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Housing finance companies under lens over lending faults

Housing finance companies under lens over lending faults

Time of India14 hours ago
The
National Housing Bank
is tightening oversight of
housing finance companies
for breaching loan-to-value (LTV) norms on
high-value home loans
, two people aware of the development told ET. Supervisory inspections by the
mortgage regulator
found cases where loans above ₹s75 lakh were sanctioned at up to 90% LTV, in violation of the 75% cap.
The National Housing Bank (NHB) has directed individual lenders to reclassify such advances as non-home loans (NHL).
"The regulator has taken cognisance of a few mortgage lenders disbursing higher amounts on loans for high-value residential apartments," said an official aware of the NHB cautions. "The NHB has sent communications to these companies to stop such practices and classify them as non-home loans."
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As per existing rules, loans of up to ₹30 lakh can have an LTV of up to 90%, those between ₹30 lakh and ₹75 lakh up to 80%, and loans above ₹75 lakh up to 75%. The scrutiny is also influencing market transactions, with HFCs purchasing loan portfolios from peers now insisting on explicit disclosures of whether the underlying assets are classified as home loans or non-home loans before adding them to their own books. "Earlier, while buying loan pools, HFCs weren't seeking LTV disclosures. But after the regulatory crackdown, they are asking for explicit home loan and non-home loan classifications in the books," said another official.
Live Events
Both the
Reserve Bank of India
(RBI) and NHB have been cracking down on lenders flouting LTV norms. Regulators have observed that during periods of stress or economic downturns, borrowers with LTV ratios above 80% face significantly higher stress and are more prone to default.
The RBI, in December last year, had cautioned lenders against excessive exposure to all types of top-up loans (including home top-up loans), which are additional credit facilities extended to customers against their existing mortgages.
While many lenders perceive these loans as low-risk, they are often sanctioned with minimal due diligence, liberal underwriting, and weak adherence to prudential norms on loan-to-value ratios, risk weights, and end-use verification, the central bank had noted.
The banking regulator had warned that such practices could create systemic risks, particularly if the value of the underlying collateral turns volatile or faces a cyclical downturn. At the end of September 2024, HFCs had a total outstanding
housing loan portfolio
of ₹6.25 lakh crore, compared with the overall industry size of nearly ₹34 lakh crore, NHB data showed.
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Housing finance companies under lens over lending faults
Housing finance companies under lens over lending faults

Time of India

time14 hours ago

  • Time of India

Housing finance companies under lens over lending faults

The National Housing Bank is tightening oversight of housing finance companies for breaching loan-to-value (LTV) norms on high-value home loans , two people aware of the development told ET. Supervisory inspections by the mortgage regulator found cases where loans above ₹s75 lakh were sanctioned at up to 90% LTV, in violation of the 75% cap. The National Housing Bank (NHB) has directed individual lenders to reclassify such advances as non-home loans (NHL). "The regulator has taken cognisance of a few mortgage lenders disbursing higher amounts on loans for high-value residential apartments," said an official aware of the NHB cautions. "The NHB has sent communications to these companies to stop such practices and classify them as non-home loans." by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Play War Thunder now for free War Thunder Play Now Undo As per existing rules, loans of up to ₹30 lakh can have an LTV of up to 90%, those between ₹30 lakh and ₹75 lakh up to 80%, and loans above ₹75 lakh up to 75%. The scrutiny is also influencing market transactions, with HFCs purchasing loan portfolios from peers now insisting on explicit disclosures of whether the underlying assets are classified as home loans or non-home loans before adding them to their own books. "Earlier, while buying loan pools, HFCs weren't seeking LTV disclosures. But after the regulatory crackdown, they are asking for explicit home loan and non-home loan classifications in the books," said another official. Live Events Both the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) and NHB have been cracking down on lenders flouting LTV norms. Regulators have observed that during periods of stress or economic downturns, borrowers with LTV ratios above 80% face significantly higher stress and are more prone to default. The RBI, in December last year, had cautioned lenders against excessive exposure to all types of top-up loans (including home top-up loans), which are additional credit facilities extended to customers against their existing mortgages. While many lenders perceive these loans as low-risk, they are often sanctioned with minimal due diligence, liberal underwriting, and weak adherence to prudential norms on loan-to-value ratios, risk weights, and end-use verification, the central bank had noted. The banking regulator had warned that such practices could create systemic risks, particularly if the value of the underlying collateral turns volatile or faces a cyclical downturn. At the end of September 2024, HFCs had a total outstanding housing loan portfolio of ₹6.25 lakh crore, compared with the overall industry size of nearly ₹34 lakh crore, NHB data showed.

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