Mahindra Finance, Shriram Transport NCDs to open:
Should you invest?
The
NCDs' rates are higher than bank fixed deposits of similar tenures.
Two non-convertible debentures (NCD) are set to hit the market on January 4. Mahindra & Mahindra Financial Services has come up with its first tranche of NCDs. Shriram Transport Finance has come up with its third tranche of NCDs. Should you invest?
What is it about?
NCDs are fixed return instruments that aim to pay you a regular return on your instruments, either monthly, quarterly or annually. Mahindra Finance has four tenures; 39-month option, 60-month option (five years), 96-month option (eight years) and 120-month (10 years) option.
All these options will pay interest annually. Each NCD is available at a face value of Rs 1,000. The minimum investment is 10 NCDs or Rs 10,000 (10 NCDs x Rs 1,000).
Shriram
Transport Finance has three options broadly; monthly, annual and cumulative
that come with an effective yield of 9.39-9.7 percent and tenures of 3-10
years. Just like Mahindra Finance, the minimum investment here is Rs 10,000.
Both the NCDs are available only in
dematerialised form. Mahindra Finance NCD will remain open from January
4 to 25th, while Shriram Transport Finance NCD opens on January 7 and
closes on 31st.
Higher returns and good ratings
There are broadly three parameters
that you should look at before buying an NCD. On top of this list should be its
credit rating. Mahindra Finance NCD comes with a credit rating of AAA by rating
agency Care, which indicates highest safety. Care classifies AAA-rated
instruments as those that ‘considered to have the highest degree of safety
regarding timely servicing of financial obligations. Such instruments carry
lowest credit risk.’
Shriram Transport’s NCD comes with a
slightly lower credit rating of ‘AA+/Stable’ by rating agency Crisil. This
indicates that the instrument ‘have high degree of safety regarding timely
servicing of financial obligations. Such instruments carry very low credit
risk’, according to Crisil’s website that elaborates what each of its ratings
mean.
A high credit rating in an NCD helps
as it indicates the credit rating firm’s comfort in the company’s ability pay
timely interests. Since investors who invest in NCDs are those who want regular
and assured income, it helps if the company is able to honour its interest
commitments.
According to Shriram Transport
Finance NCD’s offer document, its credit rating for this issue is the same as
that of the NCDs it came out with in the past three years; ‘AA+/Stable’.
Infact, its rating has gone up slightly since its NCD that it had offered in
the year of 2015.
Returns on both these NCDs are
attractive. Shriram Transport Finance offers higher interest rates of the two
NCDs on account of its lower credit rating. Typically, lower the credit rating
of an instrument, higher its need to pay a higher interest to compensate
investors for that extra risk taken.
For the 5-year NCD, Mahindra Finance
offers 9.17 percent whereas Shriram offers 9.49 percent, both for their annual
interest paying options. For the 10-year option, Mahindra Finance offers 9.50
percent, while Shriram offers 9.69 percent.
These rates are higher than bank
fixed deposits of similar tenures. As per BankBazaar, the best interest rate
offered by a bank on its term deposit for ‘5 years and above’ is 8.51 percent.
State Bank of India’s term deposit
of a similar tenure offers an interest rate of 7.03 percent. To that
extent, the NCDs offer 2 percent points more in terms of the yield that
investors can earn.
Can they pay timely interest?
The biggest concern with any fixed
income earning instrument is the company's ability to pay interests regularly
and timely. An NBFC, like a bank, borrows and lends money. The biggest threat
to meeting its commitments depends on how efficiently it can recover its dues
from its borrowers. Hence, it’s important to understand the company's business
model and whether it is capable of paying its loans on time.
Mahindra Finance lends money largely
to people who wish to buy new and pre-owned cars, tractors and even commercial
vehicles. Shriram largely lends money to transport firms that need money to buy
commercial vehicles, like trucks. To that extent, since Shriram lends money to
road transport operators, the borrower profile of Mahindra Finance works out to
be slightly better.
Since any corporate firm is likely
to have many borrowers, it helps if your NCDs are secured. A secured instrument
ensures that lenders like you, the NCD investor, are ahead in the queue should
the company face liquidation of its assets. Mahindra Finance’s 39-month,
60-month and 96-month NCDs are secured. The 120-month (10-year) instrument is
an unsecured one. All of Shriram Transport Finance’s NCDs are secured.
What should you do?
Unless a debt instrument comes with
a government guarantee, it doesn’t make sense to lock your money with a company
for a very long time, say 8-10 years. Avoid the 8-year and 10-year options of,
both, Shriram and Mahindra Finance. Further, the 10-year Mahindra Finance NCD
is also an ‘unsecured’ instrument; the only one in this lot.
Although the difference in yield
between its 5-year and 10-year NCD is hardly 0.33 percent points, sources say
Mahindra Finance has offered “a far higher brokerage” to distributors for the
10-year option.
“The 10-year NCD is offering us 1%
brokerage, the 5-year NCD is offering us 0.33% brokerage,” says a Mumbai-based
distributor who did not want to be quoted. That’s one more reason to avoid the
10-year Mahindra Finance NCD.
The 5-year option of Mahindra Finance is decent. It’s not short-term
and not very long-term.
Given that interest rates are
expected to fall this year and the attractive NCD interest rates, you can
afford to lock your money for a 5-year time periods.
Therefore, avoid the 3-year NCDs.
Mahindra Finance’s returns are only slightly lower than Shriram Transport
Finance’s 5-year NCD, but the former’s credit rating is better.
Bottom
line: Opt for the 5-year option of Mahindra Finance NCD.
Happy investing
Source:Moneycontrol.com
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