L&T Finance Limited (NSE:LTF)
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Apr 28, 2026, 3:29 PM IST
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Q4 23/24

Apr 29, 2024

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, good day and welcome to L&T Finance Limited Q4 FY24 and FY24 earnings conference call. As a reminder, all participant lines will be in the listen-only mode and there will be no opportunity for you to ask questions after the presentation concludes. Should you need assistance during this conference call, please signal an operator by pressing star then zero on your touch-tone phone. Please note that this conference is being recorded. We have with us today Mr. Sudipta Roy, Managing Director and CEO, Mr. Sachinn Joshi, CFO, and Mr. Raju Dodti, COO, and other members of the senior management team. Before we proceed, as a standard disclaimer, no unpublished price-sensitive information will be shared during the conference call. Only publicly available documents will be referred to for discussion during interaction in the call.

While all efforts would be made to ensure that no unpublished price-sensitive information will be shared, in case of any inadvertent disclosure, the same would, in any case, form part of the recording of the call. Further, some of the statements made on today's call may be forward-looking in nature. A note to this effect is provided in the Q4 results presentation sent to all of you earlier. I would now like to invite Mr. Sudipta Roy to share his thoughts on the company's performance and the strategy of the company going forward. Thank you and over to you, sir.

Sudipta Roy
Managing Director and CEO, L&T Finance

Thank you. A very good morning to all of you. I welcome you all to the investor call for Q4 FY24 and the close of the financial year 2024. With me on the call are our CFO, Mr. Sachinn Joshi, Chief Operating Officer, Mr. Raju Dodti, and the senior management team of L&T Finance. Today's call is again divided into two sections, taken up sequentially by myself and our CFO, Mr. Sachinn Joshi, who will be talking about the overall business metrics and the financial performance at length. Post our opening commentary, we'll be happy to take questions on the call. I'd like to start the call by sharing our satisfaction not only with the quarter's performance but also with the annual performance wherein we have registered the highest-ever yearly PAT of INR 2,320 crores, a growth of 43% year-on-year.

Moreover, we maintained a strong trajectory in our quarter for disbursements, ending with an overall disbursement growth of 33% year-over-year and 4% sequentially over the Q3 festive quarter. Last quarter, I had emphasized about making our retail growth trajectory sustainable and predictable. In view of that, we would like to conclude that our quarter for retail growth performance has been extremely encouraging. Having met the Lakshya 2026 goals at a retail level in Q3 FY24, we are now reorienting ourselves for convergence at a consolidated level by FY26 as detailed in the last quarter. Accordingly, the new Lakshya targets for Lakshya 2026 are as follows: retaliation at 95%, against which we are at 94% in Q4 FY24. Retail book growth to be maintained at greater than 25% CAGR. In Q4 FY24, the growth stood at 31% year-over-year.

While we have improved portfolio quality by sustaining retail GS3 and NS3 levels within the threshold levels, we have now asked ourselves to converge consolidated GS3 and NS3 below 3% and 1%, respectively. The corresponding numbers stood at 3.15% and 0.79% at the end of FY24. On the ROA front, we are moving from tracking retail ROA to consolidated ROA in the range of 2.8%-3% as per our original Lakshya 2026 targets. Our consolidated Q4 FY24 ROA stood at 2.19%, and our annual FY24 ROA stood at 2.32% after an additional prudential provision about which I will talk in detail subsequently. It is important to note that before the prudential provisions, our underlying ROA for Q4 FY24 stood at 2.63%, and for FY24, stood at 2.43%. I'd like to draw your attention to slide number six of the investor presentation where this has been delineated in detail.

I would now like to quickly run you through the key highlights of our performance in Q4 FY24 and for the full year FY24. Highest-ever annual PAT of INR 2,320 crores in FY24, a growth of 43% year-over-year. The unadjusted figure before the additional prudential provision stands at INR 2,432 crore, a growth of 50% year-over-year. Highest-ever annual retail disbursements of INR 54,267 crore, a growth of 29% year-over-year. Highest-ever quarterly retail disbursements of INR 15,000 crores, a growth of 33% year-over-year. Well-tuned acquisition engines ensured that the quarter for disbursements exceeded that of the festive Q3 quarter. Retail book crossed the INR 80,000 crore milestone. It is currently at INR 80,037 crores, up 30% year-over-year. As shared in the last two quarterly updates, the five-pillar strategy continues to be central to the roadmap to the future.

The organization continues to granularly execute the five-pillar strategy, details of which are available from slide 11 of the investor presentation. Sustained focus towards improvement in credit parameters across businesses ensured consolidated GS3 and NS3 coming down by 159 basis points to 3.15% and by 72 basis points to 0.79%, respectively, at the end of FY 2024. The provision coverage ratio currently stands at a comfortable 76%, up from 69% during the same period last year. The company continues to focus on strengthening IT and information security infrastructure, risk management, and business controls while building a strong compliance culture supported by a robust governance framework. I'd like to give you some flavor on the macroeconomic scenario and prospects of monsoons before proceeding on the five pillars of our execution strategy.

As far as the global economy is concerned, growth forecasts for 2024 have been raised in recent months by multilateral organizations and rating agencies during Q4 FY24. It will, however, have to be seen how the troika of global indicators, which are the U.S. Treasury yield, the dollar index, and the Brent crude, which are now hovering at nearly six-month-high levels, and the geopolitical tensions in the Middle East evolve during the course of the year. The country's GDP growth rate for FY25 is projected to remain strong at 6.8%, aided by continued strength in domestic demand. Production indicators, especially in the non-agriculture sectors, posted a strong growth during Q4 FY24, led by the strongest manufacturing output in nearly three and a half years. However, pockets of concern remain around the unevenness in consumption and in recovery during Q4 FY24.

As far as premium consumption demand in the economy is concerned, it continued to remain strong in Q4, but demand for goods and services of mass consumption remains subdued. On the inflation front, retail inflation dropped from 6.42% in Q2 to 5.01% in Q4 on the back of a significant drop in core inflation, aided by a tighter monetary policy. However, food inflation continues to remain sticky and will have to be monitored. On the monsoon front, IMD has predicted a high probability, 61%, of above-normal southwest monsoon rains in 2024, with La Niña conditions likely to develop during August and September 2024. Some areas in Northeast, East, and Northwest are likely to receive below-normal rainfall. The timely arrival and temporal and spatial distribution of monsoon rainfall will have to be closely monitored, especially given the backdrop of precarious water reserves in the Southern and Western regions.

The ongoing weakness in rural demand is likely to spill over to H1 FY25 due to the probability of uneven monsoonal rains and decline in crop output in FY24 as per ICRA. Urban consumption is projected to remain upbeat in FY25, though uneven. To conclude, a few challenges still persist in the NBFC sector in FY25, namely access to funding at competitive rates, tight liquidity conditions, and the higher-for-longer global policy rate regime, and elevated competitive pressure, especially from other competitors in the market. We will continue to keep a close watch on emerging scenarios across products and customer segments to shape our policies and chart out the future course of action accordingly. As I mentioned earlier, I would now like to dive deeper into what we call the five pillars of execution, which will help us in creating a sustainable and predictable retail franchise. First is customer acquisition.

As I mentioned in the last call, we have started executing on deepening the customer acquisition funnel, both horizontally, which means greater geographical coverage, as well as vertically, which means greater counter-share at dealer points. For instance, the number of new villages or the zero disbursement villages activated for the rural group loans in MFI stood at 21,524 in Q4 FY2024, which is a sequential increase of 66%. Similarly, our two-wheeler distribution points increased to 10,711 points from 9,501 in Q3 FY2024, which is a 13% increase. This granular distribution surface area increase has actually enabled us to maintain the two-wheeler disbursement momentum in quarter for FY2024 as against the peak festive quarter in Q3. We have given out details for all relevant lines of business in slide number 12 and 13 of the investor presentation. Sharpening credit underwriting.

Building the next-generation credit underwriting models has been one of the most important focus areas for L&T Finance. The work on the next-generation digital credit engine has progressed at a satisfactory pace, and we expect the beta version to be deployed in production towards the latter part of Q1 FY 2025. This in-house proprietary risk engine would underwrite customers on a multidimensional axis while ingesting bureau, account aggregator, and alternate trust signals at scale using ML-based ensemble scorecards built after extensive analysis and overlap historical credit performance data on all axes. The initial backtesting of credit performance data and on the efficacy of the models has been extremely encouraging. We are confident that this engine would significantly add to the underwriting depth of L&T Finance and help create a deeper moat in our fulcrum businesses. Futuristic digital architecture.

We are committed to becoming one of the preeminent technology-driven lenders in the country. Our technology efforts are divided on four quadrants, namely designing superior customer experience, digital process engineering, augmenting IT infrastructure, and strengthening information security. In the last quarter, we improved on the digital journeys of our personal loans, home loans, and two-wheeler businesses. We migrated our SME business to Salesforce from a legacy platform, and our B- Rek app, our in-house collections application, went live this quarter. We have started working on a revamped customer portal and the next generation of our PLANET app, which has now crossed nine million downloads. Brand visibility. The objective of investment and brand visibility augmentation is to capitalize on an already strong recall of the mother brand Larsen & Toubro and build customer mindshare for L&T Finance in our operating lines of business.

We are hopeful that the increased brand awareness will lead to L&T Finance's products finding its way into the customer's consideration set and result in higher sales and customer retention. In the last quarter, we have invested in building visibility around high-traffic customer points like airports and in-flight advertising on the urban side and wall paintings and malls on the rural side. During the quarter, we also have launched our sonic identity for better subliminal brand association and recall. Those on the call would recall that the holding tune that you heard is our new sonic identity that we have launched recently. You will see widespread use of this sonic identity and various upcoming versions of it, both internally for the people within the organization as well as externally for existing and prospective customers.

We'll be launching integrated marketing campaigns for some of our focus products in the coming months, and they will be visible in the market soon. In terms of capability building, we have strengthened the LTF leadership in critical functions in the last quarter, and we have created a strong advisory framework. We have inducted leaders with significant experience in their respective domains with a track record of successful results delivery. To sharpen the focus of the organization on technology and data-driven business delivery with a sharper consumer recall, we created and filled the positions of Chief Digital Officer, Chief AI and Data Officer, and Chief Marketing Officer with senior veterans. In order to strengthen the advisory framework in critical areas, we have onboarded seasoned industry professionals with successful track records to add firepower to our teams. Please refer to slide number 20 in the investor presentation for their detailed profiles.

Now, I would like to give you an update on the wholesale business and the related investments in security receipts with ARCs. As many of you will recall, since the launch of the Lakshya 2026 strategy in April 2022, the board, in order to pivot towards retailization, had in Q3 FY23 decided to change the business model in wholesale to enable an accelerated transformation. The wholesale assets were reclassified from amortized cost to fair value through profit and loss. In line with this, a fair valuation of the wholesale assets was conducted by an independent valuer. Given a shift to the accelerated sell-down of the wholesale book, it was envisaged that certain illiquidity discounts were to be given to potential buyers during the sell-down process. To give effect to this, the wholesale book was fair valued down by INR 2,687 crores in Q3 FY23.

As proposed to the above, I'm pleased to share that the company was able to sell down, reduce the on-book wholesale portfolio successfully from INR 38,058 crores at the end of Q2 FY23 to INR 5,528 crores by the end of quarter four FY24. This has resulted in a decisive reduction in wholesale assets by INR 32,530 crores, thereby bringing down the wholesale as a percentage portfolio from 42% in Q2 FY23 to 6% by the end of Q4 FY24.

Now, with the on-book wholesale portfolio reduced to substantially low levels of INR 5,500 crores through sell-down and repayments or INR 1,821 crores in quarter four FY24, the fair valuation exercise, as on 31st March 2024, yielded a release of INR 546 crores. As an additional information, we are pleased to share that the on-book wholesale portfolio has further reduced to INR 4,400 crores on account of further repayments subsequent to March 31, 2024.

As of March 31, 2024, we are carrying investments worth INR 7,500 crores approximately in the form of security receipts of various asset reconstruction companies. As you are aware, this represents loans we have transferred to ARCs to expedite resolution. This pertained to exposures in real estate, infrastructure, etc. Owing to improved macroeconomic conditions in India, and specifically in the case of realty, increased buy-in in the commercial and residential real estate sector, resolution pathways of various assets in our SR portfolio are now visible. We are also seized by the fact that such resolution processes carry a possible sequencing risk wherein accounting markdowns of NAVs of certain security receipts may be required temporarily before reckoning higher realizations from other project assets, resulting in a net gain for LTF.

To minimize the possibility of the above variations on a quarter-on-quarter basis arising out of this sequence risk, the company has created additional prudential provisions of INR 721 crores comprising of INR 546 crores released on account of fair value changes in the wholesale loan book and an incremental amount of INR 175 crores created through P&L. This additional provision of INR 721 crore would take the overall PCR on the net EAD value of the SR portfolio sold to ARCs to 55% post this exercise. The provisions created during the quarter of INR 721 crore constitute approximately 10% of the net carrying value at fair value of the SR portfolio investments in the books of account as of March 31, 2024, of INR 7,500 crores before taking this provision.

We are confident that LTF over the next few years would eventually collect a surplus over and above the net SR carrying value in the books today. With the wholesale book coming down to a negligible level of 6%, the management would now focus on growing the retail book as well as engage with the ARCs for expeditious resolution of the SR book. Thus, we are confident of replicating the success of reduction in our wholesale book to our SR portfolio without any further markdowns. In fact, our team is hopeful of achieving a surplus in this regard. Finally, I would like to talk about ESG at L&T Finance. The company has worked extensively in this area over the last few years.

During FY24, our ESG ratings saw an improvement from BBB to A from MSCI and moved down from the previously B management category to an A-leadership category with CDP. We hope to continuously improve our performance in this domain as a responsible corporate citizen. Now, I hand over to Mr. Sachinn Joshi, who will take you through the financial updates for the quarter.

Sachinn Joshi
CFO, L&T Finance

Thank you, Sudipta. As always, let me walk you through the financial performance of the company for the quarter and year gone by. Consolidated NIM plus P remains strong at 11.25%, owing to change in the portfolio mix to retail and weighted average cost remaining stable on a sequential basis on account of SQ liability management. We have had highest-ever quarterly retail disbursements of INR 15,044 crores, which are up 33% year-on-year. This was achieved in a non-festive quarter.

Retail book crossed INR 80,000 crore milestone, up 31% year-over-year, driven by the increased demand for both rural and urban segments alike. Our consolidated PAT at INR 554 crore was up 11% year-over-year. Consolidated return on assets was at 2.19%, up 29 basis points year-over-year. Finally, consolidated ROE at 9.53%, up 16 basis points year-over-year. As far as annual performance is concerned, consolidated PAT stood at INR 2,320 crore, up 43% year-over-year. Consolidated NIM plus P remains strong at 10.67%. We have again had highest-ever annual retail disbursements totaling INR 54,267 crore. This was up 29% year-over-year. Consolidated return on assets at 2.32%, up 79 basis points year-over-year. Consolidated ROE at 10.35%, up 256 basis points year-over-year. Now, talking about retail businesses, first, let me start with rural business finance.

The business registered highest-ever quarterly disbursements of INR 5,768 crores. This was up 31% year-over-year, along with the highest-ever annual disbursements, which stood at INR 21,500 crores approximately, up 27% year-over-year. The rural business finance book crossed INR 24,000 crore milestone in this quarter. We also achieved the highest-ever monthly disbursement of INR 2,124 crores in the month of March 2024, with 33% business volumes coming from L&T Finance's exclusive customers. The growth in this business was aided by a strong focus on strengthening customer retention coupled with a renewed focus on new customer acquisition. In case of pharma finance, disbursements stood at INR 1,530 crores in Q4 FY2024. This led to a book size reaching INR 13,892 crores, reflecting a growth rate of 8% year-over-year. A strong business momentum was maintained in this segment during the year despite a degrowth witnessed in the industry.

As far as urban finance is concerned, this segment, which comprises two-wheeler, personal loan, home loans, loan against property businesses, saw a 32% year-on-year jump in overall quarterly disbursements and a 22% year-on-year jump in overall annual disbursements. As a result, the overall book size increased from INR 27,841 crores in Q4 FY23 to INR 36,089 crores in Q4 FY24. This translated into a growth of 30% year-on-year. Let me now take you through individual businesses. The first is two-wheeler business. Two-wheeler business registered disbursements of INR 2,502 crores in the quarter, which is almost equal to disbursements made in a festive quarter. So previous quarter, we had done disbursements of INR 2,540 crores. The disbursements were up 45% from INR 1,727 crores in the same quarter last year.

The growth for the segment was additionally driven by geographic penetration, maintaining a strong focus on customer value proposition and building preferred dealer/OEM relationships to grow the market share. The book size crossed INR 11,000 crore milestone. We actually closed at INR 11,205 crores, which was an increase of 25% year-over-year. Additionally, the focus remained on continuously increasing the prime as well as EV segment, owing to deepening and new tie-ups with leading industry players. Talking about personal loans, this business witnessed disbursements of INR 968 crores. In Q4 FY23, the corresponding number was INR 1,322 crores. The book size at the end of this quarter stood at INR 6,440 crores, an increase of 18% year-over-year. Growth was a bit calibrated in this business, driven by a well-thought-out strategy of revamping policies as well as risk guardrails.

Moving on to retail housing, it achieved the highest-ever quarterly disbursements at INR 2,513 crores, which was up 70% year-on-year. Last year's same time or sorry, previous quarter in fact, we were just below INR 2,000 crores. The book size crossed INR 18,000 crore milestone, an increase of 38% year-on-year. We also hit a monthly disbursement milestone of INR 1,000 crores in March. We sustained business momentum in the business through strategic measures like deepening geographic presence, solid DSA and channel partnerships, as well as increasing customer retention. With regard to SME finance, our quarter four FY24 disbursement stood at INR 1,213 crores. The month of March also registered highest-ever disbursement of INR 458 crores. The book is inching towards the INR 4,000 crore milestone very quickly. We are at INR 3,905 crores as of 31st March.

Strong growth in business volumes aided by geographic expansion, deepening channel partnerships, and focus on providing superior value to our customers. Let me now hand over the call back to Sudipta to make his closing comments.

Sudipta Roy
Managing Director and CEO, L&T Finance

Thank you, Sachinn. In conclusion, I would like to say that we are optimistic about the potential that the company holds. We are making ourselves future-ready by continuously upgrading our capabilities across all domains. Our core business franchise stands in best shape, which is evidenced by the numbers posted by us along with the highest-ever PAT on a year-on-year basis, full-year basis. We have already started quarter one FY 2025 on a great note, and I'm confident that in FY 2025, our robust performance trajectory will continue. I thank you all for your patience hearing, and we now open the floor for questions.

Operator

Thank you very much. We will now begin the question and answer session. Anyone who wishes to ask a question may press star and one on the touch-tone telephone. If you wish to remove yourself from the question queue, you may press star and two. Participants are requested to use hands up while asking a question. Ladies and gentlemen, we will wait for a moment while the question queue assembles. Participants, you may press star and one to ask a question. The first question is from the line of Digant Haria from GreenEdge Wealth. Please go ahead.

Digant Haria
Founder, GreenEdge Wealth Services

Yeah. Hi, team. Congratulations for the good performance and good to see the top-level team getting beefed up in different areas. So my questions are twofold. One is, let this exercise of reevaluating the SRs and the provisions that we took on it, will this keep on happening once a year or once a quarter? What will be the frequency of this exercise?

Sudipta Roy
Managing Director and CEO, L&T Finance

So as of now, we have done it this quarter. And so as I said, because of the increased buoyancy in the real estate sector, resolution pathways of many of some of these assets in the SR portfolio are currently visible. And we'll keep on working on sort of during the year as well as the course of the next couple of years trying to resolve those assets. Though we will sort of obviously reevaluate in terms of the SR portfolio with every passing quarter, but we believe that at the end of the resolution period, we should get a surplus. And the provision that we have taken against this should take care of any sequence risk. So the reason that we have taken the provisions is to address the sequence risk that might come as we work on the resolution process.

We do believe that that should be enough to sort of smoothen out any sort of quarterly variations in terms of any markdowns on the resolution process that might happen. One asset might get resolved this quarter giving us slightly lower resolution, but the next asset that might get resolved the next quarter might give a higher resolution resulting in an overall surplus gain. This process will continue. But what we are very, very confident about is that the provision that we have taken as of the exercise at this quarter is sufficient enough as far as the information available with us at this point in time to sort of smoothen out any sequence risk and protect the P&L from any variations that might arise on a quarter-on-quarter basis.

Digant Haria
Founder, GreenEdge Wealth Services

All right. All right. Thanks for this answer. My second question is on the credit cost that in FY2024, we ended up with roughly INR 2,000 crore of credit cost on the retail portfolio. So you mentioned a few headwinds in terms of monsoons, which could probably be uneven, then the consumption patterns, which are uneven. And for us at L&T Finance, we are more indexed to that part of the consumption, which is slightly more impacted. So do you see credit costs inching up for FY2025? Maybe we were at an average of 2.5%-3% credit cost for the last year. Will that go up? And another reason is that microfinance had two great years, and probably the normalization of credit cost in that business should also happen. So any guidance here would be really appreciated.

Sudipta Roy
Managing Director and CEO, L&T Finance

Yeah. So Digant, I would urge the wider investor community to look at between slide 15 to 17. So two things. First and foremost thing, we have said as part of our five-pillar strategy, our second pillar is improving our credit administration framework. And as you have said, that we are building a new generation credit engine, which probably will sharpen our credit underwriting capacity. So that's the first thing. The second thing is that our credit costs have been our credit metrics have been pretty stable. And we are, especially on the urban side, especially in the high-velocity businesses like two-wheelers, we're actually working on improving our credit metrics, which is balancing the portfolio with a right and optimum mix of new-to-credit customers as well as prime customers.

If you see in slide 16 of our investor presentation, we have given the premium share of our two-wheeler originations have gone up by almost 9 percentage points this quarter from 41%-50%. So on one hand, we are trying to balance the portfolio acquisition to make it far sharper and cleaner and far more predictable from a credit standpoint. We are investing in building next-generation credit models, which will sort of bring our credit cost on a stable trajectory. And as you can see on the metrics, the indexed sort of indexed delinquency metrics or indexed credit performance metrics that we have given from slide 15 to 17, you can see that we are trending far lower than comparing industry metrics.

For example, if you see in our microloans business, if the industry metric is at about 100% delinquency on 12-month on book on an ever 90-plus, we are at 1/3 the industry risk cost on that. If you look at our two-wheeler business, we are at about 81% of industry sort of risk metrics. In our farm equipment finance, we're at about 85%. In a loan against property, we're at about 50%. So on all lines of business, our credit metrics are much better than industry. But as an organization, we are focused on bringing it far, far down by, again, as I said, building the new-age credit models as well as improving the through-the-door credit quality acquisition. So to answer your question or to summarize a little bit of a long-winded answer, is that we are working on keeping our credit costs on a downward trajectory, right?

We are hopeful that we should be able to achieve that even if some of the environmental conditions might be a little uneven during the earlier part of the year. We are hopeful that by August and September, we'll have a normal monsoon. The indications are there. We have a normal monsoon. As you know, normal monsoons typically smoothen out credit gains to a large extent, especially in the rural economy. We remain hopeful that normal monsoons also will aid us in improving our credit metrics going forward.

Digant Haria
Founder, GreenEdge Wealth Services

Okay. Thanks, Sudipta. Thanks for this.

Sachinn Joshi
CFO, L&T Finance

Digant, just wanted to add one more point. The credit cost in terms of trajectory, you are referring to 2.4% that we have. I think it will be somewhere in the range of about 2.25%-2.5%. That's the internal plan. Secondly, on the rural business finance, the microloan piece that you were speaking about, we had created macro-potential provisions of INR 975 crore, and we have earned during COVID times. You would see from the presentation that we are yet to use it. In fact, the total provisions, including macro-potential additional provisions on stage one, stage two, as well as OTR provisions, total to about INR 1,200 crore. We have ensured that we have, till date, not utilized a single rupee out of that. We have been very, very conservative trying to retain these buffers on the balance sheet. Our PCRs are perhaps one of the best in the industry.

We have a PCR of 76% on an aggregate basis. When it comes to retail book, it's 79%. So we have been providing enough and more. We believe that the credit cost trajectory, as Sudipta mentioned, with focus on going more towards prime, we will be able to hold this.

Digant Haria
Founder, GreenEdge Wealth Services

Feedback from microfinance, where you are overprovided to compensate for the SRs in the corporate portfolio. That was very good to see. Thanks for all this detailed explanation. My final and last question is that, Sudipta, you mentioned that competition is still very high. While it would be intuitively, we would see that RBI is clamping down on one or the other institution for just growing too fast, and the funding environment is tight. So are there signs that this competition is cooling off, or you really don't see anything cooling off in the near term?

Sudipta Roy
Managing Director and CEO, L&T Finance

So see, competition is quite robust, I would say, right? So the fact is that everyone is vying for a share of the customer pie. Obviously, on one hand, the customer pie is expanding in the country because as more and more people come into the consumption fold, right? But the fact is that, yeah, competition, there is market opportunity, but there is also competition.

I think it is important for us to sort of focus on how efficient we are in garnering the share by intelligently investing in technology processes that simplify our acquisition processes as well as making sure that our credit cost or the credit trajectory remains stable because it's very important to have a very stable and a predictable and a growth trajectory both in terms of growth and maintenance trajectory in acquisition as well as maintenance of credit cost trajectory for you to keep on growing. So yes, competition is intense.

But as an organization, because of our investment in our people, because of our investment in our technology, because of our granular presence across the country, and the focused increase and focused execution that we are doing in terms of, as I said, increasing the surface area of our distribution, we are hopeful that we will probably be mopping up our larger share of the available pie even in face of the competition. But yeah, to summarize, competition remains strong, but we are confident of dealing with it.

Digant Haria
Founder, GreenEdge Wealth Services

Perfect. Thank you and all the best.

Sudipta Roy
Managing Director and CEO, L&T Finance

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you very much. A request to all the participants, please restrict to one question per participant and kindly join the queue again so the management can address all the questions from the participants. The next question is from the line of Mahrukh Adajania from Nuvama Wealth. Please go ahead.

Mahrukh Adajania
Executive Director, Nuvama Wealth

Yeah. Hello, sir. My first question, sorry. I guess there's only one question allowed. So the question I have is on the SR revaluation. I guess, correct me if I'm wrong, you mentioned that you have a 55% PCR on SRs. Is that what you mentioned? So then.

Sudipta Roy
Managing Director and CEO, L&T Finance

Yes, that's right. Yes, that's right.

Mahrukh Adajania
Executive Director, Nuvama Wealth

So that would be around an INR 38 billion provision, right? But the original wholesale buffer was INR 27 billion. And the incremental you made this quarter through P&L is around INR 2 billion, INR 1.8 billion. So that kind of adds up to INR 28.8 billion, right? So you have provisions over and above that also, is it? Wholesale provisions over and above that also?

Sachinn Joshi
CFO, L&T Finance

Yeah, Mahrukh, let me take this. So we had actually let me first speak about the wholesale book. The wholesale book now is down to INR 5,500 crores as of 31st of March. And post-March, again, about INR 1,100 crores have gone. So it's about INR 4,400 crores. The provisions of INR 2,687 crores were taken in December 2022. And every quarter, we have to do this fair valuation. There is no choice, right? Under Ind AS, whether it's SR investments or whether it's a loan book, we need to do a fair valuation.

Mahrukh Adajania
Executive Director, Nuvama Wealth

The credit rating-driven fair valuation.

Sachinn Joshi
CFO, L&T Finance

That's right. That's right. So we were continuously doing it. When we made this fair valuation exercise and INR 2,687 crore was the output which came out of that valuation based on certain discounting factors because the book was very large. And how the book will behave was for anyone to guess. But last 18 months, we have seen this INR 38,000 crore come down to INR 5,500 crore. So with the behavior and also the quantum of assets which are left on the balance sheet, that was revaluated. Again, fresh valuation was done, which led to our and also, there were some resolutions also which happened during this quarter. So a net amount of INR 546 crore. So whatever assets are already there on the books, the fair valuation has been done, and whatever provision requirements were there have already been factored into that, right?

The balance amount of INR 546 crores was what got released. One option for us was to take it to P&L. But simultaneously, as Sudipta mentioned on the call, there was an exercise, similar exercise, which was undertaken on SR just by stressing the portfolio because on the normal basis, even the investments have been fair valued. As he explained on the call, it was only the sequencing risk which was looked into just at the time of stressing the SR investment portfolio. And that gave a requirement of INR 721 crores. Now, INR 721 crores was to be provided, and there was a INR 546 crore release which came from the loan book. The difference of INR 175 crores was the impact which we took on the P&L. So that's how this INR 721 crores has been accounted for. To your question on.

Mahrukh Adajania
Executive Director, Nuvama Wealth

Yes.

Sachinn Joshi
CFO, L&T Finance

Yeah. To your question on the assets which are on the balance sheet right now, the loan assets, they are fairly provided. We believe that there is not going to be a single rupee requirement even if we want to liquidate those because these are standard assets which are giving us a reasonable yield. Unless there is interest in these assets from someone without any impact on the P&L, we would want to continue with this asset book. I hope this clarified.

Mahrukh Adajania
Executive Director, Nuvama Wealth

No, I just wanted to check one thing. Basically, you said that the PCR on SR, so the SR book net stands at around INR 70 billion. 67.8 is the calculation, right? You said that it was.

Sachinn Joshi
CFO, L&T Finance

Yes, yes, yes.

Mahrukh Adajania
Executive Director, Nuvama Wealth

Yeah. So it's 50%. So 50%, say roughly, it's INR 35 billion, okay? Now, so the PCR on the SR book is INR 35 billion, and that subsumes.

Sachinn Joshi
CFO, L&T Finance

No, no, no. No, Mahrukh. No, Mahrukh . Let me explain on the SRs now. So our total SR book, which was the net EAD, was INR 15,000 crore when it was on my books, okay? That INR 15,000 crore, we provided INR 8,300 crore in all. And this INR 8,300 crore includes INR 721 crore. So INR 8,343 crore, to be precise, on INR 15,000 crore gives you a PCR of 55%. The 6,770.

Mahrukh Adajania
Executive Director, Nuvama Wealth

The gross value. The gross value.

Sachinn Joshi
CFO, L&T Finance

Yes, the gross value. INR 6,770 crore is the net on the balance sheet now after all the provisions. So the provisions that we have made is INR 8,300 crore.

Mahrukh Adajania
Executive Director, Nuvama Wealth

Okay. And that subsumes the INR 2,700 crore provision on the wholesale book, right?

Sachinn Joshi
CFO, L&T Finance

See, what? See, INR 2,700 crore was taken on the loan book, which was on the balance sheet, okay? There were few assets where the provisions were taken, and few of them moved to the ARC. So yes, there could be part of INR 2,700 crore which would have been absorbed by these assets as well.

Mahrukh Adajania
Executive Director, Nuvama Wealth

Got it. Thanks a lot. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Next question is from the line of Alok Srivastava from UBS. Please go ahead.

Alok Srivastava
Analyst, UBS

Yeah, hi. So Sudipta, I have one question.

Sudipta Roy
Managing Director and CEO, L&T Finance

Alok, may I have the question to speak a little louder, please?

Alok Srivastava
Analyst, UBS

Yeah, hi. Can you hear me better now?

Sudipta Roy
Managing Director and CEO, L&T Finance

Yes, yes, I can.

Alok Srivastava
Analyst, UBS

Yeah. Yeah. So Sudipta, I have a question on the customer acquisition number that you have given, the 6.8 lakh that we have done during the quarter. So how does it divide between rural and urban? And within urban, what is driving this acquisition? Is it coming from aggregators or two-wheeler? Where most of the acquisition is coming from?

Sudipta Roy
Managing Director and CEO, L&T Finance

Yeah. So in terms of customer acquisition, the fact is that we have a couple of major engines of customer acquisition. Obviously, the first major engine of customer acquisition is our rural group loans and our microfinance business. And so in rural because the fact is that in farm business or tractor business, the numbers are not very large. So finally, the large numbers come from our rural group loans and microfinance business. And in urban, the main actually customer acquisition driver is our two-wheeler business, right? So these are the two major in terms of volume customer acquisition drivers. As you know, the personal loan disbursement is small. So I would say 60/40 division now or maybe a 55/45 division, right, where 55% is coming from our rural businesses and about 45% is coming from our urban businesses.

Urban primarily driven by two-wheelers and rural primarily driven by rural group loans and microfinance. But obviously, the objective is to increase this going further. So that is why I have talked about increasing the horizontal surface area of distribution as well as vertical distribution. So we are continually operating on and tracking on that. You saw that we go over the number of approximately 21,000 new villages activated during this quarter and our two-wheeler distribution points going up to greater than 10,000. So obviously, the focus is on increasing both horizontal and vertical distribution. And we intend to keep a focus on this metric as a very granular metric going forward.

Alok Srivastava
Analyst, UBS

Okay. That's fair. If I can just follow up on that one now. So on the urban side, Sudipta, maybe you don't have that many products to do that vertical expansion right now. So what is the product strategy that you guys are thinking of going forward? I mean, do you think you can do some co-branded credit card, consumer durable, those kind of products?

Sudipta Roy
Managing Director and CEO, L&T Finance

See, I'll tell you. The focus of the organization right now is to sharpen what we are doing, right? So we will continue this strategy for the next couple of quarters, right? As it is on our two-wheeler business, our business if you look at our distribution momentum in our two-wheeler business, our distribution momentum on our two-wheeler business is quite good, right? And we increased the disbursement of our two-wheeler business significantly over what we did in Q2 FY24. And our Q4 disbursements of two-wheelers actually have been almost equal to our festive quarter disbursements. So as of now, for the next quarters, we'll focus on sharpening our existing line of business and building scale in our existing line of business. And after that, as and when the need may be, we will probably look at new products.

Alok Srivastava
Analyst, UBS

Okay. Got it. Thanks, Sudipta. Thanks. All the best.

Sudipta Roy
Managing Director and CEO, L&T Finance

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Next question is from the line of Avinash Singh from Emkay Global. Please go ahead.

Avinash Singh
Analyst, Emkay Global

Yeah, hi. Thanks. A couple of questions. The first one is on your personal loan. If you can just help us clarify some breakdown between what part is your cross-selling to your own customers and how the trend over the quarters has been with the fintech partnership and any sort of delinquency trends in both this, your own cross-sale as well as the partnership. That's the first. And second one now, if we see your geographic expansion or other point of presence, if this expansion continues in this backdrop and likely, I mean, from the current level, growth will possibly moderate going into next year, how do you see sort of a cost-to-income ratio moving? Thanks.

Sudipta Roy
Managing Director and CEO, L&T Finance

Yeah. So if I were to draw your attention to slide 13 of our investor deck where we have given our personal loans to existing customer number, and you can see that in quarter two FY24, we are about 47%, which have actually pushed to 60% in quarter four FY24. So to answer your question, 60% of our personal loans disbursement to our own existing customers. And the remaining is from channel-originated due to originated customer, which is either through e-aggregators or we have just started our DSA distribution model as well in personal loans in the last quarter. And we will obviously keep a very sharp eye on the credit quality of the portfolio that we do. And we are and I would like to put it on record that we, as an organization, are not into the small-ticket personal loan space, right?

We operate in the prime and near-prime segments in this space. We are very focused on the risk outcomes of this business and also very focused on digitization and very effective cost of delivery of this business. As of now, we are trending to close to about last quarter. The business has seen a slight uptick over the numbers that we have posted in Q3 FY24. Going forward, as many of our sort of fintech partnership engines come on stream, you will see a growth in numbers of distribution of disbursement of personal loans.

But again, I would like to put on record that our focus remains majorly on doing personal loans to our own customers as well as for new-to-credit customers, new-to-organization customers, focus more so on the salaried segments of personal loans, which we believe are of a far lower risk profile and more stable risk profile than maybe any other segments. So this is the first part of your question. The second part of your question was in terms of distribution.

Avinash Singh
Analyst, Emkay Global

Last question.

Sudipta Roy
Managing Director and CEO, L&T Finance

Yeah. Yeah. So in terms of distribution increase, we obviously are cognizant of the fact that you see, again, the question is that India is a very large country. And even in businesses that are of significant size like our microloans business or our two-wheeler business, there are reasonably large swaths of the country where we are still yet to build our distribution to scale. In some states, we are number one or number two position. Some states, we are not in those two positions. So obviously, our focus is to increase distribution on those states or on those geographical areas where we are probably a little lower down the picking order in terms of positioning. So our focus is on that. Our focus is to make sure that we, in the two-wheeler business at least, we are presenting about 85%-90% of the distribution universe.

And right now, I would reckon that we are about 75 odd. So there is some distance to go in that. So there is some work for us yet left to do because before we say that, we have saturated distribution. And I'm sure that as we start increasing our distribution, some of those distribution gains in terms of customer acquisition will be visible in our portfolio. Sachinn, on the cost-to-income ratio, you want to take it?

Sachinn Joshi
CFO, L&T Finance

Yeah, yeah. So on the cost-to-income, rather than talking about cost-to-income, we have in our previous calls also spoken about the trajectory that we want to have in terms of cost-to-book. And we had said that if you look at the overall ROA tree, we're talking about NIM plus POF about 11% and OPEX plus credit cost being restricted to 7%. You can notice that we are about that range at this point of time during Q4. Whatever savings we have because we are actually trying to move the credit cost down to about 2.25-2.5. But this is also the time that we are making huge investments on technology, people, setting up of new businesses.

We have rolled out new branches for the new businesses that we started off last year on the SME personal loans is also absolutely digitized product where a lot of investment have gone into IT. So all this, whatever savings we get on the credit cost, the intent is to actually apply that money towards the investment in new technologies as well as manpower. Going forward, we believe at this point of time, the cost-income ratios are in the range of 40%-41%. As the businesses start picking up, the last two quarters, you have seen the balance sheet growing. The wholesale book now reduction has more or less got completed. There will not be any significant reduction going forward. So you will see the balance sheet growing.

The top line also will start growing because the reduction of wholesale book, which was at a lower yield, is now getting replaced with retail, which is at a much higher yield. So automatically, all these get factored into when you look at a cost-income ratio. So moving forward, we should start at least over next 15-18 months, investments would continue. So I think the best barometer is to manage the overall OPEX plus credit cost within the range of 7% when it comes to cost-to-book.

Avinash Singh
Analyst, Emkay Global

Okay. Thanks.

Operator

Thank you. Next question is from the line of Kunal Shah from Citig roup. Please go ahead.

Kunal Shah
Director, Citi

Yeah. So first question is maybe you indicated that the focus will be more to sharpen the existing line of businesses. But in most of the areas, we are.

Operator

Kunal, sorry can you speak a little louder, please?

Mahrukh Adajania
Executive Director, Nuvama Wealth

Yeah. So we indicated that the focus is to sharpen the existing businesses. But when we look at Lakshya 2026, I think we are well ahead of the targets which are laid out. So maybe how should we look at it? Maybe would we want to maybe have a revised targets getting six months, one year down the line, or we would broadly stay with this and just improve the quality within this framework?

Sudipta Roy
Managing Director and CEO, L&T Finance

So Kunal, my answer to that question is that we would like to broadly stay within this framework. And the fact is that we would like to improve on the predictability earnings and our predictability of AUM growth because, as you know, we have articulated the five-pillar strategy. We still remain in execution mode in the five-pillar strategy. We believe that we have a long way to go in sort of fully executing the five-pillar strategy. And as and when we execute the five-pillar strategy, the gains from that execution will be visible in the business either in terms of top-line growth, in terms of AUM growth, or in terms of bottom-line/credit cost parameters. So we would not like to defocus ourselves over the next couple of quarters and try to sort of sharpen every line of business and granularly focus on executing the five-pillar strategy.

So as and when we think that we are in a state of completion of which will obviously take the pathway will take a couple of quarters going forward, right, we are in a state of completion. At that point in time, we would probably look at whether we want to sort of reset ourselves and reorient ourselves to new targets. Till then, we remain focused on these Lakshya targets and, again, improving predictability of our metrics on a quarter-on-quarter basis.

Kunal Shah
Director, Citi

Sure. Marketing cost would not have much of an impact. Maybe would there be more of a front-loading of the cost? Because across the board, we had seen wherever there is more focus on branding, marketing, there is some front-loading of the cost. We see maybe the OPEX heaviness in few quarters. Do we expect the same, or it will be more balanced?

Sudipta Roy
Managing Director and CEO, L&T Finance

See, it's not that our investments will be only in marketing. Our investments are in marketing. Our investments are in people. Our investments are in IT primarily. Those are three sort of axes of our investments. Obviously, there will be some investments in marketing. But I do not think that they are extremely high investments. I think they are reasonable investments. What we have factored in, we, for example, just finished our overall brand research for the entire organization where we have granular details as to which areas we need to invest in order to improve the recall of L&T Finance brand. And as I said previously in the call, that over the next couple of months, you will see more presence of L&T Finance product-focused advertising in the market. So yes, there will be some investment in marketing.

I would say our investments in marketing, people, technology, etc., are equally paced. As Sachin said, we have said that OPEX plus credit cost from our price, we would try to sort of guide towards a 7% range. That is where we will try to focus on meeting that particular number. We do believe that our investments in marketing as well as building brand recall to make L&T Finance a preferred choice set in the mind of the customer will have to be sustained for a couple of quarters, post which we will look at sort of tempering that down and bringing it to far more normal levels.

Kunal Shah
Director, Citi

Okay. Great. Great. And just one clarification, this entire SR valuation exercise, that was more internal independent rather than anything coming in from the ARC valuation?

Sudipta Roy
Managing Director and CEO, L&T Finance

Yeah. So it was more internal independent. The fact is that while we met a lot of investors, we felt that this was an area we needed to address, right? So we did an exercise in last quarter, right? And based on the inputs that we got from that exercise, we have taken the action, as Sachinn explained in great detail in a previous question. So that is what we have done.

Kunal Shah
Director, Citi

No risk of reassessment on retail, for sure. This was only on the wholesale, which was required. Retail, since we are strengthening the credit filter, there is no risk that at any point in time, there would be reassessment and provisioning buildup even for the retail at some point in time.

Sachinn Joshi
CFO, L&T Finance

So as Kunal, like I said, even for the ARC piece, actually, the NAVs come from the credit rating agencies, right? So what we did was we have actually taken this at a portfolio level. So INR 721 crore has been taken at a portfolio level and not at the asset level because asset level already is based on the NAV. So I can't take anything more than that.

They are already fair valued. This is keeping in mind the future that if there are any kind of variation or volatility as the SR starts getting resolved, this is going to take care of that. And hence, it was taken at a portfolio level. And on the retail side, I already spoke about the kind of PCRs we are maintaining across the board as well as the macro-potential provision of INR 1,200 crore. I think we are right now sufficiently and heavily provided for the.

Sudipta Roy
Managing Director and CEO, L&T Finance

Yeah. And Kunal, I'd like to add to that if, for example, from slide 15 to 17, we have taken extra care to sort of point out our credit metrics vis-à-vis industry. And this is given this has been given specifically to give comfort to our investor community saying that our portfolio metrics, right, are very robust at this particular point in time. If you look at especially our rural group loans and the fact is that this is TransUnion CIBIL data, right? So if you look at our rural group loans and our microfinance, our sort of delinquency levels on an apple-to-apple basis are one-third that of industry, right? If you look at our two-wheeler finance, we are at about 80% of industry. So the fact is that we are already maintaining good portfolio metrics in terms of credit performance.

And the entire focus of the organization is to improve on that, right? So we have told ourselves one thing, that we will grow. But we will grow only after we are absolutely comfortable that the credit metrics that will come out of that growth is of a superior quality. We will not sacrifice credit quality in chasing growth, right? And the metrics that we have given out sort of should give comfort that our retail portfolio metrics, credit metrics are quite in a good keel, right? And we will keep on our endeavor to maintain that.

Kunal Shah
Director, Citi

Great. Yeah. Thanks. Thanks, and all the best. Yeah.

Operator

Thank you. Next question is from the line of Praful Kumar from Dymon Asia. Please go ahead.

Praful Kumar
Portfolio Manager, Dymon Asia

Hi. Good afternoon. Am I audible?

Sudipta Roy
Managing Director and CEO, L&T Finance

Yeah, yeah. Yeah, yeah. You're audible.

Praful Kumar
Portfolio Manager, Dymon Asia

Yasser, congratulations on a great momentum that you have built. I want you to spend just some time on two thoughts. One, in terms of technology, on the tech stack that you are building, the sustainability and what edge does it give to L&T Finance because everybody talks about digital. How are we different in terms of what we are building today in terms of ecosystem? And second question would be on your employee talent acquisition and retention because that has been one challenge that we have seen historically. If you can address these two questions, what changes have you brought in the last three, four quarters, and how it makes you a different underwriting tech stack and gives you a lever to grow sustainably higher than the system?

Sudipta Roy
Managing Director and CEO, L&T Finance

Yeah. Thank you for the question. I think it's a very relevant question. So on the tech stack, as you see, if you look at, as I said in my call, three axes on which we are sort of building, right, first and foremost thing is that, obviously, building the front end in a way that the UI/UX we invest on the UI/UX and we make sure that customers have a world-class UI/UX when they come in. And the friction points or what I call the choke points are eliminated surgically. So the entire team has, what we have done is that, over the last 6-9 months, we have looked at all our customer journeys. And we have mapped our customer journeys.

We have granularly mapped what are the choke points, what are the points of friction where we tend to lose customers, and we are smoothening all that. Our new personal loans journey has gone live. Our new home loan journey will also go live in the next couple of weeks. Especially, our home loan digital journey will go live in the next couple of weeks. The focus is not only on two-wheeler. We already had an excellent journey. We are on two-wheeler. We are working on improving the journey. As you see, on all our lines of business, the focus is in maintaining sure that the user experience for the customer who is coming digitally as well as the user experience for our field salesperson who is sort of bringing in that application digitally, both are improved.

For example, you can see that we have launched our new in-house collections app, which is called a Break app, which is completely built in-house and which is of a new generation and gives our collections team a great amount of flexibility. So that is sort of talking about the acquisition engines. In terms of sharpening credit underwriting, we have given the detail in slide 14. But what we are trying to do is that we are trying to stitch together a next-generation integrated underwriting platform which includes not only bureau inputs but includes the account aggregator inputs, which is maturing with every passing month. We ingest alternate data at scale. And by alternate data, I mean that various trust signals, which I call trust signals, which have been built by many payments companies who see great volumes of payments data, right?

And, last but not the least, have micro-geographic inputs wherein if a particular overlay geographical loss rates, historical loss rates in a particular geographical area into the underwriting engine. So what we have been trying to do is that while we stitch together this engine, the underpinning of this engine will be machine learning-based scorecards which have been built based on past historical data. And frankly, the scorecards have been built and now being integrated into the system. And we are very pleased with the performance of the scorecards and the lift that it's giving based when we backtest that on existing data that is available. So we are hopeful that the beta version will come into production in some time around the latter part of Q1 FY 2025. And this engine will actually is an omni-product engine wherein it can be used for two-wheeler.

It can be used for personal loans. It can be used for tractors. Though the underlying scoring models might be different, that means I might have a scorecard which is different for personal loans or different for two-wheelers or different for tractors because those are different products. But the fact is that all these scorecards will go into this one engine.

And depending upon the product, the appropriate scorecard will be picked up. And so the data source, for example, when we pull it, will be the same. But the scoring models might be different for each and every line of product. So this is a slightly complicated build and a little bit of heavy lifting that our technology as well as our credit teams are doing. But we are very satisfied with the progress so far. So does that answer your question? Was there a second part of the question?

Praful Kumar
Portfolio Manager, Dymon Asia

Yeah,

Sudipta Roy
Managing Director and CEO, L&T Finance

So now whatever on the employee part yeah, on the employee part as well as so on the employee part, obviously, financial services has seen higher attrition. All organizations have seen higher attrition over the last couple of quarters. What we have done is that especially for some parts of our front line, we have done some salary corrections and made parity corrections compared to some of our competitors, which has seen our attrition levels in some of our front lines come down as high as 30% in a period of 2-3 months. So in a way, we remain focused on doing that. But also, there are various sales force welfare measures that we are keeping on doing through our HR team, which have started doing it very, very granularly.

For example, our microloans business, we do something called a role appreciation program wherein when people join, we spend the first couple of days just taking them through the ropes of what their business needs are and what the business requirements are, what they will be and do's and don'ts and the best practices, which we have noticed is that helps us sort of bring down the initial sort of joining attrition that we see. So overall, the efforts are on. And the initial results that we have seen on some of these efforts is quite encouraging. We have also, for example, in microloans business, started canteen facilities for our microloans employees wherein the food is provided at the microloans canteens, microloans branches or meeting centers, as we call it, to most of the employees who are coming from outer areas and probably stay in bachelor accommodations.

So small initiatives like this. But overall, when we add together those micro-initiatives, they add up together into a whole and sort of bring down the overall attrition levels, of which the initial trends are very encouraging.

Praful Kumar
Portfolio Manager, Dymon Asia

Thank you, Sudipta. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Next question is from the line of Viral Shah from IIFL Securities. Please go ahead.

Viral Shah
SVP, IIFL Securities

Yeah. Hi, Sudipta. Thank you for giving me the opportunity. Basically, I had first question on the profitability, essentially the NIMS going ahead. Two things are playing out. One, you're mentioning that incrementally, the focus will be more on the secured products and also the prime customers within that. One would be, say, the pressure on yields.

And the second would be also on the cost of fund side. Right now, we have seen that since last few quarters, we had the benefit of running down the book, which essentially meant that we did not have to borrow heavily. Now, incrementally, that we are going to grow the book as well as also the benefit of reverse mergers also being now behind us, how will the cost of fund trajectory look like and consequently, the NIMS? Because we saw that the spread actually compressed 10 basis points in this quarter.

Sudipta Roy
Managing Director and CEO, L&T Finance

Yeah. So I don't know. I didn't say that we'll be focusing on secured. Secured, obviously, is a focus for our business. But the fact is that if you see all our lines of business are doing well, right? And the fact is that high-yield lines of our business like microloans, etc., has shown a very good trajectory. We'll be also going personal loans, which is of a good yield. So obviously, we will have to judiciously balance our secured origination vis-à-vis our unsecured origination. But we'll be mindful that while during that process, we keep a fine we give a good balance and do not end up sort of disturbing the yield trajectory going forward. So we hope that we'll be able to keep our NIMS and fees between an 11%-11.25% sort of corridor in FY25.

Obviously, the cost of funds trajectory is something that is dependent on the market condition. Given the sort of the initial expectations of an easing of the Fed rate is sort of less of a possibility now. A follow-up action by RBI also looks like less of a possibility going forward. So we are more or less sort of given the certainty that sort of the cost of funds region that we are in probably will trend towards the majority part of the year, which might see a 35-40 basis points increase in our cost of funds during the course of the year. But maybe, Sachinn, you would like to add to that?

Sachinn Joshi
CFO, L&T Finance

Yeah. I think if you have noticed, this financial year, we have kept it in the same corridor. About 34 basis points is the weighted average cost increase from 7.46 to 7.80. I think there is still some of the banks are yet to transfer the 250 basis point repo increase, which was done by RBI because certain loans come up for renewals only after completion of one year. So those are the ones which will impact. Secondly, even the capital adequacy requirements for banks have gone up for the NBFC financing. This also may come up for the banks ultimately will have to pass it on. So these are two, three things apart from what Sudipta mentioned in terms of what may happen in the markets. RBI has been monitoring the liquidity pretty well.

If you look at just last fortnight, we have seen that there was some liquidity which got created. The short-term funds were available. Actually, the costs came down. We will have to be very opportunistic. Our commercial paper exposures are today just 5%. We can, as per the ALM, go up to 15%. We have started seeing balance sheet growth from last quarter. We will have the opportunity of increasing the commercial paper exposures slowly and steadily. We will not be very aggressive on that because we also have the benefit of financing the tractor and microloan books, which also qualify for PSL. If you look at our overall borrowings, 20% of our borrowings are actually financed through the PSL loans provided by banks. These loans come in at a cost which is lower by at least 100-125 basis points.

With whatever's happening on the Fed side, there has been, rather, an expectation of 2-3 rate cuts, which is slowly and steadily dimming. But this has also led to the borrowings through ECB route coming out to be more cheaper than domestic borrowings. So all these are opportunities which we will take. We have already two sanctions from Asian Development Bank and JICA. Apart from that, there are a few other public sector banks with whom we have been in discussion. So ECB limit of $750 million is fully available to us. So we would want to diversify and also take opportunity to restart our retail bond issuances, which we used to successfully do pre-COVID. Smaller tickets, about INR 250 crore-INR 500 crore every quarter on tap, will ensure that we have monies which stick to our balance sheet. So this is broadly the strategy on the liability side.

Viral Shah
SVP, IIFL Securities

So just to actually follow up on both those points. So first of all, cost of fund, Sachinn, so basically, this means that the incremental cost of funds for you, while the backbook is at 7.82%, it will be closer to around 8.15%-8.2% during that portfolio?

Sachinn Joshi
CFO, L&T Finance

Yeah. Yeah. So that is based on the current situation. Naturally, if something dramatic happens, we will have to factor in. But as we speak, this is what our expectation is.

Viral Shah
SVP, IIFL Securities

Fair enough. And secondly, Sudipta, on your point on the yields, right? So in terms of the balancing of the secured I get it, right? But incrementally, you are saying that we are going to focus, A, more on mortgages, B, within PL also, the NTB customers, more on the salaried side rather than the self-employed side, which is there already on the book on the yields. So how will we be able to expand the yields to offset this increase in cost of funds?

Sudipta Roy
Managing Director and CEO, L&T Finance

See, the fact is that we have to look at risk-adjusted yields at the end of the day because finally, it's a risk-adjusted yield that flows into the P&L. So it's not that we are saying that we will be focusing only on mortgages. Mortgage is one of our focus products. But the other products will also have equivalent amounts of focus. And what we are saying is that, for example, in two-wheelers, we have seen that we have increased our prime share. But the fact is that we have not dropped our NTC share. Our NTC share still remains at about 40% of our originations, which gives us the overall yield. So what we are trying to do is that making the portfolio balanced in such a way that the portfolio risk metrics become more predictable.

There is a pairing of collections cost as well as a pairing of intercredit costs as well. So though, especially on the prime segment, the yield might drop by a couple of basis points when we actually administered in the field. But the attendant efficiencies that you can get in collections cost or the attendant efficiencies that you get in terms of the actual credit cost because which obviously keeps sort of the risk-adjusted yield overall at an even keel or probably ends up improving the risk-adjusted yield and makes the portfolio far, far more stable.

We are quite confident that whatever the current sort of NIM trajectory that we have guided for, which is between 11%-11.25%, we will be able to reasonably track well within that even though we might sort of marginally sort of tweak the composition through the segment acquisition as part of our strategy.

Viral Shah
SVP, IIFL Securities

Right. And lastly, on that, sorry. Sorry, Sachinn, you were saying something?

Sachinn Joshi
CFO, L&T Finance

Just to add yeah. Just to add, Viral, right now, what you see, NIM plus fee income, there is a fee component which also gets factored in. So as disbursements grow, your fee, the normal processing fee, as well as fee from the cross-sell also keeps increasing. And FY2024 has been a year where you have seen the wholesale book slowly and steadily coming down every quarter. So next year, that factor also will prevail. That yes, there will be some pressure when we move more towards prime. But it will be full retail portfolio that will be giving me those yields. So some of it will get compensated through the wholesale book coming down to levels of INR 4,400 crore as we speak. And the INR 80,000 crore retail balance sheet will actually give me much better yields compared.

Sudipta Roy
Managing Director and CEO, L&T Finance

One additional point of information I'd like to give is that as an organization, we received an insurance corporate agency license. So previously, we could do insurance only at the point of origination. Now, we'll be able to do insurance through the life cycle. And we are setting up an insurance team as well. So we are hopeful that that also will give us a little more inflow of fees as well.

Viral Shah
SVP, IIFL Securities

Right. And just one last follow-up on that point only, Sudipta. So on the MFI piece, right, we are seeing that all the MFIs are talking of taking a rate cut. Do we also anticipate that because this is a clear, I would say, informal mandate from RBI?

Sudipta Roy
Managing Director and CEO, L&T Finance

I don't know about any informal mandates. So I will probably not be able to comment on that on the call. But as of now, our rates, we have been maintaining the same rate for almost close to 5-6 years now.

Sachinn Joshi
CFO, L&T Finance

More than that.

Sudipta Roy
Managing Director and CEO, L&T Finance

Right?

Sachinn Joshi
CFO, L&T Finance

Actually, more than that.

Sudipta Roy
Managing Director and CEO, L&T Finance

Yeah. Actually, more than that. We plan to sort of follow the same trajectory as forward.

Viral Shah
SVP, IIFL Securities

Okay. What would be the interest rates in the MFI segment right now for us?

Sudipta Roy
Managing Director and CEO, L&T Finance

24%.

Sachinn Joshi
CFO, L&T Finance

24%.

Sudipta Roy
Managing Director and CEO, L&T Finance

24% for us.

Viral Shah
SVP, IIFL Securities

24%.

Sachinn Joshi
CFO, L&T Finance

Yes. That's right.

Viral Shah
SVP, IIFL Securities

Fair enough. Thank you. Thank you so much, Sudipta and Sachinn. All the best.

Sachinn Joshi
CFO, L&T Finance

Thank you.

Sudipta Roy
Managing Director and CEO, L&T Finance

Thank you. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. A request to all the participants. Please restrict to one question per participant. The next question is from the line of Abhijit Tibrewal from Motilal Oswal. Please go ahead.

Abhijit Tibrewal
SVP, Motilal Oswal

Yeah. Good afternoon. Just two clarifications on things that you've already explained in this call. One is, I mean, in terms of SR provisions that you've taken, right, you have already explained in far greater detail. But just wanted to know that, I mean, from the regulator, there is no nudge at this point in time to increase the provisioning cover on the SRs on the book, right?

Sachinn Joshi
CFO, L&T Finance

See, the NAVs which are given by the rating agencies, okay, are given from the ARCs. It comes through the ARCs. So the valuations are always done based on the NAVs which are being given. And regulators will be more than happy when we have incremental provisions on the balance sheet. In our case, it was more to do with the fact that the loan assets having come down to such a level, we were very successful in bringing it down within a very limited time frame. So we also thought it was advisable now to start focusing on the SRs and relook at how do we really focus and start bringing around resolution around that. RBI, actually, the inspections keep happening on a yearly basis. So there are always discussions around having macroprudential provisions, having overlays. So that's part of the usual requirement.

Abhijit Tibrewal
SVP, Motilal Oswal

Got it. Sir, my last question is again on. I mean, there are two questions here. One is, I mean, you've talked about this new underwriting engine that you are building. We are comfortably growing in retail at about 30%. I mean, maybe 6 months, 12 months out when you've kind of rolled out this underwriting engine, would you look to accelerate retail growth? It's something I wanted to understand. And so lastly, on the dividend, I recall sometime in the Q1 earnings call of FY2024, we had shared that till the time we find a better opportunity to deploy the network, we'll be kind of evaluating dividend payouts of up to 50%, which is permissible. So has there been some rethink on that?

Sudipta Roy
Managing Director and CEO, L&T Finance

First, I will take the first question. Then I'll ask Sachinn to take the second question. So in terms of see, we are already going at a fast clip. 30% is quite a good pace of growth, right? So our objective on building the new credit engine is to make sure that we are able to sort of pare out even those sort of questionable credit cases that maybe a little less sharp engine is able to do. So because we are growing at such a fast clip, at a 30% level, and as per Lakshya's strategy, we have guided on a 25% growth rate, it becomes imperative for us to make sure that our credit engines are far, far more stronger than we had before. So I don't think we are building the credit engine to make us grow faster.

Probably, we are already growing at quite a fast clip. The reason we are building the credit engine is to make sure that while we are going at that pace, we obviously do not have any unseen surprises like hitting us maybe a couple of quarters down the line just to make sure that everything is robust and everything is absolutely underwritten in a pristine fashion so that there are no leakage situations later on. So that is our objective. Now, obviously, as part of this new growth engine, what happens is that what we call in our parlance, swap-in, swap-out, said, that means it helps you to swap in a set of customers you might have declined. It helps you to swap out a set of customers which you might have approved.

So the efficiency of increasing the swap-in, swap-out is also an objective of the new credit engine. And if you are able to do that, it actually improves the credit metrics by an order of magnitude. So that is the focus, right? So the focus is that while we are going at that pace, just to make sure that everything is far more tighter and far more stronger.

Sachinn Joshi
CFO, L&T Finance

Yeah. With regard to dividend, as you are aware, last year, we had declared and paid 20% dividend. This year, board has already recommended 25% dividend, which will have to be approved at the AGM. If approved, then that will be paid. Our CRAR is pretty robust. At the same time, against the Lakshya 2026 plans of growing at 25% CAGR, you would have seen that over the last two years, we have been actually growing at 30% plus. Retaining the capital on the balance sheet really is helpful as well as RBI has come up with incremental capital requirements and all that. Frankly, I think a 20%-25% dividend declaration is pretty reasonable is what the board felt. Hence, they have recommended 25% for this financial year.

Abhijit Tibrewal
SVP, Motilal Oswal

Got it, sir. This is useful. Thank you and all the very best to you and your team.

Sudipta Roy
Managing Director and CEO, L&T Finance

Thank you.

Sachinn Joshi
CFO, L&T Finance

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. The next question is from the line of Shweta Daptardar from Elara Capital. Please go ahead.

Shweta Daptardar
VP of Equity Research, Elara Capital

Thank you, sir, for the opportunity. Congratulations on a good quarter. You mentioned in your opening commentary about rural demand weakness, spilling over, and persisting. How do you perceive the microfinance business as of today if you can throw contours in terms of ticket size, vintage of the borrower, center meetings versus industry levels? That's one. Just a follow-up question on SR. While you mentioned INR 2,600-odd crore of provisions on the existing book sorry, not on the SR, on the existing on-balance sheet intra-book, so is this because of the haircut discount that we are taking or you're perceiving any underlying risk even on the on-book intra-portfolio? Thank you.

Digant Haria
Founder, GreenEdge Wealth Services

Okay. So I'll take the first question. And I will ask Sachinn to take the second question. So a lot of details have been given, actually, in slide 15 of the investor presentation where we are given borrower vintage and our ticket sizes for borrower vintage. So with regards to unevenness in rural demand, that comment was far more actually on a farm segment, which is basically tractors because of the unevenness in rainfall and because of the lowered water tables all across the country. Tractor demand has been sluggish. OEM shipments have been sluggish. And the entire industry has degrown, right? And see, the MFI industry, currently, it's operating on a 31%-30% growth rate. And the fact is that even if it tempers down slightly by a couple of percentage points, even it's a good growth rate.

In fact, for us, this year has been good primarily because, as I said, one way you can tackle uneven consumer demand also is to increase your surface area of distribution. That is what we have been trying to do as well as increase sort of the depth of your distribution wherein we have tried to see that many of our credit seasoned customers, right, we have to try to see whether we can cross-sell at a better efficiency. We have been able to do both that. We've been able to do cross-sell at a greater efficiency as well as we have been able to increase the surface area of distribution, which has actually helped us to sort of hold our distribution in the MFI segment.

As of now, as I said in my call, quarter one FY25 also, which is basically the month of April also, looks to have started reasonably well. We are hopeful that as rains come, both the farm business, which is basically primarily the tractor business, the trajectory of that business will improve. We are also very hopeful that the rural economy will perk up from the current levels and lead to sort of good rural demand generation throughout the year. Obviously, the wild card here is the monsoons. Given the current forecast right now, monsoons are expected to be normal to near normal, though with a little bit of a delayed onset. So we have to keep our fingers crossed on that. Sachinn, you'd like to take the second question?

Sachinn Joshi
CFO, L&T Finance

Yeah. So the provisions that were taken earlier, the INR 2,687 crore, was on the INR 38,000 crore book. And at that point of time, we had communicated that this was more of an illiquidity discount because the intent was to accelerate the sell-down. And if you have to accelerate sell-down of such a large book, then naturally, the expectation of the buyers would be that they would get a discount to acquire an asset or a portfolio, which is more long-term in nature. About most of these infra and real estate assets were in the range of anywhere between 5-10 years.

If we have to sell these within a limited time frame, to take care of these expectations of these investors or the buyers, we thought it was prudent to get a valuation done wherein the asset-by-asset, individual asset, the segment to which that asset belonged, the promoter group to which that asset belonged, all these factors were taken into account before the valuer arrived at a value at which it could be sold. Now, naturally, that was only an estimate which was done. And as we started selling them, we realized that there were some assets which got sold below the NAV, some assets which got sold above the NAV, and some at par. Now, once this exercise was undertaken, on the same lines, the SR investments that we have today are again in the same space. There are various projects which are in different, different stages of resolution.

Some will be in NCLT. Some will be trying to resolve with the promoters. So because of this, as Sudipta mentioned, the issue came up of sequencing risk. So which asset will get resolved earlier and which will get resolved later is very difficult to really decide. And hence, we thought it would be good to get an assessment done basis which if there is any risk of having an impact coming to P&L, we should do this stress testing and sort of create a provision at a portfolio level, which helps us in then focusing on the retail side because this is a quarter-on-quarter feature. The valuations will be done as required by the regulators. So a sort of stress testing resulted in this requirement, which has been factored in the INR 721 crore provision.

Digant Haria
Founder, GreenEdge Wealth Services

And I'd like to add to what Sachinn said. The fact is that because of the increased buoyancy in the real estate sector, both in commercial and residential real estate, land values have gone across the countries. A project which was started maybe five years back, the residential real estate rates have gone in that particular area. And the fact is that now we see that several resolution pathways have suddenly emerged. And we can see that pretty visible to us. And our teams are working on those resolution pathways. So we just wanted to protect our sort of quarter-on-quarter performance from any variations rising out of the sequence risk.

That is why, as a prudential measure, we have taken this INR 721 crore just to give peace of mind to sort of against any of the sequencing risk arise because what we want to do as an organization is that we want to focus on growing the retail. As you know, our retail engines are firing very well. You have seen that our quarter four disbursements have been better than our quarter three disbursements, which is the festive quarter, which is also a testament to the fact that the retail engines have been fine-tuned. The retail engines have come together as a cohesive whole. We obviously, as a management team, obviously thought that it is important that we should not get distracted from our growth of our retail engines going forward. And that is why we sort of have created this floating provision pool from the SR assets.

As an organization, we believe that at the end of the day, as and when these SR pools go towards resolution, LTFS will actually probably end up gaining a significant surplus over whatever the carrying value or the fair value of those SR assets are. But this resolution process will take anywhere between 4-5 years, right, because they are real estate assets. And they have an execution time frame. In the interim, this INR 721 crore is just provided to take care of any of the sequencing risk and help us sort of focus on retailizing L&T Finance. We see that we are already at 94% retail. Obviously, we will be moving towards 100% retail. And the transformation agenda should not be distracted at any cost. So that is our core agenda.

Shweta Daptardar
VP of Equity Research, Elara Capital

Thank you, sir, for the elaborate explanation. Congratulations again on the commendable job.

Sachinn Joshi
CFO, L&T Finance

Thank you.

Digant Haria
Founder, GreenEdge Wealth Services

Thank you. Thank you.

Operator

Next question is from the line of Nischint Chawathe from Kotak Institutional Equities. Please go ahead.

Nischint Chawathe
Director, Kotak

Yeah. Just one clarification. You have provisions on SR of around INR 720-odd crores. You have retail ECL on balance sheet of around INR 3,500 crores. And you have provisions on the wholesale book of around INR 2,100 crores. So all of this adds up to around INR 6,300 crores of provisions on the balance sheet. Is my math right?

Sudipta Roy
Managing Director and CEO, L&T Finance

You're talking of financials as of what date, Nischint?

Nischint Chawathe
Director, Kotak

This current date, right? So you've got ECL, and you have wholesale loans, and you have whatever.

Sudipta Roy
Managing Director and CEO, L&T Finance

First of all, we will.

Sachinn Joshi
CFO, L&T Finance

So no, no. Like I mentioned, the overall provisions which have been taken, we will actually the financials will get released shortly. But just to talk about the numbers, I'll just repeat the overall provisions that we have. On the SRs that we have taken over a period of time is INR 8,300 crore. And today, the value of these SRs on the balance sheet is INR 6,770 crore, which is after incorporating the INR 721 crore.

Nischint Chawathe
Director, Kotak

No, no. I understood. But the balance amount other than 720 is a markdown, right? So 720 is a.

Sachinn Joshi
CFO, L&T Finance

Yeah.

Nischint Chawathe
Director, Kotak

I'm just saying that if I look at the pure provision, it's INR 720. On the retail book is INR 3,500. On the wholesale book is INR 2,100.

Sachinn Joshi
CFO, L&T Finance

The retail book is what retail book?

Nischint Chawathe
Director, Kotak

The overall ECL on balance sheet in the retail book that you put out.

Sachinn Joshi
CFO, L&T Finance

Okay. Okay.

Nischint Chawathe
Director, Kotak

Okay.

Sachinn Joshi
CFO, L&T Finance

Okay. 3,531 is what you're talking about.

Nischint Chawathe
Director, Kotak

On the book.

Sudipta Roy
Managing Director and CEO, L&T Finance

That is on the book.

Sachinn Joshi
CFO, L&T Finance

This is on the books.

Nischint Chawathe
Director, Kotak

I'm talking about outside.

Sudipta Roy
Managing Director and CEO, L&T Finance

This is on the book.

Nischint Chawathe
Director, Kotak

Yeah. Wholesale is 2,100, which you mentioned anyway in the call right now.

Sachinn Joshi
CFO, L&T Finance

So, see, INR 2,687 crore was taken. That was factored in the fair valuation. We can come offline and, in fact, share the numbers with you, Nischint, because there is the whole retail portfolio. There is wholesale loan assets. There is wholesale investments.

Nischint Chawathe
Director, Kotak

Got it. Just one last one. On the retail sorry, on the consumer side, personal loan side, if we have seen some sort of a sluggishness over the last two quarters, that reflects a slowdown in kind of digital origination? Or have you slowed down the processing?

Sudipta Roy
Managing Director and CEO, L&T Finance

No, no. See, our personal loans origination is completely digital. In fact, we have just started a little bit of DSA this quarter. So till date, it was completely digital. What we did was that we because obviously, there was an entire overhang on the entire unsecured, especially on personal loans, what we did was that we took up our risk guardrails. And also, we were implementing some of our digital pathway changes. So both things actually tempered down our personal loans growth.

But as you've seen, between Q3 FY24 and Q4 FY24, there has been a disbursement growth of approximately about INR 120 crore, INR 100 crore or INR 120 crore odd. So you will see that this portfolio will be growing at a measured clip. But probably, the percentage growth rates will be measured. We will not try to put any breakneck growth in personal loans. It will be measured. And we will grow it measuredly. And you will see guidances from us and performance commentary from us in the next couple of quar

Nischint Chawathe
Director, Kotak

ters on this. So when you say measured, it's faster than the overall company growth or slower?

Sudipta Roy
Managing Director and CEO, L&T Finance

This will probably, you see, it's on a very small base, right? So at times, what happens is if you grow on a small base, percentage growth rates might come out lower. But still, if you look at the percentage cross-sell of P&L to our existing customers, it is currently at 60%. So in terms of the net growth rate, it might be lesser than the net growth rate of many other lines of business. But because the base is very small, sometimes percentages can come out as higher. But the fact is that whatever we grow, we'll be growing it to the salaried segment. We'll be growing it on cross-sell. And we'll be growing it to absolutely safe segments.

Nischint Chawathe
Director, Kotak

Got it. Thank you very much. And all the best.

Sachinn Joshi
CFO, L&T Finance

Thank you.

Mahrukh Adajania
Executive Director, Nuvama Wealth

Thank you very much. Ladies and gentlemen, we'll take that as the last question. I'll now hand the conference over to Mr. Sudipta Roy for closing comments.

Sudipta Roy
Managing Director and CEO, L&T Finance

Yeah. Thank you. I would like to sort of thank the analysts and the investor community for having joined us on this call. As I said in my opening commentary, we, as an organization and the management team, we are quite satisfied at our performance in quarter four FY 2024. We believe that we have laid the foundation stones over the last year for a very sustained retailization journey. As you can see, we are at retailization of about 94%. We remain ahead of our Lakshya plan by almost two years. We are investing, as I articulated, the five-pillar strategy. We are granularly executing the five-pillar strategy while keeping a hawk's eye on risk.

This quarter, obviously, also, we wanted to make sure that our investors sort of and we listened to our investors and made sure that we allayed sort of the overhang that we had on the trajectory of our SR book. So we have created a INR 721 crore floating provision to sort of protect us against and protect us our quarter-to-quarter performance against variation that might come because of a sequence risk while we resolve those SRs, which I maintain that at the end of the entire SR trajectory, L&T Finance will probably make a surplus on that. And we remain committed on executing a very strong FY25. Quarter one FY25 has started on a strong note. And I'm just hopeful that given the prediction of a good monsoon, FY25 will also turn out to be a very strong year for L&T Finance.

I thank you again for all joining us again in the call. And as we go through the year, we'll be very happy to sort of catch up with the overall investor analyst community on a one-on-one when we have an opportunity and explain probably on a face-to-face basis some parts of our strategy as well. Thank you so much. And have a good day.

Operator

Thank you very much. On behalf of L&T Finance Limited, that concludes this conference. Thank you for joining us. You may now disconnect your lines. Thank you.

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