Private banks cut more rates than PSBs as overall rate transmission improves, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Rate transmission, the pet peeve of the Reserve Bank of India has improved substantially following the introduction of external benchmarks with the private banks sniping more than public sector peers.

The overall lending rates have fallen as much as 100 basis points, with the weighted average lending rates for outstanding rupee loans of commercial banks fell 96 basis points between March 2020 and October 21, according to RBI data.

But these rates have fallen more sharply for private sector banks at 109 basis points compared to 85 bps dip for public sector banks and 187 bps for the foreign banks in the country.

The central bank has however cut its benchmark repo rate much higher by 115 bps during the period, and also introduced a number of measures to enhance liquidity of banks to deal with the pandemic induced crisis.

Policy transmission

Policy transmission has been at a much faster pace since the pandemic. In the 19-month period prior to the onset of the pandemic, the benchmark policy 135 bps. But the banks lowered their lending rates only by 15 basis points between March 2019 and March 2020.

A research paper by the Reserve Bank of India economist notes that the transmission of policy repo rate changes to deposit and lending rates of commercial banks (SCBs) has improved since the introduction of external benchmark-based pricing of loans.

The paper said that the transmission showed further improvement since March 2020 on account of sizeable policy rate cuts, and persisting surplus liquidity conditions resulting from various system level as well as targeted measures introduced by the Reserve Bank – cut in the cash reserve ratio (CRR)

requirements, long-term repo operations (LTROs), TLTROs, refinancing window for All India Financial Institutions (AIFIs), sector/segment specific liquidity measures (Mutual Funds, Small Finance Banks, Micro Finance Institutions/Non-Bank Financial Companies), special open market operations and regular OMOs.

External benchmarks

The share of external benchmark-linked loans in total outstanding floating rate loans increased from 2.4 per cent in September 2019 to 32 per cent in June 2021, contributing to a faster and fuller transmission.

There has been a concomitant fall in the share of MCLR-linked loans from 83.6 per cent to 60.2 per cent, over the same period, although these still have the largest share in outstanding floating rate loans.

As lending rates under the external benchmark regime undergo automatic adjustments with the changes in the benchmark rate, banks are incentivised to adjust their term as well as saving deposit rates to cushion their net interest margins and profitability, which then hastens the adjustment in banks’ marginal cost of funds, and MCLRs.

Earlier hurdles

While the Reserve Bank has periodically refined the process of interest rate setting by banks, transmission has hitherto been sluggish as banks relied on their own cost of funds, which is internal benchmarks.

“The systems were also characterised by opacity, especially regarding the interest rate resetting practices for existing borrowers,” the central bank said.

To address these rigidities, the RBI had decided to move to an external benchmark system – an interest rate outside the control of a bank and not necessarily linked to its internal costs – for select categories of loans (viz., all new floating rate personal or retail loans and floating rate loans to micro and small enterprises (MSEs) to the policy repo rate or 3-month or 6-month T-bill rate or other specified benchmarks effective October 1, 2019, and for medium enterprises effective April 1, 2020).



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Bank of Maharashtra cuts down lending rate by 10 bps, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Public Sector Lender, Bank of Maharashtra on Monday announced that it has reduced it’s Repo Linked Lending Rate (RLLR) from 6.90% to 6.80% with effect from 11 October, 2021. The 10 basis point reduction will make housing, car, education, MSMe and other loans cheaper.

“By reduction in RLLR our customers will be immensely benefited with zero processing charges in home loan, car loan and gold loan segments. This is going to add fillip to our customer satisfaction and bring cheers during the festive seasons,” said A S Rajeev , Managing Director, Bank of Maharashtra.

Additionally, the bank has also reduced its Marginal Cost of Funds based Lending Rate (MCLR) by 10 basis points. MCLR for overnight has been reduced to 6.70%, 1 month- 6.80%, 3 months- 7.10% and 6 months tenure to 7.15%. One year MCLR has been reduced by 5 bps to 7.25%.

Ahead of the festive season, the bank had earlier announced a processing fee waiver on home, car and gold loans. Post the new development, the home loan rate have been reduced to 6.8%, car loans to 7.05% and gold loans to 7%.



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Canara Bank cuts MCLR by up to 15 basis points, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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State-owned Canara Bank on Tuesday announced an up to 15 basis points cut in its marginal cost of funds based lending rate (MCLR). The bank has decided to reduce the MCLR for one-year tenor by 10 basis points to 7.25 per cent effective from October 7, Canara Bank said in a regulatory filing.

Most of the consumer loans such as personal, auto and home are priced on the basis of the one-year MCLR.

The bank has lowered MCLR on overnight and one-month tenors by 0.15 per cent to 6.55 per cent.

Meanwhile, DCB Bank also reduced its MCLR by 0.05 per cent across tenors, effective from October 6.

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Comparison of top bank personal loan rates, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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A personal loan comes in handy when we are short of funds and need the money as soon as possible. A personal loan is an unsecured loan given by a lender. While taking this loan, the potential borrower is not required to provide collateral or security against the loan, unlike in a gold loan where gold jewellery is taken as security by the lender.

Read on to find out more about personal loans.

Where can you avail a personal loan?
While one can approach one’s friends and relatives for a personal loan, lending institutions such as banks and non-banking financial companies (NBFCs) offer personal loans in a more structured and ‘on-tap’ format. Apart from banks like State Bank of India (SBI), HDFC Bank, NBFCs such as Tata Capital, Bajaj Finserv also offer personal loans. As personal loan from one’s friends and relatives may not always be readily available, we shall consider the more structured format of personal loans offered by lending institutions.

Maximum and minimum amount
The minimum and maximum amount that can be taken varies from one lending institution to another. For instance, according to its website, SBI offers a maximum personal loan of Rs 20 lakh to salaried individuals. On the other hand, HDFC Bank offers personal loans up to Rs 12 lakh, as per the bank’s website.

According to Tata Capital’s website, you can take a minimum personal loan of Rs 75,000 and maximum of Rs 25 lakh depending on your eligibility.

Fixed or floating interest rate
While taking a loan, one should check with the lender if the interest rate offered on the personal loan is fixed or floating. In case the interest rate is fixed, changes in the bank’s MCLR will not impact your equated monthly instalment (EMI) amount. Also, do remember that normally the interest rates charged on personal loans are much higher than on home loans or loans against gold because the former are unsecured loans.

Interest rate, loan amount offered by banks for personal loans

BANKS Personal Loan Amount Tenure RoI (%)
AU Small Finance Bank Upto 7.5 Lacs Upto 60 months 11.49% – 23.00%
Axis Bank Upto 15 Lacs Upto 60 months 12.00% – 21.00%
Bandhan Bank >=50000 and <=5 Lacs 12 – 36 Months 15.90% – 20.75%
Bank Of Baroda >=50000 and <=10 Lacs 48 – 60 Months 10.50% to >=16.15%
Bank Of India Upto 10 Lacs 36 – 60 Months 10.75% – 12.75%
Bank Of Maharashtra Upto 10 Lacs 60 months 9.55% – 12.90%
Canara Bank Upto 20 Lacs Upto 60 months 12.40% – 13.90%
Central Bank Of India Upto 10 Lacs 48 Months 9.85% – 10.05%
City Union Bank >=5000 and <=5 Lacs 12 Months >=9.50%
Dhanlaxmi Bank >=1 Lacs and <=15 Lacs 12 – 60 Months 11.90% – 15.70%
Federal Bank Upto 25 Lacs 48 Months 10.49% to 17.99%
HDFC Bank Upto 15 Lacs 12 – 60 Months 10.50% – 21.00%
I O B Upto 5 Lacs 60 Months >=10.80%
ICICI Bank Upto 20 Lacs 60 Months 10.50% – 19.00%
IDBI Bank >=25000 and <=5 Lacs 12 – 60 Months 8.30% – 14.00%
IDFC First Bank >=1 Lacs and <=40 Lacs 12 – 84 Months >=10.49%
Indian Bank >=50000 and <=5 Lacs 12 – 36 Months 9.05% – 13.65%
IndusInd Bank >=50000 and <=15 Lacs 12 – 60 Months 10.49% – 31.50%
J & K Bank Upto 1.50 Lacs 48 Months >=10.80%
Karnataka Bank Upto 5 Lacs Upto 60 months >=12.45%
Karur Vysya Bank Upto 10 Lacs 12 – 60 Months 9.40% – 19.00%
Kotak Mahindra Bank >=50000 and <=20 Lacs 12 – 60 Months >=10.75%
Punjab & Sind Bank >=1 Lacs and <=3 Lacs Upto 60 months 9.35% – 11.50%
Punjab National Bank Upto 10 Lacs Upto 60 months 8.95% – 14.50%
RBL Bank Upto 20 Lacs 12 – 60 Months 14.00% – 23.00%
South Indian Bank >=1 Lacs and <=10 Lacs Upto 60 months 11.95% – 12.65%
State Bank Of India >=25000 and <=20 Lacs 06 – 72 Months 9.60% – 15.65%
Union Bank Of India >=5 Lacs and <=15 Lacs Upto 60 months 8.90% – 13.00%
Yes Bank >=1 Lacs and <=40 Lacs 12 – 60 Months >=10.99%
Ujjivan Small Finance Bank >=50000 and <=15 Lacs 12 – 60 Months >=11.49%

All data sourced from Economic Times Intelligence Group (ETIG)
Data as on August 29, 2021Eligibility to apply for personal loans
The eligibility criteria for sanctioning personal loans vary from lender to lender. To be eligible for a personal loan from SBI, your minimum monthly income should be Rs 15,000 irrespective of whether you have a salary account with the bank or not as per the bank’s website.

In case of HDFC Bank, to be eligible for a personal loan an individual should be between 21 years and 60 years of age and should have a job for at least two years, with a minimum of one year with the current employer. Further, if salary account is maintained with HDFC Bank, then the individual should have minimum Rs 25,000 net income per month. If the individual is not an HDFC Bank account holder, then he/she should have minimum Rs 50,000 net income per month.

Your credit score will also play an important role in determining whether or not you are eligible to get the personal loan.

Tenure of personal loans
Usually, a personal loan is offered for a maximum of five years by lending institutions such as banks. However, the tenure can vary from lender to lender.

Charges in personal loan
To avail a personal loan, a bank or NBFC will levy certain charges such as processing fees, stamp duty and other statutory charges etc. These charges vary from lender to lender.

Further, a lender can also levy pre-payment charges or pre-closure charges. Therefore, before taking a loan from the lender do check the different types of charges leviable.

Disclaimer: The data/information given above is subject to change, hence before taking any decision based on it, please check terms and conditions with the bank/institution concerned.

For any queries or changes, please write to us on etigdb@timesgroup.com or call us at 022 – 66353963.



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Over 28% of loans now linked to external benchmarks, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The introduction of the external benchmark system for lending and deposit rates has helped in improving the monetary transmission by banks, an RBI article said.

The share of outstanding loans linked to external benchmarks has increased from as low as 2.4 per cent during September 2019 to 28.5 per cent during March 2021, said the article prepared by RBI officials.

“Over the years, the Reserve Bank‘s efforts in improving transmission to deposit and lending rates of banks have started to bear some fruits particularly with the introduction of the external benchmark system,” it said.

The external benchmark system, it added, has incentivised banks to adjust their term as well as saving deposit rates as lending rates undergo frequent adjustments in line with the benchmark rates, to protect their net interest margins thus broadening the scope of transmission across sectors that are not even linked to external benchmarks.

External benchmarks

The RBI had asked banks to link all new floating rate personal or retail loans and floating rate loans to micro and small enterprises (MSEs) to the policy repo rate or 3-month T-bill rate or 6-month T-bill rate or any other benchmark market interest rate published by the Financial Benchmarks India Private Limited (FBIL) from October 1, 2019.

Not just repo: Over 28% of loans now linked to external benchmarks
The adoption of external benchmark-based pricing of loans has strengthened market impulses for a quicker adjustment in deposit rates, the article said. Further, a combination of surplus liquidity conditions amidst weak credit demand conditions has enabled banks to lower their deposit rates.

The lowering of deposit rates has resulted in the decline in the cost of funds for banks, prompting them to reduce their MCLRs (Marginal Cost of Funds based Lending Rate), and in turn their lending rates.

As per the article, the transmission of policy repo rate changes to deposit and lending rates of commercial banks has improved since the introduction of external benchmark-based pricing of loans.

The transmission showed further improvement since March 2020 on account of sizeable policy rate cuts, and persisting surplus liquidity conditions resulting from various system levels as well as targeted measures introduced by the Reserve Bank.

The impact

In response to the cumulative reduction of policy repo rate by 250 basis points (bps), the 1-year median marginal cost of funds-based lending rate (MCLR) of banks declined by 155 bps from February 2019 to June 2021.

It further said the pass-through to deposit and lending rates is substantial for foreign banks during the external benchmark lending rate (EBLR) regime.

The public sector banks depend more on retail term deposits and face competition from alternative saving instruments like small savings, which constrains them from lowering deposit rates in sync with the policy repo rate.

Private sector banks have exhibited increased pass-through to lending and deposit rates compared to public sector banks.

“This uneven transmission across bank groups is partly explained by the fact that the share of outstanding loans linked to external benchmark is more for private banks as compared to PSBs,” the article said.



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Credit guarantee scheme for facilitating MFIs loans announced, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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New Delhi, The government on Monday announced a new credit guarantee scheme that will facilitate loans to 25 lakh people through micro finance institutions (MFIs).

The announcement was made by Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman as part of economic relief package provided to spur investment climate in the country affected by the Covid pandemic.

As per the new scheme, guarantee will be provided to Scheduled Commercial Banks for loans to new or existing NBFC-MFIs or MFIs for on lending up to Rs 1.25 lakh to approximately 25 lakh small borrowers.

Interest Rate on Loans from banks will be capped at MCLR plus 2 per cent.

Maximum loan tenure 3 years, 80 per cent of assistance to be used by MFI for incremental lending, interest at least 2 per cent below maximum rate prescribed by RBI.

The focus of the scheme will that lending would be for new activities and not repayment of old loans. Loans to borrowers to be in line with extant RBI guidelines such as number of lenders, borrower to be member of JLG, ceiling on household income and debt.

All borrowers (including defaulters upto 89 days) will be eligible for guarantee cover for funding provided by MLIs to MFIs/NBFC-MFIs till March 31, 2022 or till guarantees for an amount of Rs 7,500 crore are issued, whichever is earlier.

Guarantee upto 75 per cent of default amount for up to 3 years through National Credit Guarantee Trustee Company (NCGTC) which will also not charge any guarantee fee.

–IANS

sn/kr



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Bank of Baroda cuts MCLR for various tenors, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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NEW DELHI: State-owned Bank of Baroda on Thursday said it has slashed the benchmark one-year marginal cost of funds based lending rate (MCLR) by 0.05 per cent.

The bank has approved the revision in MCLR with effect from June 12, 2021, the lender said in a regulatory filing.

The MCLR for one-year tenor stands revised to 7.35 per cent.

Among others, the six-month and three-month tenor MCLRs have also been slashed by 0.05 per cent each to 7.20 per cent and 7.10 per cent, respectively.

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Banks are without a raft in Covid storm, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Banks, which got protection and support by a swift moratorium on loans when the pandemic first struck, have no such cover this time.

As the second wave intensifies, most of the relief measures and schemes announced by the government and Reserve Bank of India have expired. On top of it, the central bank is non-committal on moratoriums.

“In today’s conditions, there is no need for a moratorium”RBI governor Shaktikanta Das

Also, a spike in overdue loans after the lifting of the moratorium has been worrying analysts.“The level of loans in overdue categories has increased after the moratorium has been lifted and the impact on asset quality will be spread over FY2021 and FY2022 as various interventions and relief measures have prevented a large one-time hit on profitability and capital of banks,” ratings agency Icra said in a report.

No standstill

Banks enjoyed a standstill on classifying loans as non-performing last fiscal and also accounted for interest accrued despite not receiving payments during the quarter. Both these leeways will no longer be available after the final SC order in March.

As a result, bank NPAs are likely to spike and they may have to reverse some interest earned on loan accounts above Rs 2 crore as the SC order has directed banks to charge simple and not compound interest on loans between March and August 2020.

It is estimated that banks could face a hit of between Rs 7,000 crore to Rs 10,000 crore due to the reversal of interest as it is unclear whether the government will reimburse this waiver – as it earlier did for small-ticket advances.

Analysts will watch out whether banks will provide for the write-back on compounded interest as directed by the ape court or adjust it through their Covid 19 provisions already accounted for.

Fourth quarter

The banking sector had got back to some sense of normalcy in the fourth quarter as collection efficiency came close to or at pre-Covid levels and loan growth recovered.

However, a resurgence in Covid cases, leading to localised lockdowns in various states will force banks to look out for risk mitigation.

There is a likelihood of delayed recovery in credit offtake after the Covid spike. Analysts expect the banking sector loan growth to recover to 6% to 7% in the fiscal ending March 2021 mainly due to a growth in retail loans in the second half of the year. Large lenders with a wider network are expected to clock in a higher year on year increase with a double-digit increase in credit growth.

While banks may not have any impact on margins as they have not cut deposit or MCLR based rate, higher liquidity on the balance sheet could decline. Treasury income may also drop on sequential basis as 10-year Gsec has risen by about 28 basis points during the quarter.

The silver lining

The only respite for banks is their gross non-performing assets may not jump as estimated by RBI’s fiscal stability report.

Icra sees the NPA ratio at 9.5-9.7% as of March-end, lower than RBI’s estimate of 12.5% for the same period.
The RBI’s Financial Stability Report (FSR) of December 2020 has stated that banks’ gross non-performing assets (GNPAs) may rise sharply to 13.5 per cent by September 2021, and escalate to 14.8 per cent, nearly double the 7.5 per cent in the same period of 2019-20, under the severe stress scenario.

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