There has been a huge rise in the number of
people under 30 years of age seeking credit in the last five years,
according to credit information provider Cibil report. While those
under 30 years constituted just around 7 per cent of the new credit
applicants in 2008 and the same has grown to over 25 per cent now, the
Cibil report said. Interestingly, eagerness shown by youth in getting
indebted comes at a time when people have been complaining about bleak
times on the economic front due to falling growth, which also led to
some job losses, the report said. Till FY 2008-09, the economy was
doing very well and the same has now plummeted and logging even a 5 per
cent growth is also seemed to be an uphill task this fiscal, it said.
Cibil further said it could be noted that the demographics have
undergone a radical shift in the past decade, with the country getting
more "younger", i.e. the percentage of working age population (between
15 and 35) growing rapidly. The percentage of those under 40 years
applying for their first credit has gone up to 60 per cent in 2014, from
the 50 per cent mark in 2008, the report said. "Youth are driving
credit growth with 60 per cent of new loan applications coming from
applicants, who are under 40," it said. With the economic growth facing
troubles, coupled with a sense of "policy paralysis", lenders have been
focusing very hard on the retail segment for growth as the project
loans are not coming at all, the report said.
According to the Cibil, which has completed 10 years of operations, retail credit growth has driven an increase in its credit reports usage at loan origination. The credit information company said in the last five years, bulk of the growth has come from personal loans and two wheeler loan segments, followed by home loans. Cibil claimed the data it produces, and prudent risk management policies, have resulted in fewer delinquencies in banks' retail portfolios. It said the NPA rate of around 1.9 per cent in 2010 has declined to 1.3 per cent in 2013. "There is almost 30 per cent reduction in NPA rates over the last four years," it said. In what it claimed is representative of the increasing usage of credit scores, Cibil said over 80 per cent of the credit active population has a Cibil Transunion score of greater than 750.
According to the Cibil, which has completed 10 years of operations, retail credit growth has driven an increase in its credit reports usage at loan origination. The credit information company said in the last five years, bulk of the growth has come from personal loans and two wheeler loan segments, followed by home loans. Cibil claimed the data it produces, and prudent risk management policies, have resulted in fewer delinquencies in banks' retail portfolios. It said the NPA rate of around 1.9 per cent in 2010 has declined to 1.3 per cent in 2013. "There is almost 30 per cent reduction in NPA rates over the last four years," it said. In what it claimed is representative of the increasing usage of credit scores, Cibil said over 80 per cent of the credit active population has a Cibil Transunion score of greater than 750.
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