A rate cut by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) next week will not be enough to spur banks to lower lending rates immediately, bankers said on Monday.
Instead, Indian banks, saddled with high-cost, long-term deposits and narrowing profit margins, are hoping for a cut in the cash reserve ratio (CRR), which would boost liquidity and in turn lower the cost of funds, and would allow them to ease deposit and lending rates.
The central bank, the RBI, last cut rates on April 17 by a sharper-than-expected 50 basis points, bringing the repo rate to eight per cent.
But most banks have been unwilling to follow RBI, minimising the stimulative impact of the policy move as tight liquidity kept the cost of funds high for banks.
High lending rates in Asia’s third-largest economy, coupled with rising inflation and sluggish decision-making on reforms, have stunted growth, which fell to a nine-year low of 5.3 per cent in the March quarter. “If CRR is cut, our costs of funds will come down immediately, so we’ll be able to pass on the benefit to our customers,” said B A Prabhakar, chairman and managing director of state-run Andhra Bank.
“Otherwise we’ll have to lower our deposit rates. But in the meanwhile there won’t be a lending rate cut,” he said.
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If the policy interest rate alone is lowered, then a cut in lending rates will be delayed by two to three months, several bank executives said. If a rate cut is accompanied by a CRR cut, the impact would be immediate.
New lending by banks slowed to just 29 per cent of fresh deposits at end of May, much weaker than the 70 per cent at mid-December, as demand for fresh credit has evaporated although tight liquidity has not allowed banks to lower deposit rates.
The three-month certificate of deposit rate for companies, also known as the wholesale rate, touched a high of 11.50 per cent on March 13, and has remained near 9.5-10 per cent despite the RBI’s steep April rate cut.
Top-rated companies pay around 11 per cent for credit despite demand falling sharply.
Most economists polled by Reuters expect the RBI to cut interest rates at its June 18 review on slowing domestic growth and a drop in global oil prices. Still, they did not expect a CRR cut in anticipation of higher government spending, which would boost liquidity.
“I actually want to see deposit rates coming down,” said Parthasarathi Mukherjee, president for treasury and international banking at private lender Axis Bank.
“Wholesale (deposit) rates continue to be high,” he said.
The average cost of funds for Indian banks — 6.2 per cent — is expected to remain high over the next few months, adding pressure to keep lending rates high, analysts said.
Average net interest margins, a key gauge of profitability for banks, dropped to below 3 per cent in the financial year that ended March 2012 from about 3.5 per cent a year earlier.
State Bank of India, the country’s largest lender, last week lowered retail term deposit rates for tenors of up to 240 days.
“Even if (policy) rate is cut by 50 basis points, the impact on our resources or earnings is not much. Whereas if you release 50 basis points in CRR it can have a good impact. There is a big difference in terms of arithmetic,” said Sunil Pant, chief general manager at State Bank of India.