(This story originally appeared in on Oct 04, 2023)
Mumbai: Strong domestic demand and government capex are helping most Indian companies grow at a healthy pace while several companies dependent on exports are facing some headwinds, credit rating analysis for the first half of fiscal 2024 (H1 FY24) by Crisil and ICRA showed.
During these six months, the ratings upgrades-to-downgrades ratio by both credit ratings companies was nearly 2:1, i.e., for every two companies which were upgraded, one was downgraded. A ratio of one or more indicates more upgrades than downgrades, and is a positive sign for the economy and the corporate sector.
In its report, Crisil said that although domestic oriented companies were seeing high capacity utilisation, high interest rates and an uncertain inflation outlook were preventing them from embarking on capacity expansion.
For Crisil, credit ratio moderated in H1FY24 to 1.91 from 2.19 in the second half of the last fiscal, a company release said. “There were 443 upgrades and 232 downgrades.”
For ICRA, in H1 FY24, total instances of rating upgrades outnumbered that of downgrades by a factor of two. In comparison, in both FY22 and FY23, the credit ratio of the ICRA-assigned ratings was closer to 3x, it said in a release.
ICRA’s portfolio saw a lone instance of default in H1 FY24, compared with 22 defaults seen in FY23. “The said default pertained to an entity that had a peak rating of BB- during the 12 months prior to default.”
Overall, according to analysts at ICRA, in H1 FY24, the credit quality of India Inc continued to strengthen, “building upon the strong performance observed in the preceding two fiscal years, led by domestic consumption and investment-focused sectors. Both the