Shaktikanta Das, the new RBI governor, has been trying to nudge bankers to lower lending rates, holding meetings with bank chiefs last month to discuss the monetary policy transmission.
Business
Standard : Indian lenders haven’t fully passed on the
central bank’s latest interest rate cut to borrowers, pressuring
the monetary authority to loosen policy even more to support economic
growth.
A
mismatch between deposits and credit growth, and competition from the
government for small-savings mean banks face a high cost of capital,
limiting their ability to transmit monetary policy easing. Bankers
say the Reserve
Bank of India’s 25 basis-point reduction in the repurchase rate
to 6.25 percent in February was a start, but was probably too little
to have any impact on lending rates just yet.
Latest
data from the central bank shows the main overnight lending rate
offered by commercial banks has been sticky in a range of 8.15
percent to 8.55 percent since the beginning of the year. Most banks
have trimmed lending rates by a ‘token’ 10 basis points, said
Ashutosh Khajuria, chief financial officer at Federal Bank Ltd. in
Mumbai, adding that the RBI needs to move by a bigger-than-usual 50
basis points to spur lending.
“If
it is a 50 basis points cut, it will be an accelerated transmission,”
Khajuria said. “If inflation behaves the way it has been,” rates
will certainly go down in the first quarter of the next financial
year starting April.
Subdued
Inflation
Calls
for rate cuts have been building, given benign inflation and weak
demand. Inflation has been subdued at about 2 percent, much lower
than the central bank’s medium-term target of 4 percent.
Shaktikanta
Das, the new RBI governor, has been trying to nudge bankers to
lower lending rates, holding meetings with bank chiefs last month to
discuss the monetary policy transmission. In India, rate adjustments
take about six to nine months to work its way through the economy.
Bankers
remain cautious though and “are not willing to cut rates as
deposits and household financial savings are at historical lows,”
said Prachi Mishra, chief India economist at Goldman Sachs India
Securities. “Even while policy rates are down, the rates paid by
the government on small savings are significantly higher than bank
deposit rates.”
Savings
programs offered by the government through post offices return
between 7 percent and 8 percent annually along with tax benefits,
while a one-year time deposit with the State Bank of India, the
country’s largest bank, earns an interest of 6.9 percent.
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