Context: The growth of the corporate debt market has been disappointing for India.
Importance of Corporate Debt:
The backbone of any economy: as it does infrastructure growth, which is by nature debt-fuelled.
Act as an alternative to banks and Non-Banking Financial Companies (NBFCs) as they are reluctant to lend to long-term assets.
Issues with Corporate Debt Market:
Skewed Growth: The entire growth in the corporate debt market has been only with the safest bonds.
Raising debt capital without being the safest company is difficult: 95% of all corporate debt is rated either AAA or AA. All other ratings fall in the 5%., while the US markets mirror the image.
Creating an equity-like market is difficult since the nature of traders and trades are different since most trades are large, time-sensitive and traders re highly sophisticated.
Transparency: While traders want more transparency with respect to the underlying company’s health, they want less transparency with respect to their trades.
India is the world’s only jurisdiction that imposes a ‘non-cooperative rating’ mandate, wherein rating agencies have to necessarily put out ratings based on publicly available data.
This weakens trust in the system, edging investors to the safest securities.
A large part of the market is a phone market, where players give two-way quotes through a broker, who does not disclose whether the counterparty is a buyer or a seller till the very end.
Flexibility Issues: Unlike equity, a company may have dozens of securities of debt, making the market and pricing highly fragmented.
Way Ahead:
An electronic, anonymous marketplaceshould coexist with a non-transparent market which requests for quote systems, hit-and-take bilateral platforms and voice broking
Competition among marketplaces should be encouraged, while the backend can be handled more frequently by the clearing corporations, ensuring guaranteed trades for many,
Other reform measures like credit enhancement, repo and Credit Default Swap (CDS) market development, Government Security (G-sec) market reforms, and less risky debt adoption.