MFI Portfolio Shrinks 17% in FY24, Signs of Stabilization in Q4

The Indian microfinance (MFI) sector is navigating a complex recovery phase as recent data reveals a significant 17% year-on-year contraction in the total portfolio for the 2024 fiscal year. However, a strategic shift in lending patterns during the final quarter suggests the industry may be finding its footing after a period of intense volatility.

Portfolio Contraction vs. Sequential Growth

The microfinance landscape faced a challenging FY24, marked by a 17% decline in the overall portfolio size compared to the previous year. This contraction reflects the aftermath of credit stresses and regulatory caution that permeated the sector. Despite this annual slump, the March 2024 quarter provided a glimmer of optimism by showing sequential growth. This shift from contraction to growth indicates that the worst of the portfolio shrinkage may be behind the lenders, marking a transition toward a more controlled expansion phase.

Shifting Lending Strategies and Borrower Profiles

As the industry moves toward stabilization, Microfinance Institutions (MFIs) have fundamentally altered their approach to credit deployment. Rather than aggressive customer acquisition, lending has increasingly shifted toward existing, proven borrowers. This "retention-first" strategy is designed to mitigate risk by focusing on clients with established repayment histories.

Furthermore, there has been a noticeable trend in loan profiles. Data suggests that average loan sizes have increased, even as borrower leverage—the ratio of debt to income—has begun to moderate across several key Indian states. This indicates a shift toward higher-ticket, more stable credit rather than the high-volume, micro-sized loans that previously drove rapid but risky growth.

The health of MFI balance sheets remains a mosaic of improvement and lingering concern. On one hand, there has been a positive trend in 30+ days past due (DPD) rates, suggesting that recent lending cycles are managing short-term delinquencies more effectively.

On the other hand, the sector is battling "legacy stress." While newer loans show better performance, intensified stress has been observed in older loan cohorts. These older accounts continue to struggle with repayment, highlighting the long-tail impact of previous economic disruptions on the micro-borrowing population. For investors and stakeholders, this means that while the immediate outlook is stabilizing, the cleanup of older, non-performing assets remains a critical priority for the industry.

Key Takeaways