Frustrated at not seeing his words being converted into action, Finance Minister P Chidambaram, is now changing his approach from "nudge" to "push". An Economic Times report says that the FM may push state run banks to achieve financial closure of big-ticket projects and take aggressive steps to recover bad loans. The finance minister is also expected to ask banks to lower lending rates.
After the Reserve Bank of India governor failed to fall in line with the FM’s view on interest rates, the minister has decided to directly talk the banks into reducing rates. The question is why should these banks agree? And if they do, their net interest margins are expected to go for a toss.
With deposit growth failing to pick up, banks are not willing to reduce interest rates for depositors. Reducing the lending rate would mean taking a hit on their net interest margins. Banks' profits are anyway going to be impacted with a fall in yields in government paper, and taking a hit on lending rates will only deteriorate their financials further.
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While private sector players are not willing to invest in these long gestation and government controlled projects, public sector banks are being compelled to do so. The renewed push will only make matter worse for public sector banks.
Most of the bigger broking firms have a ‘Sell’ recommendation on public sector banks and prefer private sector ones. If the FM has his way and compels banks to cut rates, we can see some of the bolder broking houses change their recommendation to "Short Sell"; in other words to borrow and sell these shares.