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RBI Asks Banks To Peg Floating-Rate Loans To External Benchmarks

RBI allows banks flexibility to peg floating-rate loans to external benchmarks.

Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg
Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg

The Reserve Bank of India has asked lenders to link all new floating-rate loans to external benchmarks to improve transparency.

Starting April 1, floating-rate personal or retail loans and small business loans will be linked to an external benchmark, according to the change announced along with the monetary policy. Final guidelines will be issued by the end of December.

Banks will have the discretion to decide on the spread at the inception of the loan but that should remain constant over the period of the loan unless there is a change in the borrower’s credit score.

The external benchmarks that the banks can choose from include:

  • RBI’s repo rate
  • The 91-day T-bill yield
  • The 182-day T-bill yield
  • Any other benchmark market interest rate produced by the FBIL.

After linking base rate to the marginal cost of funds-based lending rate, the RBI is now making it mandatory for banks to link interest rates to the external benchmarks, NS Vishwanathan, deputy governor at the Reserve Bank of India, said. This, he said, would make interest rates transparent for borrowers.

Calling the move long overdue, Jaideep Iyer, head of strategy at RBL Bank Ltd., said the external benchmarks should help better reflect the global rate environment. The RBI has always felt that monetary transmission is supposed to happen like repo rate change. However, banks have a lot more to grapple with, he said, adding that the move will be challenging for interest-rate management by banks.

Ananth Narayan, professor at SP Jain Institute of Management and Research Narayan described the move as “very positive”. One of the issues in the financial ecosystem is that the real users' benchmarks are very different from the financial sector's benchmarks, he said. Banks in the financial system look at T-bills, CD rates, government bond yields and so forth. Whereas actual users, corporate or retail, look at bank PLR, bank base rates, banks MCLR and so on. The two don't talk to each other, he pointed out.

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RBI Asks Banks To Peg Floating-Rate Loans To External Benchmarks

The Long Battle Over Loan Pricing

The new loan pricing mechanism follows recommendations of an internal study group chaired by the RBI’s Janak Raj in October 2017. It will come into place just three years after the Marginal Cost Lending Rate (MCLR) system was introduced in 2016. The MCLR had replaced the ‘Base Rate’.

When the MCLR was first introduced, it was pitched as a solution to the perennial problem of banks not seeing an immediate change in their average cost of funds, even after a change in policy rates by the central bank. This meant that loan rates would also be slow to adjust.

Under the base rate mechanism and in the case of its predecessor-- the benchmark prime lending rate (BPLR) introduced in 2003--banks would consider the average cost of funds, rather than the marginal cost, while calculating their lending rate.

The average cost of funds takes in to account the cost that the bank pays on old as well as new deposits. So even if banks would reduce the interest rate they paid on their new fixed deposits, the interest they paid on the old stock would ensure that they would see hardly any reduction in their average cost.

Analysts estimate that 60-70 percent of the fixed deposits in a bank fall in the one year bracket. Thus the time it would take for a reduction in deposit rate to reflect on a bank’s cost structure would be two to three quarters.

Under the marginal cost system used as part of the MCLR system, lenders would have to consider the cost they pay on every additional deposit they receive from depositors. Theoretically, this cost would adjust more quickly, making transmission more effective.

Since the MCLR was introduced, two problems arose. First, banks continued to price old loans using the base rate while new loans were priced using the MCLR. And so, starting April 1, the RBI made it mandatory for banks to link the base rate to the MCLR.

But even then the problem of divergence between loan rates and the policy and market rates persisted.

This, prompted another relook at the loan pricing mechanism, leading, finally, to the RBI recommending linking lending rates to market based benchmarks.

Watch the interview of SBI’s PK Gupta on the new loan pricing rules.