Ladies and gentlemen, good day and welcome to the Q3 FY 2025 earnings conference call of LIC Housing Finance Limited, hosted by Axis Capital. As a reminder, all participant lines will be in the listen-only mode, and there will be an opportunity for you to ask questions after the presentation concludes. Should you need assistance during the conference call, please signal an operator by pressing star then zero on your touch-tone phone. Please note that this conference is being recorded. I now hand the conference over to Mr. Praveen Agarwal from Axis Capital. Thank you, and over to you, Mr. Agarwal.
Thank you, Michelle. Good morning, everyone, and welcome to the earnings call of LIC Housing Finance. From the management team, we have Mr. Tribhuwan Adhikari, MD and CEO, and Mr. Sudipto Sil, CFO, to take us through the results. I would request Mr. Adhikari to share his initial remarks, post which we'll open the floor for Q&A. Over to you, sir.
Thank you, Praveen. A very good morning and welcome to all of you to the post-earnings analyst call of LIC Housing Finance Limited. As you are aware, LIC HFL declared its Q3 FY 2025 results on 31st January 2025. Before I start the highlights of the Q3 results, I would like to outline a few of the developments in the economy of the last quarter. The interest rate scenario has been quite volatile during the last quarter, with the RBI changing its stance in its October MPC meeting and the Q2 GDP numbers coming in at a drastically low level of 5.4%. Anticipation of rate cut was built up in December, however, due to weakening of INR against the US dollars and a very tight system liquidity, the rates were kept at the same level.
Further, to ease out the liquidity stress in the system and create a base for a possible rate cut in February meeting, RBI has taken several steps like reduction in CRR, daily VRR, and OMO. The Union Budget announced just two days back proposes income tax relief for the middle class, which will certainly create much more purchasing power in their hands. As a basic necessity for this segment, this liquidity would definitely be a welcome step for housing finance, and we expect housing finance to take a major share of this savings. With this, we present the financial highlights of the company for the quarter, which were as follows: Total revenue from operations stood at INR 7,057 crores as against INR 6,972 crores for the corresponding quarter of the previous year, showing a growth of 4%.
Outstanding loan portfolios stood at INR 299,144 crores as against INR 281,206 crores as of 31st December 2023, reflecting a growth of 6%. Out of this, the Individual Home Loan portfolio reported a growth of 7% and comprises 85% of the total portfolio. During the quarter-end review, two of our largest centers, Bangalore and Hyderabad, were impacted due to some external issues, due to which disbursements to the tune of INR 700 crores-INR 800 crores were impacted. The issues pertaining to Hyderabad have been resolved and sorted out in December. However, Bangalore is yet to be resolved, which we believe should be resolved in the month so that the accumulated business would grow in this quarter from Bangalore. Total disbursements for the quarter was INR 1,575 crores as against INR 1,584 crores for Q3 of FY 2024, a marginal increase of 2%.
Out of that, disbursements in the Individual Home Loans were at INR 1,248 crores as against INR 1,268 crores, whereas project loan was at INR 983 crores as compared to INR 375 crores for the same quarter in the previous year. During the quarter, the company launched a special product in the affordable housing segment in select centers. This we believe will be a major driver for growth as well as margins in the quarters to come. The product is priced about 250-300 basis points higher than the retail mortgages. Though still early days, initial trends are encouraging. On the net interest income front, NII was INR 2,000 crores for the quarter as against INR 2,097 crores for Q3 of FY 2024 and INR 1,974 crores for Q2 of FY 2025.
Net interest margins for the quarter stood at 2.70%, flat almost because the previous quarter, that is Q2 of FY 2025, it was 2.71%, and 3% was the NII for Q3 of FY 2024. Profit before tax for the quarter stood at INR 1,793.44 crores as against INR 1,448.69 crores, up by 24%. Profit after tax for the quarter stood at INR 1,431.96 crores as against INR 1,162.88 crores for the same period in the previous year. In terms of asset quality, the Stage III exposure at default stood at 2.75% as against 4.26% as on 31/12/2023 and 3.06% as on 30th September 2024. Total provisions as on 31/12/2024 is INR 4,974 crores, reflecting a provision coverage of almost about 48% on Stage III. Technical write-offs amounting to INR 174 crores were taken during the quarter.
The company also conducted a sale of a highly stressed exposure through ARC for a cash consideration of INR 250 crores during the quarter. For the coming quarters, we are confident of some more resolutions. There is a strong visibility of further reduction in Stage III in quarter four. On the funding side, we have witnessed an increase in cost of funds, which stood at 7.78% as compared to 7.73% as on 30th September 2024, attributable to a very tight liquidity and increase in benchmark rates like T-Bill and G-Sec. Incremental cost of funds also inched up and stood at 7.75% for Q3 of FY 2025. We have taken a PLR hike of 10 basis points, which will offset the cost increase and will be effective in Q4.
The outlook for the coming quarter remains positive as Q4 is always a good quarter in terms of business for the company, which gives us conviction of a good financial year. With this brief introduction, I would like to invite you for your queries. Thank you.
Thank you very much, sir. We will now begin with the question and answer session. Anyone who wishes to ask questions may press star and one on their touch-tone phone. If you wish to withdraw yourself from the question queue, you may press star and two. Participants are requested to use only handsets while asking a question. Ladies and gentlemen, we will wait for a moment while the question queue assembles. The first question is from the line of Mahrukh Adajania from Nuvama. Please go ahead.
Yeah, hi. I just had a couple of questions. Firstly, that we did have a discussion around interest rates in the second quarter earnings. But I just wanted to check one thing, that in the past cycles, we've seen that your PLR would have, that is, your repricing of existing loans could have lagged with the banks, right? Because your PLR depends on your own cost of funds, not what the private banks do. So wouldn't that increase the risk of a balance transfer should the rate cut cycle resume or start? So that's my first question. And my second question is on growth. So what would be a fair assumption for growth in FY 2026, right? Where it's currently 6%, 4 Q you have guided to an improvement. So what growth can we look forward to in FY 2026? These are my initial questions.
Yeah, Mahrukh, I'll take the growth question first. Yes, as on 31/12/2024, our growth is 6.38%, the AUM growth. And the beginning of the year, we had guided to 10%, if you remember. And as I said in my early briefing, two of our major regions, Hyderabad and Bangalore, were impacted quite severely in Q3, I would say. Hyderabad was mostly on account of the formation of a regulatory body called HYDRAA by the government. And Bangalore was because of some technological issues regarding launch or, I would say, registration of the properties through an electronic system. So these two centers are our major contributors, almost contributing to 35% of our book. And an impact in these centers did sort of push us back, as I said, INR 700 crores-INR 800 crores is the pushback that we got in Q3. Hyderabad is now okay. Hyderabad is now settled.
The government has realized that, yes, they probably erred in being too aggressive with HYDRAA, so that has now sort of stabilized, and business is picking up in Hyderabad. In Bangalore, we have a lot of undisbursed sanctions on our book in the sense that people have applied for loans. We have sanctioned those loans, but as you know, in housing finance, until and unless the property is registered, the disbursement cannot happen, and the problem there, the technological problem there, is regarding registration of properties, so we have a significant book buildup there, which can only translate to disbursement once the properties are registered with the concerned authorities, so I expect Bangalore also, the government is working on it, and it's coming out with positive sort of references that, no, no, we are aware of the problem, and we are trying to deal with it.
So I expect Bangalore also, in the coming January. Yes, there has been some slight improvement, still a huge backlog of cases pending for registration. I expect this to ease out in February and March. So probably by March, we'll be back on complete normal track. So as of now, 6.38% is what we are at. And I am, well, to be very honest, I am not expecting a double-digit growth, but definitely somewhere we will be touching 9% in IHL in the current financial year with improvements in Q4. Next year, we are definitely hopeful of a good double-digit growth backed by some of the foray, I would say, into the affordable housing, which we went into in the third quarter with the launch of a specific product. Early days yet, but yes, the signs are encouraging and impressive.
As regards ROI and balance transfer, Sudipto, can you take it?
Thank you. Yeah, Mahrukh, actually, as far as the balance transfer triggered by rate of interest movement is concerned, we are fully aware of it, and we are, I would say, well prepared this time around because, in fact, we can say that by the time there will be a proper rate cut announcement, we will already be seeing some kind of improvement in the bond market rates. This time, it did not come up because of the tightness in liquidity, but with the Reserve Bank coming out with a slew of measures addressing the liquidity front, we are likely to see a kind of improvement in the short-end papers, basically the money market instruments, which are basically the, I would say, indicators for the rate movement. This improvement, we are likely to see in this month.
And by the time the impact of the rate cut, if it would happen that will actually come up in the month of April, we should be in a position to address it suitably. And most likely, we will be matching the rates without cutting the margins. Hello?
Okay. Yes. Thanks a lot. I just had one question on self-occupied property. So does that clause help you a lot? Because your average ticket size is not big, right? So.
Yeah, Mahrukh, yeah, definitely. Definitely. I think self-occupied, allowing the second home as self-occupied property would give a boost to the entire industry. I believe some people would be skeptical about going in for a second property because it would form a part of their income or whatever the income was. So yes, definitely, it would help the industry, I would feel. And it would help us because, as you said, our ticket sizes are small. So I think people would be more encouraged to go in for a second home, people who have been holding back. So definitely, that will give us some boost.
Yeah, actually, this is a big segment of population where people are not able to occupy a house because of the nature of employment. They're staying somewhere else.
So this is certainly going to improve, I mean, especially the middle class, a good segment of whom who are having two houses. This tax benefit will certainly help.
Okay. Thanks a lot. Thank you.
Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, in order to ensure that the management will be able to address questions from all the participants in the conference, kindly limit your questions to two per participant. Should you have a follow-up question, please rejoin the queue. Thank you. The next question is from the line of Avinash Singh from Emkay Global. Please go ahead.
Yeah, hi. Good morning. Thanks for the opportunity. A couple of questions. First one, if you can just provide some color on your ARC sale, what was the gross exposure? What was the net? And of course, cash consideration is given. So that's question number one. Second question around growth once again, and not just for the quarter, more sort of a structural. If we see post-COVID last nearly four odd years, the growth in particularly the Prime Housing Loan, even in salaried class, has been reasonably good for the industry, big banks, and others. And even from the developer perspective, developers, the project launches and all, particularly had consolidated the top category developer where typically you see your potential customer base or the category developer. They have also been in kind of expansion spree in the last three years.
Even in this backdrop, if we go back and look at the growth, the growth has been kind of a challenge. So the question here is that, okay, is it something to do with structurally you are facing issue due to size or is it due to competition? Because even if they come to competition, your yields in most of these segments are highly competitive, even very, very close to some of the banks. So a bit, if you can provide some color on the structural and direction of growth, because I mean, it seems that there is something beyond this typical competition or interest rate that's playing out. Thanks. You have two questions.
Yeah, Avinash, yeah, coming to that first thing on the ARC sale, yes, this was a big stressed account, account which we had been after for a long, long, long time. The total volume of the disbursement or outstanding principal was INR 510 crores. We took it to the ARC and finalized the deal at INR 250 crores all cash. And that materialized in the third quarter. So since it was a fully provided for, that means 100% provisions were there. So there was not a write-back. It was completely provided loan. So we got the benefit of that in Q3. So this is about the ARC sale. And as regards growth, yes, we talked about the Prime and the developer segment. Well, honestly speaking, yes, we have a very large book, INR 3 lakh crores. So growing from such a big base is always a challenge, I would say, right?
It would be difficult if you equate us with some of the smaller HFCs, which have a book size of one-tenth of ours or say of that size. But the other part which we are looking at as a company is now, what do we do? Do we really grow the book or do we grow the margins? This is a conundrum we are facing right now. You alluded to the Prime segment in IHL. Yes, the Prime segment in IHL is a very keenly contested and heavily, I would say, competitive segment. All the banks are there. We are there. The bigger HFCs are there. So this is a very contested segment. And it's very, very non-margin-accretive, I'd say, as of now. Similarly, in the developer book, if you talk about the triple, of course, there's no one in AAA , the A or the BB B.
These developers, especially the big top-notch developers, they are looking for construction finance at rates as low as 8.5%, 8.6%, 8.7%, almost on par with my IHL rates. So again, there is one need. What we are looking at is, do we really need to grow our books, construction finance books with a rate of 8.5%, 8.6%, 8.7%, which some of the banks are willing to offer? Or do we do a trade-off that grows slightly slower but try to get margin-accretive business? So that is the thought process right now. And because of that, we have started looking into the affordable segment. And as I said, we have launched a product in the third quarter. We are very, very keen on growing this affordable segment book because, as I said, we have priced it at 250-300 basis points more than our IHL rates.
And plus, there is a demand in this segment. But yes, we are going slow because we need to build the infrastructure because it has not been our sort of regular business, regular model which we are into. Slightly risky, no doubt, but definitely margin accretive. So all these factors put together, I think, yes, you are right that the growth has not been what the industry growth has been. But I think we are not aiming for very high growth or probably not trying to catch up with the industry-level growth. Right now, I think as a company, we are more focused on getting margin-accretive business, even if it means cutting down or coming below the market expectations of high growth.
Thank you, sir. Just a small follow-up now, again, on this affordable piece, given, as you rightly said, a INR 3 lakh crore kind of a loan book, and this affordable that ticket sizes are small, they are very, very kind of OpEx-intensive feet-on-the-street model as opposed to, I mean, typically what so far you have been doing more into Prime segment. So now, I mean, is this kind of directional change worth it? Particularly, yes, there could be some marginal delta in margins. But even that will be fairly limited because you are sitting on a INR 3 lakh crore loan book. And in affordable, if we see today, the biggest player would be Aadhar sitting with a INR 20,000 crore loan book at once. So now you will take time to go there. And in this process, you will have this increased operational intensity and cost and all.
So is this kind of a shift in direction worth it? Particularly, I mean, in the backdrop that when the Prime, there are not many. I mean, banks are there, but there is definitely a kind of a vacancy created by one HFC merging with a bank. So is this your venture into affordable worth it? The pain that will kind of move the needle much, whether it's the margin profitability or the growth?
No, Avinash, well, we are not vacating Prime as such. And it does not mean that our movement to affordable will be at the cost of the Prime or the kind of business we've been doing right now. But we are very well aware of the pains of affordable. Yes, it's going to be slightly cost-intensive, feet-on-the-street, I would say slightly riskier with maybe a probability of slightly higher delinquencies. Yes, we are fully aware of that. But we are not jumping into it, or I would say we are not totally going into it. This we are going to develop over a period of time. I'd say at least it's going to take us three, three years, probably two, two and a half, three years to really get into it. And this will be a new segment, a new vertical which we are trying to create.
We will be having a totally complete, a different infrastructural setup for this. We are not going to merge it or link it with our existing Prime and the salaried class business. And we are very conscious about getting into it slowly and steadily because we believe this is going to be the segment in the coming years which is really going to grow. The Prime or the salaried class segment, there's going to be tremendous competition. And with the kind of competition there already is, banks are probably advantaged by their lower cost of deposits, the CASA deposits coming in. I do not know whether we as an HFC will be able to, we'll really want to get into that, this severe competition just to build our books. I think we will be looking at, yes, definitely we'll be looking at building our books.
But we will be looking at building our books with probably a slightly higher margin than we are getting today.
Thank you. Thank you. All the best.
Thank you. The next question is from the line of Dinesh from KRD Capital. Please go ahead.
I have two questions. Are we looking for acquisition? Basically, there was a phone call in Canara Bank. They were planning to divest their subsidiary Can Fin. Are we looking for it? If not, can we have some additional dividends from you? And what are the things to do to reduce the cost of deposit? Or maybe can we borrow it from our parent company, LIC? These are the two questions from my side.
Yeah. First question with regards to acquisition, no, nothing on the horizon so far. Nothing being discussed as of now, right? But let's see. When we do not rule it out as well. Let's see if an opportunity presents itself. Definitely, we'll be going to the board and discussing with the board. This will be a part of our strategy when we have the strategy meet somewhere in the month of March. On merits, we'll decide regards to acquisition. And the second part of the question, what was it, Dinesh?
Dividend. Is there a possibility to increase the dividend?
We are already paying a high dividend, right? 450% on that. That's a pretty high dividend. Anyway, let us see. This is a call taken by the board, so nothing has come up yet. Last year, it was 450%. Let's see what happens with things, what does the board feel about it, so that is about the dividend.
The cost of deposit? Cost to borrow from our term?
Cost of deposits, yeah. Cost of deposits, we are very consciously not increasing our bank. Banks are in a deposit war. Banks are very competitive as far as cost of deposits are concerned, and they are really paying some astronomical rate of interest to their deposits. We are not so much fighting the deposit war. The deposits are just 6% of our borrowings right now. And we have not increased our deposit rates at all. We are not trying to match the banks at all. And yes, your question on whether we can borrow from our promoter group, that is.
I think I lost you.
Sir, I'm sorry. I'm sorry. Yes, the line for the management has been disconnected. Please stay connected while I try to reconnect them. Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for patiently holding. The line for the management has been reconnected. Over to you, sir.
Yeah. Dinesh, where did we drop off?
We were talking about borrowing from the parent company.
Yeah. Right now, borrowing from the parent company, we are restricted by IRDAI because of the related party issue. So until and unless those restrictions are removed and IRDAI gives us some space, I don't think we would be in a position to borrow from the parent company.
However, Dinesh, I might add that our resource base is well diversified. And I mean, we are having access to the best pricing from the wholesale debt market through bonds and commercial papers, and even from the banks also. As far as the liquidity is concerned, there is no issue in the liquidity. There is no issue in the pricing as well. We get the best of the pricing. You can check up from the debt market data.
So that if something comes up in terms of related party, some relaxation, then obviously it will impact, and this will have a positive impact. But otherwise, I think we are well capitalized, and the liquidity is also quite comfortable.
We cannot borrow from SIDBI, NABARD at lower rate?
Sorry?
Or we are already borrowing at less than 6%?
Yeah, yeah, yeah. See, these are market rates. Market rates. We are accessing all types of funding from various market participants, including the names that you have spoken.
Then why are the NIMs very low as compared to bank? If I compare with Bank of Maharashtra, which has got more than 4%, they borrow from SIDBI, NABARD.
No, I think the comparison is not correct because when you are talking about some banks, the banks will be also lending to various types of industries and various types of customers. Whereas we are dealing only in one product, which is housing finance. So that comparison with any bank, I think, is not a fair comparison because the banks will be lending to various segments, including personal loan, unsecured loans, MSME, corporates. Whereas our business and our customers are essentially the Individual Home Loan customers. And obviously, you are aware that banks are having access to CASA. NBFC or an HFC doesn't have CASA. So I think the comparison with any bank is not, I mean, it is not apples to apples comparison. Maybe cost of deposit, maybe anyway.
Thanks.
Thank you.
Thank you. The next question is from the line of Kunal Shah from Citigroup. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Hi. A couple of questions. Firstly, when we look at it in terms of the yields, so yields have come off on a quarter-on-quarter basis. While last time you indicated that there is a recalibration, we have maybe tweaked the lending rates, and the differentiated rates are being offered now. So what could be the impact? Is it more to do with income from the NPAs, which has impacted yields, or is there anything else to read into this?
See, actually, we have tweaked the pricing, as you have said, in the last quarter itself. So that is actually giving us better incremental yield. But even after the increases, the rates at which we are lending today are obviously lower than the rates that we were lending maybe a couple of years back. So there always will be that much of a, you can say, decline in yields, especially if you consider the wholesale piece, which has been coming down quarter after quarter.
So more to do with the mixed yields and slightly lower rate?
Because if you just look at maybe a couple of years back, the wholesale piece was above, closer to 4%, 4.5%. Today, it is less than 3%. So for every single percentage decline in the wholesale piece, the overall NIM impact is around 300 - 600 basis points.
So I was specifically asking from Q2 to Q3. Yeah.
Yeah. Even from Q2 to Q3 also, there has been a decline in the wholesale lending piece as well in terms of the pricing because there have been some high-yielding accounts which have been repaid and closed.
Nothing to do with the income from or maybe recovery from NPA, which was maybe impacted in 1 Q. We have not disclosed that in Q2.
I think that number is more or less stabilized. So it is not having any incremental impact, either positive or negative.
Got it. Got it. And secondly, in terms of the disbursements, so this INR 700 crores-INR 800 crores impact would be per month because of these two states. Or is it like the?
No, no, no. For the quarter. For the quarter.
Quarterly impact. Impact for the quarter.
So even if I add back INR 700 odd crores, it doesn't seem to be a very significant number. So. So even when we look at it, it's not so high.
IHL piece would have probably crossed INR 13,000 crores on a standalone basis.
Sorry, sorry.
The IHL, the Individual Home Loan piece, the disbursement, which was around INR 12,200 crores or INR 12,300 crores, that would have crossed INR 13,000 crores, have been able to get these two pieces of business during the quarter.
Yeah. But even year on year would have been not that great because last time also it was like INR 12,900 odd crores any which ways. Yeah.
No, that was total business. That was full business. I'm talking of only the Individual Home Loans. I'm not considering the NHI, not considering the project, of course.
No, that's what I'm saying.
These two years back, straight away, the disbursement figure would have been in excess of INR 16,000 crores.
Okay. No, no. So this quarter, Individual Home Loan was INR 12,200 crores.
Yeah. That would have.
If we add on INR 700 crores, INR 800 crores.
If you see the total business, Kunal, if you just see the total business, which was around INR 15,400 crore, would have crossed INR 16,000 crore.
Yeah, yeah. But even if I'm saying, even if I compare it with Q3 of last year, it was INR 15,200 crore. So it's not a huge growth, which would have been there anyway.
INR 15,200 crore-INR 16,200 crore, I mean, of course, the base itself is a INR 15,000 crore base, but the number would have increased by INR 1,000 crores on a year-on-year basis.
Okay. And the sanction pipeline, which you indicated, Bangalore, how much would that quantum be? And if we can just get the number on the monthly disbursement run rate, which we are expecting for the Q3, could it still be like INR 6,000 odd crores, which we can easily do for this?
Yes, certainly. That will be there.
Okay. And undisbursed sanctions in Bangalore, how much is that quantum?
INR 600 crore. About INR 600 crore.
INR 600 odd crores. Okay. Got it. Got it. Okay. Yeah. Thank you.
Thank you. The next question is from the line of Abhijit Tibrewal from Motilal Oswal. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Good morning, everyone. Thank you for taking my questions. Is it circling back on growth? Just trying to understand, I mean, if you could help us understand that between December and January, what was your disbursement run rate like? What was it in December, and what was it in January?
See, exact figures of January we'll not be able to share, but we can share that more or less the run rate that we had indicated that we are very much there in terms of disbursement for the month of January. December, we've already told you the December was impacted because of certain Bangalore and Hyderabad kind of external situations, but January, we are back. In terms of Hyderabad, the business has come back fully. In Bangalore, we are still awaiting a resolution in terms of the registration pipeline getting opened. It has improved as compared to what we had seen at the peak of the situation, which was end of November, beginning of December, but it still has to be resolved, but as far as Hyderabad is concerned, we are back on track completely.
Okay, and so just trying to understand, given that Bangalore is still weak and we are expecting maybe this month, next month it will get better, but given that it is still not recovered, then even seeing a quantum of IHL disbursements that maybe we did in Q4 of last year is unrealistic then, right?
Sorry, sorry.
No, Abhijit, if I may just come in. Bangalore is slightly different. Hyderabad was a question of business not coming. Bangalore, we are getting business, right? Our sanction pipeline is growing day by day. The only problem is that these are not being converted to disbursements because those properties are not being registered because of some technical glitch in the allotment of what they call E-Khata numbers, right? Because you have to get an electronic khata number before you are allowed to register a property. So our marketing activities are going on as usual, full swing. People are coming and applying for loans. The only problem is that they are not being disbursed because the registrations are slightly held up because of this issue.
So I would not say that Bangalore is going to really pull us back because the moment this situation or this E-Khata issue or this technical issue is resolved, we should be able to disburse large numbers and volumes of loans in one go.
Got it. So just one clarification on that, which essentially means that whatever we have guided for FY 2025 or the fourth quarter in terms of loan growth is at least predicated on the hope that Bangalore will improve, be able to disburse whatever we have shipped.
No, yes, definitely. We are expecting because the government also is losing a lot of revenue. Government also is concerned, right? And so this is a technical issue. It's something which does not need any change in policy or anything of that sort. They are engaged with the technical partners, whoever they are. I'm not even very sure. But I'm sure that we have seen signs of improvement in December, towards the latter part of December. And in January also, Bangalore, the kind of pullback which we witnessed in December or the deficit we witnessed in December has significantly come down. So that is why we are hopeful that Bangalore is also going to contribute normally in quarter four.
Got it. And then thank you for that. And last question that I had on exit quality: two subparts to this question. The first one is, I mean, while we did resolve one large account on the project side in Q3, if you could give some color on what project loan resolutions are expected in Q4, the quantum of these loans, and what are your expectations on recovery. And the second part for Sudipto, s ir, if you can share, I mean, the Stage III segment-wise exit quality that we share in every annual call. And given that there were INR 250 crore of recoveries or provision write-backs in this quarter, I mean, how did we think about, I mean, creating some management overlay and consequently what impact it could have on the credit costs for the next fiscal year, FY 2026?
Next fiscal year. Okay.
Yeah. Abhijit, talking of asset quality, we are very upbeat about the asset quality. We have been systematically and consistently improving our asset quality. Well, from 4.26% in the same quarter last year, we are down to 2.75% this year. Compared to Q2, 3.06%, we are down to 2.75%. So asset quality, we are pretty assured that it's only going to improve. No doubts about that. Now, coming to big lumpy resolutions in Q4, as I've always alluded, these big cases, these lumpy cases, they are at various stages of resolution. Some in NCLT, some in the courts, some discussions and deliberations going on. Some cases, we would be putting up to ARCs on all-cash basis.
But again, yes, there are some four or five cases which are, I would say, almost maturing, but you can never put your hands on them and say that or say with any certainty that I'm 100% sure that this case is going to come through or that case is not going to come through. You never know. These four or five cases I'm talking of, they're at very advanced stages of resolution. Could happen. We are optimistic that at least one or two of these cases will come off in Q4. We are doing all we can to ensure that these mature in Q4. So that is all I'd say. Overall, I would say our guidance on asset quality is that we are very, very positive of improvement in the asset quality in Q4.
Yeah. Abhijit, balance queries I will take, but just I would like to add is that the focus is obviously on the large ticket cases. We have identified the large ticket cases as the ones that we will tackle first. We've already demonstrated with one such ARC sale, and various other types of resolutions are also on track. What MD mentioned is that some of them are at, I would say, quite advanced stage, and we hope that there will be a positive surprise. As far as the numbers that you have asked for, you can just note it down. For the total stage three for the entire book is around 2.75%. As far as the project, the Individual Home Loan is concerned, that is at 1.2% stage three. For the non-housing individual, it is 4.59% stage three.
As far as the NHC plus project, that is non-housing commercial and project put together, the stage three is 27%. Overall, working out to 2.75%.
Got it. You said IHL was 1.3%?
1.2%.
And so then lastly, I mean, how do you think about credit costs for the full year FY 2026?
Look at it. This quarter, there has been a negative variation in credit costs despite the fact that we have actually taken higher provisioning as management overlays on some accounts, especially some accounts where we expected that there could be a weakness. So fully provided those accounts, despite that, we have had a negative credit cost. I would not say that we will have a negative credit cost in Q4 also, but I would say that it will be fairly low in terms of our overall guidance for the full year. We had guided about 20-30 basis points. I think we should be substantially lower than whatever we have guided, and that should give us a good release in terms of PPOP and PBT levels.
Got it, sir. This is useful. Thank you so much for patiently answering all my questions.
Thank you. The next question is from the line of Varun from Kotak Securities. Please go ahead.
Hi, sir. I just wanted clarification on the affordable housing fees that we are building. So what kind of investments are we looking to make in this business in the next one year or the next three years? And the second one is with regard to the cost. So if you look at OpEx, there's a spike that we've seen in Q3. Is this because of investments in the new business, or is there a wage hike or a provision for a wage hike?
Yeah. I will take that second part of the query that is pertaining to the one-off. You're absolutely right. We have had a one-off in the cost line that is pertaining to some gratuity provisions that we had made pertaining to the proposed wage revision, which is likely to get completed in this quarter. So with that, all these provisions that we have made as one-offs for the last several quarters will get closed. It will come to an end. That is one thing. So that is an impact of around INR 30 crores, which is basically a one-off in the cost line this time. Your other query was pertaining to the investments in the affordable housing. I would request MD actually on investment per se. We do not need any major infrastructure upgrade because we already have presence in a large number of Tier 3 and Tier 4 offices already.
And to start off with, we will be rolling out the product in those centers, but the remaining MD can.
Yeah. Coming to your investment part, as far as affordable is concerned, yes, we do realize that this is a completely different ballgame altogether. It requires a different skill set and different sort of an expertise to take it forward. Right now, we've launched a product in Q3, and we are pushing it with our existing manpower, my existing resources. But ultimately, in the next financial year, we're looking at probably trying to build up a separate infrastructure, maybe not in terms of offices or such, but a separate marketing, collection, recovery team, and especially a credit appraisal team in affordable. We will be taking it to the board in the month of March. Right now, we are formulating that strategy. So difficult to come up with a number as to what would be the quantum of investments.
But probably beginning of next year, when we have the strategy in place and we've decided to go ahead, we will be calling. But it is not going to be anything very significant. As I said, we are not going gung ho or jumping straight away into it in one year. We'll slowly build up the capacity, and we will try to go in with, as far as possible, a low OpEx model.
Okay. Thanks.
Thank you. The next question is from the line of Mohit Jain from Tara Capital. Please go ahead.
Hello. Can you hear me, sir?
Yeah.
Yeah, Mohit. We can hear you.
Hello?
Yeah, yeah, Mohit. We can hear you. Please go ahead.
Please go ahead.
I have a question regarding the margin. I believe so you said that you would prefer to have the margin you'd prefer to protect the margins over the growth. I just wanted to understand what are the levers you are having from the margin front, considering the fact that the affordable housing part is going to be a longer journey. So I don't think incremental delta is going to come there. And in case we are having a rate cut, so what can be the possible margin levers for us?
Yeah. Obviously, one of the margin levers will be the foray into the affordable segment, and whatever accretion happens on that book will be always margin accretive. Even if it is a very small number, it will be a margin accretive. Secondly is that very recently, we have, as we mentioned in the opening remarks, we have affected a PLR hike that was basically to offset some of the cost, which was driven because of the tightening liquidity situation, and which we expect to ease over a period of time. The third is obviously more and more assets coming in from the non-performing to the performing area. That itself is margin accretive, and there we have made a significant improvement. The fourth lever is obviously the turnaround in the project.
For example, for the last six, seven quarters till June, you have witnessed a gradual decline in the project loan portfolio. Now, for the last two quarters, you would probably have seen a turnaround and a positive accretion in terms of the project finance portfolio. Obviously, the project finance portfolio is a better-yielding product segment as compared to the other segments. So I would say that there are four levers in terms of margin recovery and margin, I would say, stability in the fourth quarter getting into the next year.
Okay. Just one more thing. On the modest growth, you said that we'll be ending the year most probably with 9%. So when we started the year, we had a disbursement target of INR 75,000 crores and a double-digit modest growth. I think since last seven, eight quarters, our loan growth has been pretty slow. I understand this quarter we had a problem with Bangalore and Hyderabad. But even if we include that, is it fair to say that structurally we are heading towards a lower growth number of some way, mid-single digit over a longer period of time?
No, I think if you look at this year itself, right from March into June, September, and December, the overall AUM growth has been trickling upwards. We started the year at around 4% AUM growth, if you recollect on a year-on-year basis, which has now come up to more than 6.5%, around 6.5%. And of course, the numbers may not be very large in terms of moving the needle, but one has to also consider the fact that the 2.5% incremental growth number has arrived on a base of close to INR 3 lakh crores. So there is a movement. Probably the movement is not felt because of the large base, but certainly the move is towards the increase in the AUM on a progressive basis as far as the growth number is concerned.
Okay. So we are optimistic of touching the double-digit even next year as well.
Yeah, certainly that will come. That will certainly come.
Okay. Thank you.
Thank you. The next question is from the line of Chintan Shah from ICICI Securities. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Thank you for the opportunity. So first, a housekeeping question. So on your total borrowings of INR 2.65 lakh crore, how much percentage of that would be floating in nature, and how much would be fixed in nature? Any sense on that?
See, roughly around say 55% will be floating, and there will be another 20% of the balance which will be reset during the year. So you can say about 65% will be either fully floating or will be floating because it will get reset during the year.
Okay. A year means this financial year so in Q4?
Any 12 months, a period of 12 months.
Okay. Sure. In affordable, I think we are banking too much on the affordable phase that will be margin accretive and also growth accretive. So probably down the line or say next two, three years, what kind of loan book are we looking on the affordable phase or how much affordable would be as a part of the total AUM?
I think in the next two, three years, because it's early days yet, we've just launched the product and are trying to market it through our conventional channels, if I may use the word. In the next two, three years, about 10% of the loan book should be affordable. Okay. So probably INR 3 lakh crores or INR 30,000-odd crores it would be the current number. So assuming the current INR 25,000 crores-INR 30,000 crores in three years.
Okay. But so a loan AUM, overall AUM also would go probably AUM will also touch around 3.5, 3.6. So it would be around 6%-7%, right? Or 10%?
Correct. Correct.
Correct. Correct. You're right. You're right. Okay.
And given that the current AUM among the affordable players right now, I think the highest also is around INR 21 thousand crores-INR 22 thousand crores. So what gives us the kind of confidence? So will we be offering lower rates as compared to the peers, or what would be our main USP to attract the customers? Yeah.
If you look at the affordable book and the pure play, the affordable housing players, I think the rates are anywhere upwards of 13% or so, right?
Yeah.
Yeah. And we would, yes, you are right in a sense that we would be very competitive as far as affordable. As I said, our existing product which we have launched is just 250-300 basis points more than our conventional products. So to be spot on, I would say our affordable product starts at 11% as compared to somewhere around about 13%-14% for some of the pure play affordable housing companies. So yes, we are going to be competitive. And we also do have a pretty big reach in the sense right now we are spread across all over the country, 310 locations, etc., etc. Of course, we will be creating a separate vertical which will probably be housed in these very locations. So I think our reach also would be significantly better than some of these affordable players. And finally, the brand connect would, of course, definitely be much, much more helpful to us.
See, just to add, none of the pure play affordable housing players as they exist today have got a Pan-India reach of the size anywhere close to ours.
Sure. So probably we'll also be penetrating into some of the areas which are not penetrated by the affordable players right now.
Yeah. It is possible. Going forward, it will certainly be further enhanced, but it will be further enhanced going forward.
Any top five or top 10 markets which we are looking to first get into? Top 10 markets? Any specifics on that?
Specifically, we cannot give out the cities, etc., but largely it will be focused on the Tier 3 and beyond, Tier 3, Tier 4, and beyond. Those centers, many of the places we are already having offices. So those will be the first where we will be pitching our product.
Sure, and just lastly on the fee part, so apart from the yield which we started at 11%, what would be the other income component, fee income or insurance cross-sell? What could that percentage be of the book, overall book? Yeah.
You are talking of the affordable piece or overall?
Yeah, on the affordable one. So basically 11% is the yield, and apart from yield, the processing fees or the insurance cross-sell, what could be that additional income part from the affordable pool? Yeah.
Additional will be the normal processing fee. Of course, as far as the processing fee and other charges are concerned, we are in the process of revamping the entire fee structure across all product categories, and that work has already started from 1st January. Some places we have increased the fees, and going forward in the next couple of months, and more prominently from April onwards, you will see a completely different fee structure where we will be significantly enhancing the fee contribution as a percentage of the total revenues. But those probably in the next quarters we'll be able to give you greater information.
Sure. And this revamp would be for the entire book, right? Or not only on the affordable?
Which one?
Or only affordable? So the revamp of fee income which you told, there would be a complete revamp as a product category?
All product categories. I mentioned all each and every product category.
Sure. Sure. So this is very helpful. I think that's it from my side. Yeah. Thank you for your question, and all the best.
Thank you. The next question is from the line of Gaurav Jani from Prabhudas Lilladher. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Thank you, sir. Just two main points that I want to cover. One is on the provisions, right? So just to clarify, the INR 250 crore of sales that was effected in the provisions, right? So the provisions are net of the INR 250 crore.
Yeah. Could not hear your last part of your query. Can you please repeat kindly?
So what I was asking you, sir, that the sale to ARC number of INR 250 crore, so that would be effected in the provisions, right? So the provision negative number is net of the INR 250 crore?
Correct. Correct.
Okay. So normalizing that, so we are looking at a number of about INR 206 crore.
As I mentioned a few minutes back, we had actually taken management overlay, the ECL model-driven provisioning requirement, but still in very low numbers. But we had, you can say deliberately, we had effected the management overlay portion over and above what was required in the ECL. And two, you can.
So the management's line has been disconnected. Let me reconnect them. Give me a moment, please. Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for patiently holding the line, the management has been reconnected. Over to you, sir.
Yeah. Gaurav, where did we drop off?
Sir, Sudipto Sil was mentioning about the management overlay. So I just want to ask, what was the quantum of management overlay that hit the P&L this quarter?
Around INR 150 crores-INR 160 crores of management overlay. Total number, because there were some releases also, total there were two accounts on which we had given management overlay additionally. That would be around, say, INR 200 crores. This is the negative impact was around INR 44 crores.
Understood. So just extending this, so just wanted to understand the normalized level of provisions, right, that could actually impact us for the next one year or so. So are we to understand that 2025, the provision number is a normalized level, or how should we look at it?
I think that is, I mean, slightly on the higher side. We are looking at around 20 basis points on a steady-state basis.
Okay. Sure. Sure. So that answers. Secondly, sir, just if you could help me as to for Q4, what kind of a disbursement number are we targeting?
For Q4, generally, the numbers have been, I would say, around INR 20 thousand crore-INR 25 thousand crore we'll be looking at all products put together.
Okay. INR 20 thousand crore-INR 25 thousand crore for Q4.
Correct.
Okay. Okay. Thank you. That answers my question. Thank you.
Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, we'll take the last question for today, which is from the line of Jigar Jani from B&K Securities. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Hi. Thanks for taking my question. Just one question on margin. So given that we have so many levers to increase margin, would it be fair to assume we'll be inching towards the upper end of our guidance of 2.7%-2.9%? It will be much closer to 2.9% over the next couple of years.
See, that actually depends on the asset mix, and if the AUM for the affordable housing, the way we have projected it over a three-year period, I think the three-year period of around closer to 8%-9% of the book or 10% of the book, if we are able to achieve, then certainly we can look at margin improvement by around 15-20 basis points, but that is not going to happen in one year. That will take about a two- to three-year period.
Sir, this accounts for any rate cut impact that probably will happen?
Rate cut is something which will certainly have an impact at the inflection point, but we understand that if there is a rate cut then and followed by, I would say, reasonable infusion of liquidity, then I will get some positive impact of it on the borrowing side as well.
15-20 basis points over a three-year period is what we are looking at just beyond the big stage.
It's quite reasonable kind of an expectation.
Understood. And sir, on disbursement guidance for next year, any guidance for disbursement for next year?
Disbursement guidance generally around 10%-15% growth we are expecting in the next year.
Okay. Thank you so much. And best of luck.
Thank you. As that was the last question, I would now like to hand the conference over to the management for closing comments. Over to you, sir.
Yeah. Thank you, friends. This year was a year of consolidation for LIC Housing Finance after a series of structural changes made last year. Focus area for this year was an active resolution of non-performing loans where we made good progress. The asset quality has been improving quarter by quarter. We are quite positive on a further improvement in the asset quality in Q4 of the financial year. On the business front, some ground needs to be covered. For example, in the affordable piece, we have just ventured into it, and we need to strengthen it, build it further, and that we are in the process of doing so and looking forward to this business contributing significantly over a two- to three-year period. Despite tight liquidity conditions, we have maintained the margins during the quarter, flat-ish from Q2.
By the end of Q3, we expect some improvement in the margins because of the slight 10 basis points PLR hike which we have taken. We look forward to your continued support for a very good Q4 to close the year. Thank you, and thank you so much.
Thank you. Members of the management, ladies and gentlemen, on behalf of Axis Capital, that concludes this conference. We thank you for joining us, and you may now disconnect your lines. Thank you.
Thank you.