No compound interest on loan, irrespective of amount, during moratorium, rules SC

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The Supreme Court on Tuesday stopped banks from charging compound interest (interest on interest) or penal interest on any loan, irrespective of the amount, during the moratorium period.

A three-judge Bench of Justices Ashok Bhushan, Subhash Reddy and M R Shah said the amounts taken as compound interest or penal interest should be adjusted in future loan payments.

However, the court agreed with the Rserve Bank of India (RBI) that extending the date of the loan moratorium was “not viable”.

The court said judicial review over fiscal policies was limited. The court cannot order specific financial reliefs.

The court questioned the rationale of limiting compound interest waiver to loan up to just ₹ 2 crore.

The government had introduced a pay-back scheme on October 23 last year. The scheme payments waived the difference in the compound interest and simple interest charged between March 1 and August 31 (moratorium period) for eight categories of loans worth up to ₹ two crore.

The eight categories were MSME, education, housing, consumer durables, credit card, auto, personal and consumption loans. The lending institutions included banking companies, public sector banks, cooperative banks, regional rural banks, all India financial institutions, non-banking financial companies, housing finance companies registered with RBI and national housing banks.

In November last year, the court had directed the Centre to implement the pay-back scheme.

However, borrowers had continued to press for an extension of the moratorium and also argued that the entire interest for the moratorium period should be scrapped. The petitioners also said the ₹ 2 -crore pay-back scheme did not bring any relief to big borrowers reeling under the impact of the pandemic.

While reserving the case for judgment on December 17 last year, the Indian Banks Association had said the pleas made by the petitioners extended beyond the financial stress they supposedly suffered during the pandemic.

The Centre had said a complete waiver of interest would cripple the economy and banking sector.

The State Bank of India had pleaded in support of the small depositors who form the “backbone” of the banking system.

“Small depositors are faceless in these proceedings. It is not a case of borrowers versus bank. They are the backbone of the financial system. Banks have to give interest to these depositors. How can we leave them?

For every loan account there are about 8.5 deposit accounts in the Indian banking system,” senior advocate Mukul Rohatgi had asked in court on the last date of hearing.

The RBI had referred to clause 3 of its August 6 circular for ‘Resolution Framework for COVID-19-related Stress’ to point out that lending institutions, guided by their respective Board-approved policy, would prepare viable resolution plans for eligible borrowers. However, the benefits would only be provided for borrowers stressed on account of COVID-19.

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Know the magic of compounding

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A phone call between two friends leads to a conversation on how compound interest works.

Karthik: If not for Covid-19, we would have planned a trip this December, no? Phew!

Akhila: How I miss travelling!

Karthik: The silver lining is that I’ve saved a few bucks from limiting my travel this year.

Akhila: So, are you planning to invest that money?

Karthik: No, yaar! It’s too little to invest. Even if I do, the interest I earn on it will be peanuts.

Akhila: No, you’ve got it wrong. The return that you may earn today may be small, but if you stay invested over a long term, the power of compounding will result in bigger gains.

Karthik: The word compounding rings a bell. Care to explain?

Akhila: Sure. As Benjamin Franklin explained compounding: “Money makes money. And the money that money makes, makes money.”

Karthik: Whoa! Sounds like a tongue twister! Explain it in simple terms, no?

Akhila: When you invest, your principal amount earns interest in the first year. In the next year, you earn interest on the principal as well as on the interest earned in the first year. In the following year, you earn interest on the principal and on the interest earned in the first two years and so on.

Karthik: – That’s amazing!

Akhila: – To give you some perspective, any amount invested at 10 ten per cent per annum takes about 10 ten years to double if the interest is credited based on simple interest. But if the interest is compounded yearly, the investment doubles in just about 7.3 years!

Karthik: – Interesting…

Akhila: That’s the miracle of compounding. So, will you invest now to unlock the value of compounding in the long run?

Karthik: Of course! I have been waiting all life for a miracle to happen. Never thought it will be through compounding.

Akhila: Good! But, you also need to remember that compound interest can also be your greatest enemy.

Karthik: Oops!

Akhila: That is when you do not repay your loans on time. Any interest on your loan, if not paid by the due date, attracts interest. If the dues are not paid for a long period, the outstanding loan amount can snowball into a mountain of unmanageable debt.

Karthik: Real killer.

Akhila: As the popular saying goes: “Compound interest is the eighth wonder of the world. He who understands it, earns it; he who doesn’t, pays it.”

Karthik: That’s Simply Put.

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How yield on deposits is calculated

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Angry bird Bulbul gets some ‘interesting’ gyaan from agony uncle Babaji who revels in rhyme and reason

Bulbul: Businessmen always get what they want. Cheaper loans they asked for – and now they have it, with interest rates at multi-year lows. But in the bargain, savers and depositors like me are getting squeezed – most banks and companies now offer just about 5-7 per cent on fixed deposits. Not fair!

Babaji: Fret not so much, Bul. What goes up comes down and what goes down comes up. So will interest rates. It’s all temporary.

Bulbul: Whatever, Baba. But for now, I am on a hunt – for the best yields to shore up my already modest interest income.

Babaji: Hunt if you must, but don’t fall for illusions. ‘Cos what you see may not be what you get – especially when it comes to yield in this fickle financial field.

Bulbul: Another rhyming riddle and your fate is sealed! See this baton that I wield?

Babaji: Calm down, Bul. Let me make the complex simple, and see your smiling dimple. You see, when it comes to interest and yields, the simple can compound your problems. It gives you an illusion of more, and you could end up feeling sore.

Bulbul: Now, do you really want a gash and a gore?

Babaji: Nope, here’s the crux to the fore. When it comes to advertised yields, what you see is often an exaggerated number meant to entice you, dear depositor. That’s because many companies that accept deposits do not follow the correct definition of yield.

Bulbul: Pray, explain what you say.

Babaji: Yield, as per finance terminology, should ideally be calculated using the formula for compound interest, that is, Amount = Principal*(1 + Rate)^Period. But several deposit-takers calculate yield applying the simple interest equation, that is, Simple interest = (Principal*Period*Rate)/100. Re-arranging the formulae, the Rate in both the equations gives you the annual yield. Turns out, the simple interest formula churns out a much higher yield than the compound interest formula.

Bulbul: Oh my! Tell me why.

Babaji: Sure, let me try. In a cumulative deposit, the interest earned is reinvested and, in turn, earns interest in the subsequent period. These periodic additions to the capital need to be considered while calculating yield. The compound interest formula does that, the simple interest one does not.

Bulbul: Yelp! An example will help.

Babaji: Say, a company offers annual interest rate of 6.7 per cent on its cumulative deposits for a tenure of 5 years; the interest is compounded annually and Rs 5,000 will grow to Rs 6,915 in 5 years. The company advertises that the yield is 7.66 per cent, using the simple interest formula – while actually, the yield is only 6.7 per cent using the compound interest formula. If you get enamoured by the higher advertised yield, you could end up making a wrong choice. Greed often comes with misery, you know.

Bulbul: Enlightened, thanks. But how do I calculate the correct yield without getting into knots with complex formulae?

Babaji: Simple. Invoke the ‘Rate’ function in Microsoft Excel. It can do the job in a jiffy. Before you take the bait, wait and calculate.

Bulbul: That’s Simply Put.

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