Small Business

Undisbursed loans may lead to rate war, even if RBI tightens

Contrary to popular perception on interest rate movement, expected to head north following a likely central bank action on monetary tightening, banks may actually end by cutting rates in the below-prime lending rate region for at least their corporate clients. - "RBI may signal end of easy monetary policy by hiking CRR" - RBI survey raises GDP forecast to 6.9% - Central Bank Q3 dips 13% to Rs 306 cr - Food inflation rises again; RBI may hike rates - GSS eyes Rs 500 cr turnover in FY 2011 - Rating the raters This is because of the huge pipeline of undisbursed loans the banks are sitting on (see table) and their scramble to bloat top line to reach closer to the yearly targets. As a result, irrespective of what Reserve Bank of India (RBI) does on rates, banks will try to undercut each other to push loan growth. The latter has been at a historic low in the last quarter and resulted in a fall in net interest income for most state-run lenders. According to bankers, companies already smell the arbitrage opportunity and have started “shopping”. In bankers’ parlance, “shopping” means seeking quotes from one bank and using it to bargain for a better deal from another. And, banks may have to oblige to boost both top line and bottom line. With treasury performance expected to be in the red, banks are banking on core income for improving their performance. In the third quarter, big banks like State Bank of India, Bank of India and Union Bank of India reported mark-to-market (revaluing assets at current value) losses on their bond portfolio, as yields on sovereign bonds hardened. Bank of India, for example, is sitting on Rs 30,000 crore of sanctioned loans, yet to be disbursed. With the lender having 28.5 per cent of gross investments in the available for sale (AFS) category, a rise in bond yields will result in mark-to-market loss on its bond portfolio. The bank is betting on the undisbursed loans in the current quarter, which will not only improve its net interest margin but also lower net and gross non-performing assets. Bank of India is expecting at least Rs 10,000 crore disbursements from the sanctioned portfolio. For SBI, the difference between sanctions and disbursements, on last count, was Rs 50,000 crore. For banks, sub-BPLR lending, despite RBI’s repeated warning, constituted around three-fourths of the total. While most banks did not disclose the data, SBI said that during the third quarter, 67 per cent of the incremental growth in lending quarter had been at sub-PLR rates, in which the share of home loans was 28 per cent. In recent months, banks have been forced to lower rates in segments such as home and auto loans to attract more customers. In addition, companies are also being wooed through short-term loans at lower rates to ensure banks earned more than the 4.19 per cent they got on liquid funds or the 3.25 per cent by parking money through the reverse repo window.


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):

News of the day
Congress sweeps Amul polls, bags all 13 seats
Congress-backed candidates today won all the 13 seats on the board of Kheda District Co-operative Milk Producers Union Ltd (KDCMPUL), popularly known as Amul Dairy. On the other hand, BJP once again failed open its account.
Popular Articles
fast payday loans

Pyramid Saimira to dilute 40% in all 8 subsidiaries
As part of a restructuring plan, the Chennai-based Pyramid Saimira group, which produces films, has decided to dilute 40 per cent stake in all its eight subsidiary companies. It hopes to raise up to Rs 300 crore by doing so.

Rupee down 10 paise at 45.91/$
The rupee today declined by 10 paise to 45.91 against the US dollar in early trade in line with other weakening Asian currencies.