Ladies and gentlemen, good day and welcome to Satin Creditcare Network Q3 and 9 Months FY25 Earnings Conference Call, hosted by Dolat Capital. As a reminder, all participant lines will be in the listen-only mode, and there will be an opportunity for you to ask questions after the presentation concludes. Should you need assistance during the conference call, please signal an operator by pressing star, then zero on your touch-tone phone. Please note that this conference is being recorded. I now hand the conference over to Mr. Aman Mehta from Dolat Capital. Thank you, and over to you, sir.
Thank you, Manu. On behalf of Dolat Capital, I welcome all participants on the call and thank the management of Satin Creditcare Network Limited for the opportunity to host this call. For today's call, I have with me the members of the management and leadership team. This includes Dr. H P Singh, Chairman and MD, Mr. Jugal Kataria, Group Controller, and Ms. Aditi Singh, Chief Strategy Officer. With this, I now hand over the conference to Dr. H P Singh, Chairman and MD, to preside over the call. Thank you, and over to you, sir.
Thank you, Aman. Good evening, everyone. Thank you for joining to discuss our performance for the third quarter and the nine months of the financial year 2025. We are already a month into 2025, and I hope it has been a fruitful and healthy start for all of you. I wish you all continued success and well-being. I trust you would have had a chance to review our quarterly results and investor presentations. If not, they are readily available on our website and stock exchanges. In my years of experience in the microfinance sector, I have witnessed its evolution through periods of uncertainty and challenges. There have been moments when questions arose about its resilience and the perceived vulnerabilities of its business model. Time and again, the sector has not only endured but has emerged stronger, demonstrating the depth of its foundation and the strength of its purpose.
Even now, as it evolves through a volatile phase, it is reinforcing its framework with a renewed commitment to best practices, charting its path forward. In navigating these challenges, we cannot lose sight of what truly defines the sector. It is its cause in the inclusion space. While some borrowers may struggle with repayments, it is important that we may not let these cases overshadow the needs of those who genuinely rely on access to credit. For instance, if we look at the PAR numbers of Satin, PAR one stands at 6.4%, meaning the vast majority of borrowers continue to repay responsibly and on time. It is our responsibility to ensure that these committed borrowers are not deprived of financial access due to the challenges faced by a few. In fact, our PAR one has improved from the last quarter, which is an encouraging sign.
This reaffirms the continued demand for credit, improved repayment behavior, and the importance of ensuring access for those who need it most. Every day, we see stories of resilience and ambition, individuals who take small loans and turn them into life-changing opportunities. This is the true strength of microfinance, and we at Satin are proud to be a part of this larger mission, standing alongside those who are shaping their own futures. At Satin, the journey of 34 years of experience has given us not only the wisdom to navigate challenges but also the resilience to emerge stronger each time. Our legacy and sustainability are built on a foundation of strong governance, best-in-class risk management, innovative approaches, disciplined underwriting, and robust business models. These principles have been instrumental in ensuring that no crisis defines us. Rather, it is how we overcome them that shapes who we are.
Whether it was the 2010 Andhra Pradesh crisis, despite having only started the JLG model in 2008, we raised capital of INR 24.3 crore and continued to grow through those turbulent times. Or during demonetization, when the entire sector faced disruptions in portfolio quality, we were more impacted due to our significant portfolio in UP. Our overall PAR one bucket peaked at 45%, and yet we remained focused on recovery and steadily brought it under control. Even during COVID, when stress levels were high across the industry, Satin managed to keep its credit costs among the best in the industry. As well as in today's challenging environment, we continue to hold one of the strongest positions in terms of asset quality, demonstrating our disciplined risk management and operational excellence. That has been the story of Satin all along. We have never waited for challenges to pass.
We have worked through them, strengthened our fundamentals, and emerged more resilient each time. This resilience is reflected in our 14 consecutive profitable quarters achieved despite sector headwinds. During this reporting quarter also, we've registered a profit of INR 31 crore, coming across among the best in the industry and also reinforcing our financial strength, operational efficiency, and disciplined execution. Our consistent performance and commitment to excellence have also been recognized on prestigious platforms. We are honored to have received renowned accolades, including being named the Microfinance Organization of the Year at the Global Inclusive Finance Summit 2024 and being recognized among the top 15 companies with great managers at the Great Managers Award 2024 for the fourth time. In the reporting quarter, I would like to touch upon the SRO's guardrails, which continue to reinforce the industry's focus on transparency, asset quality, and stakeholder protection.
Since the company has been following the good practices even before the implementation of Guardrails 1.0, currently, there has not been much impact on our portfolio. With Guardrails 2.0 coming into effect completely from April 1, 2025, we are fully prepared for a seamless implementation, as reflected in our December 2024 performance. As of December 2024, only 5.4% of our existing clients had more than three lenders at the time of disbursement. Further, for loans disbursed from April 2023 to December 2024, the percentage of clients with loan exposure exceeding INR 200,000 remained minimal at just 0.03%. These numbers reaffirm our disciplined approach and readiness for the regulatory shift. More details on this are available in slide number five. We would now like to draw your attention to slides six, seven, and eight on the asset quality update.
Our portfolio has experienced reversal in delinquency trend, with improvement becoming materially visible across various markets since November, strengthening further in December and January. Net fresh PAR flow has seen a significant decline, reducing from 1.61% in October 2024 to 0.45% in January 2025. Additionally, PAR one stood at 6.4% in Q3 FY25, improving from 6.8% in Q2 FY25. When compared to the industry, Satin continues to outperform. As per CRIF Highmark data, the PAR one for NBFC-MFI stood at 13.9%, whereas ours remained significantly lower at 6.4%. Furthermore, in our top five states, Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Assam, West Bengal, and Madhya Pradesh, PAR one stands at 5.6% compared to the NBFC-MFI industry average of 15.3%. This outperformance is driven by a strong client relationship and disciplined portfolio management, particularly in key states.
The reversal in our delinquency trends aligns with our expectation, reinforcing our confidence that credit costs for the year will remain within the guided limits. With improved borrower discipline and a focused recovery strategy, our overall portfolio has been stabilizing across key geographies. Early indicators suggest a steady normalization of repayment behavior, further strengthening our outlook. The collection efficiency for the X-bucket stood at 99.8% during Q3 FY2025, again demonstrating continued portfolio stability. Additionally, we registered strong recovery against write-offs amounting to INR 27 crore for the first nine months of FY2025. In our top four states, which collectively account for approximately 61% of our own book portfolio, the PAR 90 stands at 3.0%, notably below the national average of 3.9% as of December 2024.
While there has been a slight degradation in asset quality across these states, this has been largely influenced by on-ground external factors such as localized weather-related disruption and borrower stress in certain pockets. However, fresh PAR inflows have significantly reduced, indicating early signs of stabilization. Specifically, Uttar Pradesh and Bihar, contributing around 41% of our own book portfolio, exhibit strong performance with PAR 90 figures below our national average. This is particularly noteworthy given the recent industry reports indicating rising delinquencies in Bihar and Uttar Pradesh. Despite these challenges, our portfolio in these regions has demonstrated resilience, reflecting the effectiveness of our strategies. Currently, approximately 69% of our portfolio across states has a GNP of less than 3.9%, reflecting the strength of our asset quality and disciplined credit practices.
Additionally, West Bengal is showing signs of improvement, with PAR one decreasing from 8.6% in September 2024 to 7.7% in December 2024. This positive trend indicates effective portfolio management and recovery efforts in the region. In line with our prudent risk management approach, as we continue to maintain a healthy provision buffer to safeguard against any potential uncertainties, as of December 2024, we have an on-book provision amounting to INR 322 crore, which represents 3.9% of our on-book portfolio, well above the regulatory requirement of INR 136 crore as per RBI norms. We have created a management overlay of INR 16 crore, reinforcing our proactive approach and strengthening our financial position and creating an additional cushion for the coming quarters. In the last quarter, we highlighted a transitory increase in delinquency influenced by various external factors across a few geographies, namely Punjab, Rajasthan, Maharashtra, Odisha, and Jharkhand.
I'm happy to share that our performance in three of these states, Punjab, Rajasthan, and Maharashtra, has shown signs of improvement. Together, they account for approximately 10% of our on-book portfolio, and PAR one on these states has declined as a result of focused intervention on quarter-on-quarter basis. As of December 2024, in Punjab, PAR one reduced by 240 basis points quarter-on-quarter to 4.6%, while the industry average remained significantly higher at 32%. In Rajasthan, it declined by 303 basis points quarter-on-quarter to 7.8%, whereas the industry stands at 21.2%. In Maharashtra, it dropped by 310 basis points quarter-on-quarter, now standing at 8.5%. As per industry, it is 8.7%. This improvement is the result of our proactive intervention, including stricter underwriting standards for new client acquisition, a calibrated slowdown in disbursement in impacted regions, optimization of CSO spans, deployment of additional collection officers, and a strengthened client engagement framework.
With delinquency trends showing clear signs of improvement, our commitment to grow remains strong, reflected in our AUM. The consolidated AUM grew by 10% YoY to INR 12,128 crore, while the standalone gross loan portfolio increased by 10% to INR 10,778 crore. For nine months fiscal year 2025, consolidated disbursement stood at INR 7,568 crore, registering a 2% growth, while standalone disbursement reached INR 6,955 crore, up 1%. This consistent disbursement trend underscores our disciplined lending approach. Furthermore, the quarter-on-quarter stability in disbursement has contributed to a sequential AUM growth of 3%, reaffirming our commitment to sustainable expansion. I would like to take a moment to discuss the current status in the state of Karnataka. Given our relatively low exposure in the region, we have decided to pause disbursement there for the time being. We are currently in wait-and-watch mode, carefully assessing the evolving situation.
Based on our observation and market conditions, we will take appropriate actions as needed. Our consolidated branch infrastructure stands at 1,535 branches spread across 483 districts and 29 states and UTs. On a standalone basis, we operate in 1,421 branches. Coming to our financials now, during nine months FY2025, the company's overall revenue grew by 24% year-on-year to INR 1,979 crore on a consolidated level, and on a standalone basis, it reached INR 1,815 crore, marking a 25% increase. The pre-provisioning operating profit stood at INR 625 crore, registering a growth of 26% year-on-year on a consolidated basis. On a standalone basis, the PPOP stood at INR 610 crore, up by 29%. This growth reflects our focused strategy and operational efficiency in spite of the difficult dynamics. For nine months FY2025, the consolidated PAT stood at INR 164 crore, with an ROA of 2% and ROE of 8.8%, reflecting our sustained operating profitability.
Beginning in Q1 FY2025, we proactively initiated early recognition of stress across the portfolio, enabling us to address challenges head-on and implemented targeted interventions. As mentioned in our previous results, these initiatives included focused recovery strategies, new customer acquisition guidelines, strengthened underwriting practices, and enhanced processes. These efforts have started yielding positive results, as we've seen visible improvements in key performance indicators, reinforcing our commitment to maintaining a healthy and resilient portfolio. There have been ongoing discussions around employee attrition in our sector. To address this, we have proactively implemented multiple employee welfare initiatives aimed at enhancing engagement, retention, and overall workplace satisfaction. We remain committed to creating a supportive and rewarding environment for our employees, ensuring that we attract and retain top talent. Additionally, we strongly believe in recognizing and nurturing internal talent by providing them with the opportunity and positions they deserve.
On the borrowing front, in nine months FY25, the company raised INR 6,216 crore at the group level from various lenders, maintaining healthy liquidity. Further, the company's financial position on standalone basis remains strong, with CRAR of 27.4%. As of 31st December 2024, the company has adequate liquidity of approximately INR 1,581 crore, coupled with untransactional INR 1,435 crore as of date. As we move forward, our guidance remains unchanged from the previous quarter, and I'm pleased to share that as of nine months FY25, we have delivered consistent results in line with the guidance. We have achieved an AUM growth of 10% YoY against our guided range of 8%-10%, which reflects robust performance and effective execution of our growth strategy. Additionally, our credit cost stands at 5% annualized, well within the guided range, underscoring our discipline, risk management, operational efficiency.
Now, let me run you through the financial operational highlights of our company. Starting with consolidated highlights, we have a customer base of 33.9 lakh customers, 33.9 lakh as of 31 December 2024, with presence spanning in 1,535 branches across 483 districts in 29 states and UTs of India. Our top four states contribute to 56% of AUM as at Q3 FY25, and the states are UP, Bihar, Assam, and West Bengal. Now, coming to standalone highlights, our average ticket size of MFI lending for the nine months FY25 stood at INR 53,000. We have a well-diversified customer base of approximately 33.2 lakh clients with 76% rural exposure. PAN India presence with 1,421 branches. That of nine months FY25 stood at INR 175.5 crore, ROA of 2.2%, and ROE of 8.5%. The shareholder equity stood at INR 2,830 crore as of 31 December 2024. GNP as of December 2024 stood at 3.9%.
The overall provision coverage ratio increased to 99% versus 83% in December 2023. Total borrowing stood at INR 7,829 crore as of December 31, 2024. Debt to equity ratio as of December 31, 2024 stood at 2.8x. As of December 31, 2024, 96.9% of our districts have less than 1% of our AUM. An update on subsidiaries. As a one-stop diversified financial services provider for rural India, our subsidiaries work collectively to expand financial access. Leveraging our strong microfinance outreach, we provide affordable housing and retail MSME loans to clients who have completed two or more loan cycles with us and require high credit scores. Satin Housing Finance Limited has now reached an AUM of INR 872 crore, which grew by 44% year-on-year, having presence across 19 states with 8,464 customers. SHFL has a 100% retail book, GNP of 1.7% as of December 2024.
The company has 31 active lenders, including NHP Refinance, CRAR of 59.61% and gearing of 1.9x. That of nine months stood at INR 2 crore. Trade rating of A minus stable from ICRA and Infomerics. Satin MSME, the company's MSME lending arm, has reached an AUM of INR 479 crore. We are running down the business correspondent book and focusing on building retail MSME book going forward. MSME on-book portfolio grew by 50%, CRAR of 42.2% and gearing of 1.8x, 18 active lenders, including banks, impact funds, etc., trade rating of A minus stable from ICRA. As we approach the end of our discussion and before we move into the Q&A, I would like to take a moment to express my appreciation for our strong and dedicated management team. Their expertise, strategic vision, and a strong commitment have played a critical role in navigating challenges, strengthening our foundation, and driving our performance.
With a team of seasoned professionals from diverse backgrounds, we have created a leadership framework that is aligned with our mission of driving sustainable growth and financial inclusion. This is a team that has grown with the company, evolving alongside the business and demonstrating resilience in an ever-changing landscape. Their collective experience and ability to execute with discipline and foresight have been instrumental in maintaining our strong market position. In closing, as we forge ahead on our journey of growth and innovation, we are confident in our ability to achieve higher growth while maintaining financial discipline and operational excellence. With a clear strategy, strong fundamentals, and an unwavering commitment to financial inclusion, we remain well-positioned to navigate challenges and unlock new opportunities. Thank you all for your valuable time. We look forward to answering all your questions during the Q&A session. Thank you.
Thank you very much, sir.
We will now begin the question and answer session. Anyone who wishes to ask a question may press star and one on their touchstone telephone. If you wish to withdraw yourself from the question queue, you may press star and two. Participants are requested to use handsets only while asking a question. Ladies and gentlemen, we'll wait for a moment while the question queue assembles. I repeat, if you wish to ask a question, you may press star and one. Ladies and gentlemen, a reminder to all participants, if you wish to ask a question, you may press star and one. We have our first question from the line of Rishikesh from RoboCapital. Please go ahead.
Yeah, good evening. Thank you for the opportunity. I'm audible? Yeah, yeah, you are. Yeah, thank you. So nice. Can you share your years of experience that you have in the MFI industry?
How is it?
Your voice is not clear. Rishikesh, hi, sorry, your voice is not clear.
Hello? Limit now?
Oh, now it's even getting worse. I think you are in a bad network patch.
Okay, let me try.
Sir, can you use your handset?
Yeah, one handset only.
Okay, I think you have a network challenge, Rishikesh.
I'm audible now? No, sir. Your voice is still breaking. Fine. Let me get back in the room. Sure. Hello.
Manu, we can take another question.
Sure, ma'am. We have our next question from the line of Anant Mundra from My Temple Capital. Please go ahead.
Hello. Thank you, sir, for the opportunity. Firstly, sir, congratulations on a great set of results in such challenging times. You've shown excellent performance in our X-bucket collection efficiency, and that's quite commendable. Sir, I just wanted to understand.
My first question was around when do you expect the credit cost to normalize? Because for us, as I see currently, our SMA zero bucket has considerably reduced quarter on quarter because our X-bucket collection efficiency is good. The stage two effects have kind of floated, and that could be an irritant for us going forward. When do you expect the lag of that to completely be over?
See, my own guess is I think if I give you brass tax baseline numbers, till October, I think we were still having power flows coming in. Since November, as indicated in my speech earlier, we've rested the flow. I think it is not there. My sense is that whatever happened during October, give it 90 days for it to reach its peak, basically.
I think this quarter will be maybe probably the last of our quarters to have a little challenge. Beyond that, since November, December, January, I think these 90 days have been pretty good. I think it'd probably be much better from, I think, April onwards in any which case. It's just probably the October month, which is probably just a slight irritant which is there for us. Rest, everything is much below our earlier estimated power flows which were there.
Okay, so there could be some flow over that September-October bucket into Q1 of next year. Maybe Q2 is something where we can expect absolute normalization in credit costs?
Absolutely, 100%. That's what I said. October, 90 days from there, 31st October, we come into January. That's the only irritant we've got.
If you look at our numbers from November, December, January, I think the next 90 days probably are the thing. We hope, looking at how we are looking at containing the PAR flows and the way we've been able to address the challenges, I think for us, February, March also bodes very well. I think we are probably on the way where we have arrested our PAR one, which came down from 6.8%- 6.4%. I think that is probably one of the biggest signs which we are probably demonstrating in our portfolio.
All right. Sir, do we expect any further challenges arising from Guardrails 2.0, which will be implemented from April? Could there be a fresh round of PAR accretion because of that?
No. Our rejection rates, which are currently at about 60%, will increase by another 8%-10%.
I think we will have probably more difficulty in navigating our growth. We will certainly be able to do that because we've already worked on Guardrails 1.0. Our rejection rate was 60%. I think they will increase to about 70% once we implement Guardrails 2.0. Our technology and our software and everything is ready. The moment it is implemented, we'll be the first one to implement that and move forward. No accretion on the credit quality because of that. In fact, it's going to be better and healthier for us.
Sir, if I see one data point, our Saturn Plus 3 customers have actually gone up from portfolio has gone up from 4.2% to 4.5% quarter on quarter. It appears that we are giving out loans to the Saturn Plus 3 customers, which we'll not be able to going forward from April.
Do you expect? I mean, it feels like there could be some stress because of that because those customers will no longer be eligible.
But thori see shanti. 4.2-4.5, yeah. Point three maybe is like stable.
We have said that the rejections will increase by 8%-10%. The guys will not lend to them.
Yeah, we will not. It will not come.
We were lending to them because it was allowed. Whether it was 4.2 or 4.5, it was well within the allowed range.
That is what I said. We will have an increase of about 8%-10%.
Got it. Got it. Got it. I would also assume that because the X-bucket collection efficiency has been good, can we expect disbursements to increase quarter on quarter from Q4 significantly as compared to Q3?
Because Q2 to Q3 has been kind of flattish. No, no. We will be very cautious. I'll be very honest with you. I think for us, right now, our whole focus is completely on power quality, profitability. For us, growth is not something which we are really looking at. We have enough time on our hands to look at growth. I think first we want to set all this right. We've got two states which are still demonstrating stress. We want to work on those and have all the states practically out of the stress. Odisha and Jharkhand, we're working very, very hard on that. Let's see if we are able to get some more positive results. Overall, I think asset quality will probably be the best.
Got it. Got it. Got it.
For Q4, we can assume the same sort of disbursement number that was there for Q3?
Yeah. Yeah. Kind of.
Okay. The collection efficiency trend so far in Q4 from January till February 10 has been in that 99.8% for the X-bucket?
Yeah, it's been. It's been.
The positive trend is continuing. Okay. All right.
Yeah, yeah. It is.
For this management overlay of INR 16 crore that we have, that's lying in our, is it in the stage two bucket or is it in stage one? Where does it lie?
This is on one to 90. We have created that overlay.
It's on one to 90. Okay. Got it. Got it. Got it, sir. That's it from my end. If I have any more questions, I'll get back in the queue. Thank you.
Sure. Thank you.
Thank you.
Ladies and gentlemen, in order to ensure that the management is able to take questions from all participants in the conference, please restrict yourself to two questions per participant. Should you have a follow-up question, we request you to rejoin the queue. The next question is from the line of Pranav Gupta from Aionios Alpha Investment Managers. Please go ahead.
Hello. Yes, sir. Yes, sir, we can hear you. Am I audible? Yeah. Yeah. Hi. Good afternoon. Good evening and congratulations on a good set of numbers. Just a couple of questions. The first being that if I look at Saturn Plus 3 or Saturn Plus 4 customers, that number has been fairly under check, especially over the last couple of quarters. When we sort of compare this with the industry, industry numbers are significantly higher.
I mean, I would assume that a large part of the curtailed stress in our book versus peers has been mainly because of this number being lower. Could you talk about some of the measures that have led to this number? Because a lot of other players, when we speak to them, mention that maybe they were the second or the third lender and lender plus three or lender plus four is being caused because of a couple of other players who lend later. How do we protect ourselves against that and what has led to this good performance on this over-average customer base?
See, Pranav, it's not only just one factor which defines your asset quality. It is a combination of a lot of factors. This is one of the key factors, definitely, yes.
I have nothing in hand to probably look at it that what happens after I've disbursed. For us, it is not only we are looking at the three-lender base or two-lender base. We have credit scores which work full-time for us. We maintain a policy of doing one loan per customer. We never have looked at over-leveraging our customer at any which point. We have worked on NTC, new-to-credit clients in about 800 of our branches. That has not been implemented. Now we started with 200-odd branches, went up to 500, has gone up to 800. New-to-credit, new-to-satin clients also in about 300-odd branches. We maybe stopped that. It is not just limited to only one guardrail which is there, which people are talking about. There is more to it. We have taken several initiatives in terms of looking at employee benefits schemes.
In fact, if I share a data point with you, for us, our regional managers, technically, out of about 104, about 85% of them have a vintage of more than five years. I think it's a combination of everything which works together. We've actually looked at complete ecosystem rather than just looking at one aspect of doing credit discipline. This is how we work. This is how Satin works, basically. This is where it is. We've never given loan to any delinquent customers ever. That is also one of the key factors which is there. I think the combination of all this actually entails where we can talk, I think, with a lot of stress that, yes, our trade cost is 5%, which is practically one of the best in the industry. It will probably remain at that.
It is not just that. I think there are a lot of other things which have gone into this.
Right. Fair enough. Fair enough. The second question was on the top two states. You mentioned in your booking commentary, and it is visible with the numbers as well, that we are much better than the industry in terms of the stress that we have seen in those states. How should we look at this going forward in a sense that do we believe that once the industry starts seeing growth and maybe then we are more comfortable in terms of increasing disbursements, these couple of states, or maybe some of the ones that are recovering pretty well, can drive growth going forward, given that maybe industry is a couple of quarters sort of behind us in terms of either recognition or in terms of the stress that they see?
How should one think of those couple of states?
You are essentially saying the states where we are doing well, when things settle, we may push the accelerator for growth. Do I hear you correct, Pranav?
Yeah. The question is twofold, right? Only one part is what you said, that those two states, if I name them, UP and Bihar, are huge markets where opportunity is still, I mean, under penetration is still relatively higher. The industry out there, I mean, industry numbers suggest that most players are sort of worse off than where we are. Once we're comfortable in terms of the stress points that we have there, should we think of it in a way where we will start going faster or before the rest of the industry does, given that we are sort of behind in terms of recognition?
Pranav, we've got our own guardrails on various states and everything to probably look at. Again, as I said, it's a combination of a lot of factors. How's the team in a particular state performing? What is the vintage of my supervisors over there? Where all geographies we think that we can be able to still have an increased depth in terms of expansion in terms of our geography? I think for us, as I said, FY 2026 is, again, very cautious. We want to completely put in place everything we've got in our armory, in our bucket, to probably look at asset quality. That's our foremost thought process. Wherever, if we need to accelerate at some point of time, definitely we will do that. We have all the necessary resources for us also to do that also.
I think right now for us, it is that are we able to maintain the credit cost at the level where we are, or are we able to bring it down from wherever we are? I think for us, our endeavor is to bring down our credit cost from what levels where we are. That's our main focus right now. Growth will come. Growth is not our problem. Growth is not something which we are more worried about. It will come at any point of time, and we want to do it. Right now, I think the focus is asset quality and the team which is working on the ground.
Right. Just one last question. The industry overall has seen a lot of accretion issues, especially in the field office category. What has our accretion been like in the last 18 months?
Could you give that number out?
See, it's been stable. If I give you my, we've got one data point of which you look at it. My loan officers, which have a vintage of one and a half years plus, is close to about 40%. I think that is something which probably gives us that confidence that even on the loan officer on the ground, we still have a 40% vintage of our loan officers still there with us for the last one and a half years plus.
Sure. Thank you so much, sir.
Thank you.
Thank you. We have our next question from the line of Amit Mehendale from RoboCapital. Please go ahead.
Hi. Thanks for the opportunity. My first question is just to follow up on the last comment on credit cost. I think this year, the guidance was around 5%.
Can we expect next year, FY 2026, to be around 3.5%-4%, 4% type of credit guidance?
Your guess is as good as mine. We are working towards it only. That is what I said. For me, for all of us sitting down in this room and in the entire field, this is what our go-to figure is. We want to bring it down below 3%. That is what our challenge is, and that is what we want to do.
Sure, sir. Assuming that looking at how PAR one has turned out for this quarter, and if I extrapolate that further for two, three quarters, typically in six to nine months, typically, I think if things settle down, then we could start looking at growing the book again. Is that a fair window of time?
That is a fair distinct. That is a fair distinct. That is what I said.
First, right now, I think thinking about growth is not what is foremost in our mind. Our first foremost thing is, as what you rightly said, for us, we want to beat those 3% credit cost numbers, and we want to beat that. For us, growth will never be a challenge. Growth is something which we can probably be able to do. That's not something which.
Right, sir. Just one last thing. How do you see the non-microfinance book going? I mean, just so I don't need, I'm not looking for any numbers, but say two, three years out, what is the big picture thing? Do we want to scale that book aggressively, the non-MFI book, or how do we see the composition between MFI and non-MFI book?
See, our idea for the non-MFI book, both our secured lending portfolios and our whole thought process is that we want to calibrate it and also have an increasing trend across over there. The base is small, so doing a 40%-50% year-on-year growth is not a challenge over there, and we want to do that. Since the overall ecosystem is somewhat very shaky right now, I think the stress is, I think a lot of people are saying, is moving from the unsecured to the secured businesses. Also, we want to be very cautious over there, and that's why we're treading a very, very straight line also across over there. We're not getting too much into the depth of just looking at pure growth.
We're also streamlining our processes and systems in both these companies to look forward so that we are not caught napping at any point of time over there also.
Sure, sir. That's it from me. All the best.
Thank you.
Thank you. We have our next question from the line of Yash Dedhia from Maximal Capital. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Good evening, sir. Sir, firstly, your PAR one number, which is 6.4% as of December, how has this number trended in January and February till date?
I gave you that we'll remain within our credit cost guidance. We probably do not have actual numbers as such, but it'll remain within this threshold only.
We have given you that the flow has, like Sir said in the beginning of his speech, that the flow has reduced to one-fourth of what it was, and it is holding on.
That should answer your question.
Okay. What is your stage two and stage three provisioning as of now? Stage three, we know, but stage one and stage two provisioning?
Stage one is about 0.3 or so. Stage two, our LGD is about 63%, and we multiplied the PD to get that number. There are different PDs for 31-60 and 61-90. LGD is 62.3% or so in both the categories.
What is the overall, Sir, cover on the stage two? If you can tell me the absolute number and what is the provisioning that we carry as of now?
Just one moment. Just a minute. Stage one, the overall provisioning is about INR 33 crore, and stage two is about INR 71 crore.
INR 71 crore. What is your stage two number as of now? 5.7% is it? 4.9%? Yes.
Part 30 is 5.7, and Part 60 is 4.9. 4.9.
Okay. Okay. Understood, sir. One question related to the industry. You mentioned a comment that in Karnataka, you have stopped fresh disbursements. Given the new sort of draft guidelines, proposed guidelines, how do you see this impacting the industry and your own presence in Karnataka?
See, we've got a very small portfolio, and as per the draft ordinance which we have seen, I think it makes RBI-registered entities out of the purview of the ordinance. I do not think that there will be any major effect coming in. We still want to take a very cautious stand. That is the reason why we, till the time the dust does not settle down and things are not very clear enough, have stopped our disbursements over there.
Okay.
Finally, on your disbursement growth, now that you have achieved 99.8% ex-pocket collection efficiency, which is as good as normal times, why should we not increase our disbursements to a large extent in Q4 over Q3? What is the rationale behind keeping it at the same level as Quarter 3?
Everyone wants to. We want to run it the way we've run it always. I think for us, it's always tread with caution. We've always done that. Right now, also, we feel, I think, early days as yet, but we just want to tread with caution. As I said earlier, growth can come at any point of time. We'll get there. It's easy to give money. It's very difficult to recover. Let's do the difficult part first. Asan kam to baad me ho vi jayega.
Understood, sir.
Thank you, sir, and all the best.
Thank you.
Thank you. We have our next question from the line of Shreyas Pimple from JM Financials. Please go ahead.
Hi. Good evening. Thank you so much for the opportunity. My question was on net interest margins, specifically. We have seen both on standalone as well as consolidated level, net interest margins improve majorly because of increasing yields and lower cost of funds. Can you elaborate on what is driving this change?
One, that our cost of fund is broadly under control. We have got some good sanctions in spite of whatever is happening in the industry. PAR one numbers are improving, so to that extent, yield loss on portfolio is relatively less quarter by quarter. A combination of all that, we are managing our treasury better by keeping optimum liquidity, etc.
A combination of all these factors, so to say, is reflecting in the name.
Okay. Understood. Sir, the operating expenses have risen majorly because we have strengthened our collection team. When do you see the operating expenses coming under control? Would this be the trend that operating expenses would be around 6.8-6.9% of the consolidated AUM? How do you see that going ahead in FY2026, 2027? If you can elaborate on that, please.
I think it'll take maybe another two quarters or so. We feel that some additional expense on the additional manpower is required to keep the portfolio quality under check. We will do that for the next one or two quarters and then take a call when to, so to say, bring it back to the normal levels.
I think we'll keep an eye on for next one or two quarters and then try to bring it down.
Fair enough, sir. On the last part, the two states that we have seen the largest stress in, Odisha and Jharkhand. Can you elaborate a little bit what is causing the problems in these states and what are the actions that we have taken? How do you see the normalization coming in in those states? If you can elaborate on that, please.
See, there's nothing much to elaborate. This is probably the sector headwind which is happening across every state. We've just picked out two states where we have a slight stress which is there. We are working on our management team across over there. We've made some changes across over there.
We feel that we'll be able to bounce back as we bounce back in Punjab, Rajasthan, and Maharashtra. I think we know where to work on it and where to look at it. In fact, we'll work around it. I cannot give you very specific instances of what to do.
But I think we have given some of the measures in the slides. Of course, while they only look like words, once you implement that rather seriously and religiously, they do yield results.
Understood. Understood. Thank you. Thank you so much.
Thank you. We have our next question from the line of Ashlesh Sonje from Kotak Securities. Please go ahead.
Hi, team. Good evening. First question is, so what was the write-offs for the quarter?
INR 1.69 billion.
Okay. Thanks. Secondly, you have given an X-bucket collection efficiency of 99.8% this quarter.
Can you share the number for the previous quarter, and what is it typically during normal times?
I do not have it handy. We can take it offline, please.
Okay. Lastly, how do you define X-bucket collection efficiency? What goes into the numerator and what is in the denominator? If you can share that, please.
Tell me how you want to define it as. We will give you the answer. No. Sorry. I will answer. Yeah. Sorry. Yeah.
We take the current loans and their collection against their demand.
Okay. Do you include the earlier collections, if at all, in the numerator?
It does not have earliers. It does not have earliers. Otherwise, it will be 100 plus.
Okay. This number technically cannot be beyond 100. Understood. Okay. Perfect. Thanks a lot. Those are all the questions I have.
Thank you.
We have our next question from the line of Amit Mehendale from RoboCapital. Please go ahead.
Thanks for the opportunity. Sir, my question is more on the sector. We have been following the sector for now many years and seen three or four cycles. Typically, what are the lead indicators that you think one can track when the credit quality or the and apart from PAR, what can an analyst or management typically track to see that the collection efficiency is going down or the stress is building up?
Track us first, then track everybody else and compare that to that. You'll find answers. Sorry. I didn't want to, actually, because you've taken the first question and then you're coming at the last question, basically.
See, about the sector, I think you analysts probably know it much better than me to look at what do you have to really look at. It's all same across collection efficiencies, GNPAs, write-offs, credit cost. I think you've covered it all. The analysts. Disbursement. Disbursement. I think you have all the points which are there. That's why I said maybe in my speech, and I think you have to do your basics right. I think your basics, the moment you do your basics right, I think lending business is all about the process and systems being followed to the hilt. I think that is probably the one line answer which I can give. Yes, I think you can track it across collection efficiencies, your credit cost, and your PAR, DPD buckets, and everything. You have everything.
The data is there for you to track it, where it's going wrong, where it's not going wrong, where it's probably working right. I think that's where it is.
I think I was asking from the in the back. Typically, in Q1, right around June and July, I think most of the companies typically said that this is one-hour duty elections and so on, and it didn't turn out to be so. I was just asking in that context, I mean. I got the answer here.
These factors do count in. Heatwave was pretty bad. Same was the floods, which were there. Practically, you won't believe it, but floods this time was practically in every state. Every state. You talk of Rajasthan also, there were floods also in Rajasthan. You have to actually and it's a door-to-door collection business.
It's a physical business where you take collection. It's not easier where you can do a check collection or where actually you need to hold center meetings. You need to be there. The borrower has to come in. I think it really weighs on everybody's logistics mind to probably look at it. I think that is also one of the key factors which have probably been a part of where we all have suffered because of that. It's been a continuous journey of climate change which is happening across. I think you know it or not, but about 10 days during December was very severe cold wave all across northern India. It does affect your collection efficiency to a certain extent.
Right. Got it. Thanks. Yeah.
Thank you.
Thank you. Actually, I have one more question.
We have another question from the line of Mona Ketan from Dollar Capital. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Hi, sir. Good evening. Good evening. A few questions from my side. Firstly, what you said that on growth, it will be pretty cautious. Just trying to understand that once things normalize, what sort of run rate on growth could we expect from Satin?
See, 10%-15% is what we look at it that from now onwards, whenever we are looking at growth, I think it would be in the range of 10%-15%. Because again, since we've seen six, seven years of crisis brewing, maybe because of external factors, internal factors, whatever, I think the model throws up. My sense is that 10%-15% is what we're looking at for SCNL.
For the subsidiaries, definitely, they are on a different trajectory of a lower base. I think they will probably grow at a faster pace rather than microfinance, definitely, at 10%-15% is what we're looking at.
Okay. Just trying to understand at the branch level, what sort of center meeting attendance are we seeing currently? Is there any change that you are anticipating in that? Or what will be a more normalized number on the center meeting attendance as we go ahead in your case?
See, last one year, it has been in the range of 60%-70%. My sense is it is bound to be in that range only. There is not going to be anything which probably we'll talk about it that it goes upward from there.
It won't deteriorate also, I think, because the basic fundamental GLG mechanism works on center meeting. It's 60%-70% is what you can take a fair estimate. Some certain states will have higher. Like Assam for us has about 90%, 95% attendance rates. As compared to maybe an Odisha, there we have close to about 50-odd percent or 55%. Varies according to state, basically. That is where the difference lies. My sense is overall, average about 60%-70% is going to be what the attendance rates are going to be.
Was this number in the similar range maybe five, seven years back as well? Or was it fairly different then?
Five, seven years? Thank you. Five, seven years, we used to be 85%-90%. Okay.
This is the more normalized range given the changes we have seen in terms of digitization and everything.
I think we all will have to live with the 60%-70%. The range will be there between 55%-70% is the range we will all have to live in.
Got it. Just finally, if I have to understand, of your FY2025 opening book, how much has slipped to the 90-plus buckets in the last nine months? What would that sort of number be on the gross side?
Slippage for nine months. FY2025, nine months. FY2025, around 380. 380. 389. 380, around. Around that number. Yeah. 389. 389.
Okay. Got it. Thanks so much. That's all from my side.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you. We're leaving the interview. That would be the last question for today. I now hand the conference over to Ms.
Aditi Singh for closing comments. Over to you, ma'am.
Thank you, everyone, for taking out time, coming on our call, and also on a lighter note, encouraging us to grow faster. We hear you all. We will maintain that our focus is very much there on the asset quality and looking at our strength and processes. We have tried to communicate that the worst is definitely behind, and we are very much in control in the asset quality and the fresh PAR flows as established in the presentation and the data set shared by our CMD also in the beginning of the call. We have tried to take all your questions and tried to answer them to your satisfaction. However, should you still want to discuss something, you can reach out to me. My name is Aditi Singh, or to my teammate, Ms.
Shweta Bansal, from the investor relations team. We will be more than happy to discuss with you anything you want to clarify. Thank you so much and have a great evening, everyone.
Thank you, ma'am. On behalf of Satin Creditcare Network Limited, that concludes this conference. Thank you for joining us, and you may now disconnect your lines.