CREDIT · BANKS · RISK

Street Read: Tariff Spills to Bank Credit — Delinquencies & Working-Capital Lines

Export-MSME stress watch: track SMA creep, receivable slippages, and WC tightening. What lenders are already doing, and a 30-day playbook for risk teams.
By bataSutra Editorial · August 29, 2025
In this piece:
  • The short (what’s moving on desks)
  • Where stress surfaces first (SMA ladder)
  • Who’s tightening what (banks/NBFCs)
  • Sector & HS-code risk map
  • RBI/liquidity watchlist
  • 30-day lender playbook
  • FAQ

The short

  • Receivables risk: U.S. buyer re-pricing/deferrals push export bills beyond terms—first into SMA-0, then SMA-1 if not cured.
  • WC guardrails: Banks aren’t blanket-cutting limits; they’re lowering drawing power, nudging higher margins, and shortening tenors for exposed SKUs.
  • Provisioning stance: Conservative overlays in tariff-exposed portfolios; tighter sanction conditions on renewals/rollovers.

Where stress surfaces first — the SMA ladder

BucketWhat trips itSignals to watchDesk action
SMA-0Up to 30 days overdueExport bill collections slip; buyer discount asksCall-ups; partial cures via ECGC/insurance; roll to shorter tenors
SMA-131–60 daysRepeated “ex-tariff” renegotiations; inventory buildLower drawing power; raise margins; covenants on SKU/HS exposure
SMA-261–90 daysFX hedge lapses; disputed invoicesStandstill discussions; collateral top-up; restructure only with visibility
Early cures are cheaper: escalate the moment export bills age beyond contractual grace; pair with layered FX cover.

Who’s tightening what — street read

Banks (PSU & private)

  • Drawing-power haircuts ↑ 2–5 pp on receivables from high-tariff HS codes.
  • Shorter assessment cycles; quarterly stock/receivable audits.
  • Event-based covenants: tariff escalation → auto re-pricing or margin step-up.

NBFCs/Fintech lenders

  • Invoice discounting limits tightened; higher IRR floors for exposed lanes.
  • Selective pause on unsecured WC for exporter MSMEs without ECGC cover.
  • Real-time bureau pulls on early-warning triggers (bounced e-mandates, GST gaps).

Sector & HS-code risk map (first-order)

BucketHS codesCredit watchSpreading
Apparel/Textiles61/62/63Thin margins; high buyer powerECGC cover; shorter cycles; purchase-order backed loans
Gems & Jewellery71Lumpy ticket sizes; inventory riskInsured inventory; strict KYC for counterparties; escrowed collections
Footwear64Retail demand elasticityMake-to-order; vendor finance with recourse to buyers
Furniture94Customs/storage costs; delivery lags3PL duty-drawback; tighter LC terms
Seafood (Shrimp)03 (0306)Perishability; cold-chain capexTransit insurance; confirmed orders with deposits

RBI/liquidity watchlist

  • Ops toolkit: VRR/VRRR fine-tuning, OMOs/Twists to smooth curve if FX volatility rises.
  • Transmission: Watch MCLR resets and working-capital interest coverage in exposed MSMEs.
  • Supervision: Expect tighter scrutiny of export finance books and provisioning assumptions.

30-day lender strategy

Risk & collections

  • Daily SMA dashboard for tariff-exposed NAICS/HS buckets.
  • Early-warning triggers: >7-day invoice aging, GST e-way anomalies, hedge gaps.
  • Pre-emptive restructuring only with PO visibility and ECGC coverage.

Sanctions & pricing

  • Shorten tenors (90–120d), step-up pricing or covenants on trigger events.
  • Lower receivable eligibility from U.S. buyers lacking ex-tariff clauses.
  • Mandate layered FX hedges for limit utilisation >70%.

Treasury & ALM

  • Stress test interest-coverage under 100–200 bps spread widening.
  • Hedge USD funding mismatches; watch OIS-G-sec basis for cues.

Governance

  • Board note on tariff exposure; quarterly disclosure of overlay methodology.
  • Client education pack: ex-tariff pricing templates, hedge playbooks.

FAQ

  • Will limits be cut across the board? Unlikely. Expect line-by-line tightening tied to HS exposure and buyer contracts.
  • Best early-warning indicator? Aged receivables > 15–30 days vs historic DSO, especially where FX cover is missing.
  • Where to add buffers? ECL overlays on exposed pools; extra collateral margins where realizable values are volatile.