Showing posts with label SBI-Interest. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SBI-Interest. Show all posts

Friday, April 2, 2010

SBI hikes rates on home loans



Source:Partha Sinha, TNN, Apr 2, 2010, 12.38am IST



MUMBAI: State Bank of India (SBI), the largest bank in India and one of the leading players in the housing finance market, has raised interest rates on home loans. Although the bank will continue with its 8% teaser rate — which the SBI had introduced more than a year ago — for the first year, it has increased rates for the subsequent years, effective April 1. The hike in home loan rates by SBI was triggered by the recent increase in its cost of funds.

Till March 31, SBI had two schemes — The Easy Home Loan (up to Rs 50 lakh) and Advantage Home Loan (above Rs 50 lakh). ‘‘From April 1, both the schemes have been merged and extended for a month,'' an SBI spokesperson confirmed to TOI. ‘‘The rates applicable for new loans sourced from April 1 till April 30 are 8% for the first year, 9% for the second and third years and floating rate at 1.75% below SBAR (SBI's equivalent of prime lending rate, or PLR) thereafter,'' the spokesperson added.

So in effect, the home loan rates for the second and the third years have gone up by 50 basis points (100 basis points=1%), from 8.5% earlier to 9% now. While fourth year onwards, at the current structure, the interest rate will be at 10% per annum, since currently SBAR is at 11.75%. Earlier, from the fourth year onward, the floating rate was at 2.75% below the SBAR and the effective rate was 9%.

Under the new rate structure (assuming a 10% rate from the fourth year), on a 20-year loan of Rs 30 lakh, a customer would have to shell out about Rs 3.9 lakh over the tenor of the loan. Thus the effective rate that the customer would be paying over the 20-year period is 9.5%.
Explaining the rationale for hiking rates on home loans, the SBI spokesperson said it mainly reflected ‘‘the increased cost of funds from April 1 stemming from the new methodology for paying interest in savings bank accounts on daily balances.'' In April 2009, Reserve Bank of India (RBI) had mandated all the banks in India to move to a new methodology of calculating interest rates on savings bank accounts that would add interest on a daily basis. This is a significant departure from the earlier practice of calculating interest rate on minimum balance after the tenth of every month.

For sometime now, with the annual rate of food inflation hovering around 20% level and the yields on benchmark 10-year government securities around the 8% mark, bankers and home finance veterans were talking about the possibility of a hike in interest rate in the economy. And now with SBI, the country's largest bank, hiking housing loan rates, industry players are almost sure that interest rates have bottomed out in the current cycle.

Lately a number of banks and financial institutions, including the country's home loan pioneer HDFC, have withdrawn their home loan products at 8% or at a slightly lower rates, and are moving to a more sustainable interest rate structure.

Saturday, February 13, 2010

SBI hints interest rates may rise from June 2010

Posted: 12 Feb 2010 03:38 AM

The country’s largest lender State Bank of India has hinted that lending rates may rise from the second quarter of fiscal 2010-11, even though there is no immediate pressure on interest rates.

“So far as bank lending rates are concerned, I do not expect lending rates going up before May-June,” said O P Bhatt, chairman, SBI.

Bhatt said money supply is under pressure, but interest rates will remain stable in immediate future.
“(There is) pressure on liquidity, but no immediate pressure on interest rates,” Bhatt said.

In its monetary review recently, the RBI asked banks to keep more cash with it, which will shrink money supply by Rs 36,000 crore from the system.

The apex bank’s move to hike Cash Reserve Ratio (CRR), portion of deposits banks kept in cash with the central bank, by 75 basis points to 5.75 per cent will come into effect from February 13 in two tranches.
Earlier, the largest private sector lender, ICICI Bank CEO and MD Chanda Kochhar had also said that there would be upward pressure on interest rates from the second quarter of this fiscal, because demand for investment would increase.

Bhatt added that its associate bank SBI Indore will be merged into it by March-end.

The government and the SBI Board has already given in-principle approval to the merger. SBI Saurashtra has already been merged into the parent company.

Bhatt also said the SBI sees loan expansion at the rate of 16-18 per cent this fiscal. “We are already at 17 per cent,” he said.

The RBI has also projected credit expansion target at 16-18 per cent for this fiscal.