve Bank of India, their regulator. But the Securities and Exchange Board of India, the stock-market watchdog, has cottoned on to the sleight of hand. According to a Reuters report in October, the SEBI has detected at least a dozen cases involving $1.8 billion to $2.4 billion where alternative investment funds have been misused to sidestep other financial regulators including the RBI.

The amounts involved may be small, but the problem with such shady practices is that they invariably lead to stiff regulation. And that could slow down the blistering growth of alternative funds, a broad category that includes venture capital, private equity, real estate funds, and private credit. A prominent Mumbai-based PE investor pointed out to me that it’s mostly the Wall Street firms that sponsored the cute structures. The same marquee buyout specialists will be the first to complain when, as a direct consequence, regulation in India takes a sterner turn. The lawyers who advised on these deals would wash their hands off.

Currently, it’s international investors who dominate the alternative-asset landscape in the world’s most-loved emerging market. But a rising number of affluent Indians are also looking at them for returns superior to what they can get from public equity, debt and residential real estate. For a growing class of high-net-worth individuals, the minimum ticket size — 10 million rupees ($120,000) — is not a showstopper.

However, the game will not stop with the rich. Domestic institutions’ participation will increase, too, once insurance and pension firms are given more leeway to invest in alternative assets. Since that will indirectly bring the regular Indian saver to the rich person’s playground, it’s one big reason why the SEBI can’t afford to ignore the dodgy structures. A global PE sponsor buying a riskier portion of a fund would be par for the course, but a local nonbank finance company that’s not the sponsor providing a loan-loss cushion to make its balance sheet look good? Or a big international retailer using a fund to get around New Delhi’s foreign direct investment limits? The regulators are losing their patience.

The zeitgeist is in SEBI’s favor. The US Securities and Exchange Commission, under Chair Gary Gensler, came out with rules in August to tighten its grip on hedge funds and private equity. Their industry associations have sued the SEC, alleging that the agency has gone too far and that the new rules “would fundamentally change the way private funds are regulated in America.”

Which is perhaps why the SEBI wants to act early. The alternative-asset industry in India has venture capital and hedge funds as its two bookends. The main body, however, consists of private equity and private credit. Whereas just a decade ago these two asset classes were a $200 million sideshow, now they command $83 billion, or more than four-fifths of the $100 billion committed by investors to private funds.

If this past growth is any guide, it won’t take too long for the firepower to grow to a point where the industry can flex its lobbying muscles — both in New Delhi and Washington — to thwart any attempt to rein it in. Even now, it isn’t exactly easy for SEBI. A tussle between the regulator and the fund lobby has been playing out for more than a year, the Economic Times reported in July.

The stakes are increasing on both sides. Alternative funds will continue to be the fastest-growing segment of India’s investment landscape, CRISIL, an affiliate of S&P Global Inc., noted in a report last year. That growth has been made possible by light-touch regulation: As conduits of foreign capital into the country, the industry has enjoyed a lot of latitude. But now that the local saver is getting entangled, expect an end to private funds’ freewheeling ways. Global PE firms’ questionable deals have made that outcome inevitable.

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View: The murky uses of India’s private credit funds (2024)

FAQs

What is private credit in India? ›

Private credit is one of the most rapidly emerging asset classes in India over the last decade as an alternative investment option. It is growing as a medium of debt financing for startups, performing companies and other special situations.

Has private credit's golden age already ended? ›

Private-credit investors are now supplying the third wave of money. Since 2020 such firms, which often also run private-equity funds, have raised more than $1trn. When interest rates rose in 2022 and banks stopped underwriting new risky loans, private credit became the only game in town.

What do private credit funds do? ›

Private credit funds are pools of actively managed capital that invest primarily in loans to private companies, seeking to generate income by investing in loans of private companies.

Why private credit is good? ›

Getting involved in private credit is also a way for investors to diversify their holdings and protect against price swings in public markets. It also gives them exposure to more companies than those available in the public markets.

What is an example of a private credit? ›

Common forms of private credit
  • Direct lending. Direct lending provides credit to non-investment-grade companies. ...
  • Mezzanine debt. ...
  • Distressed debt. ...
  • Special circ*mstances.
Jun 1, 2024

Is private credit the same as debt? ›

Private credit or private debt investments are debt-like, non-publicly traded instruments provided by non-bank entities, such as private credit funds or business development companies (BDCs), to fund private businesses.

Has the United States had a Golden Age? ›

The 1950's ushered in a golden age for America. With The Great Depression and World War II firmly in the rearview, it was finally time to enjoy the life that so many had suffered and fought for. This new decade also brought a new advertising avenue in the form of television commercials.

What brought the Golden Age to an end? ›

In Hesiod's version, the Golden Age ended when the Titan Prometheus conferred on mankind the gift of fire and all the other arts. For this, Zeus punished Prometheus by chaining him to a rock in the Caucasus, where an eagle eternally ate at his liver.

What are the reasons for the decline of the Golden Age? ›

The main causes of the decline were; the economic and political decline which led to poverty in the Islamic World, the disturbance of the equity cycle, which is based on Ibn Khaldun's well-known Asabiyyah model (the rise and fall of civilizations), natural disasters, foreign invasions by colonial powers (Crusades- 11th ...

What are the risks of private credit? ›

Private credit is typically floating rate and caters to relatively small borrowers with high leverage. Such borrowers could face rising financing costs and perform poorly in a downturn, particularly in a stagflation scenario, which could generate a surge in defaults and a corresponding spike in financing costs.

What is the dry powder in private credit? ›

Dry powder, or the amount of money committed to private credit funds that has yet to be deployed, is at a record.

How do private funds make money? ›

Private equity firms buy companies and overhaul them to earn a profit when the business is sold again. Capital for the acquisitions comes from outside investors in the private equity funds the firms establish and manage, usually supplemented by debt.

Is private credit in a bubble? ›

Interviewed yesterday by David Rosenberg of Rosenberg Research, his Toronto-based independent research firm, Gundlach voiced skepticism about the health of asset classes ranging from private credit to 30-year Treasury bonds. Both Gundlach and Rosenberg agreed the boom in private credit represented a “bubble.”

What is the future of private credit? ›

Private credit is predicted to grow in 2024, as numerous leveraged loans and high-yield bonds reach their maturity wall and will need to be refinanced. With M&A volumes down, investors will be looking for new ways to exit investments.

How much do you make in private credit? ›

Private Credit Salary
Annual SalaryMonthly Pay
Top Earners$52,000$4,333
75th Percentile$46,500$3,875
Average$42,501$3,541
25th Percentile$38,000$3,166

Is private lending illegal in India? ›

Safeguarded By Law

The Usurious Loans Act of India, 1918 aims to shield borrowers against greedy lenders that exploit people in need of cash by charging exorbitant interest rates. Private-party lending is primarily covered under this act.

Who buys private credit? ›

Private credit is a kind of fixed-income investment that allows investors – typically accredited investors and institutional investors – to purchase off-market debt of private companies.

Is private credit the same as fixed income? ›

Private credit may offer higher income than traditional fixed income (syndicated high yield or leveraged loans) markets. Companies may be stressed or in unique situations that prevent them from accessing traditional markets, meaning they are willing to pay a premium to access capital.

What is the difference between public credit and private credit? ›

Public credit: Debt issued or traded on the public markets. Private credit: Privately originated or negotiated investments, comprised of potentially higher yielding, illiquid opportunities across a range of risk/return profiles. They are not traded on the public markets.

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