Business Standard

Hike season: Now it is SBI's turn

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BS Reporter Mumbai
The bank yesterday announced an across-the-board hike of 50 bps in lending rates.
 
State Bank of India (SBI), the country's largest bank, has decided not to spare existing home loan borrowers from an increase in interest rate this time around. The bank today announced an across-the-board hike of 50 basis points in lending rates.
 
The bank has raised its benchmark advance rate to 12.75 per cent with effect from April 9, which will increase loan costs for individuals as well as corporate borrowers.
 
SBI's effective interest rates for home loans with repayment period of less than five years now is 10.75 per cent and for 5-20 years is 11.25 per cent. The revised interest rate on fixed rate home loans is 12.75 per cent.
 
SBI and other public sector banks had spared existing home loan borrowers when they raised their lending rates in February.
 
The decision was in adherence to the finance ministry's suggestion that existing home loan borrowers should not be burdened as those who had borrowed over a year ago had already seen a sharp rise in either their equated monthly instalments or tenures.
 
The increase in PLR by SBI is still less than the 75-100 basis points increase in lending rates effected by other banks after the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) announced more monetary tightening measures to combat inflation. 

UP, UP AND AWAY

Name

Increase (bps)

PLR (%)

SBI

50

12.75

ICICI Bank

100

12.75 (individual),
15.75 (corporate)

BoB

75

13.25

HDFC Bank

100

15

UTI Bank

100

15

Yes Bank

75

14.75

HDFC

50

14

 
The current round of interest rate hikes is meant to pass on rising cost of funds to borrowers. SBI, which is struggling to push up its deposit growth rate, had started a rate war by announcing a peak rate of 9.5 per cent for 3-5 year deposits. ICICI Bank and others were pressurised by competition in announcing higher deposit rates. SBI's deposit growth is around 12 per cent against the sector's deposit growth rate of close to 25 per cent.
 
Earlier this week, private sector banks ICICI Bank, HDFC Bank and UTI Bank raised their PLRs by 100 basis points and public sector Bank of Baroda (BoB) by 75 basis points. BoB, however, effected a lower 50 basis points increase in interest rates for existing home loan borrowers. Similarly, Housing Development Finance Corporation (HDFC), the largest mortgage lender, raised rates for borrowers by 50 basis points.
 
State Bank of India's outstanding housing loans stood at Rs 36,475 crore at the end of December 2006. Housing loans account for more than half of the bank's retail advances and around 12.5 per cent of total advances.

 

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First Published: Apr 08 2007 | 12:00 AM IST

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