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ICICI Bank, Punjab National Bank, HDFC raise lending rates

As of 31 December, 70.9% of all loans to large industries were linked to MCLR and 20.4% to external benchmarks, as per data from the Reserve Bank of India. (Photo: PTI)Premium
As of 31 December, 70.9% of all loans to large industries were linked to MCLR and 20.4% to external benchmarks, as per data from the Reserve Bank of India. (Photo: PTI)

  • The Reserve Bank of India had asked banks to link all new floating rate personal, and micro and small enterprises loans to an external benchmark from October 2019 and medium enterprise loans in April 2020.

NEW DELHI: Two large banks – ICICI Bank and Punjab National Bank – and mortgage lender Housing Development Finance Corp (HDFC) on Wednesday hiked their lending rates in the range of 5-30 basis points (bps) as lenders adjust pricing of assets in a rising interest rate scenario.

ICICI Bank and PNB raised their marginal cost of funds-based lending rates (MCLR), an internal benchmark used by banks to price corporate loans, by 30 bps and 15 bps across tenors, respectively. The hike in MCLR would also impact a section of retail and small business borrowers who took loans before October 2019.

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) had asked banks to link all new floating rate personal, and micro and small enterprises loans to an external benchmark from October 2019 and medium enterprise loans in April 2020.

HDFC Ltd raised its retail prime lending rate (RPLR) on housing loans, on which its floating rate mortgages are benchmarked, by 5 bps. Loans on the RPLR benchmark are offered at a discount to customers, unlike a bank’s benchmark where loans are offered after adding a spread.

For larger firms, lending rates are primarily linked to MCLR, where transmission is slower than external benchmarks like the repo and treasury bills.

As of 31 December, 70.9% of all loans to large industries were linked to MCLR and 20.4% to external benchmarks. For small businesses, loans linked to MCLR were at 24.2% of their aggregate loans, while 69.2% of loans were on external benchmarks, as per data from the Reserve Bank of India.

The rate-setting panel of RBI met out-of-turn last month to “reassess the evolving inflation-growth dynamics" and the impact of the developments after its previous meeting in April. All six members of the committee voted for a 40 bps hike in repo rate that takes the repo rate up to 4.4%.

It is expected that there are more hikes in the offing as the central bank tries to tame inflation. Following RBI’s move in May, banks raised their interest rates on loan linked to the repo rate and a few more rounds could follow.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Shayan Ghosh
Shayan Ghosh is a national writer at Mint reporting on traditional banks and shadow banks. He has over a decade of experience in financial journalism. Based in Mint’s Mumbai bureau since 2018, he tracks interest rate movements and its impact on companies and the broader economy. His interests also include the distressed debt market, especially as India’s bankruptcy law attempts recoveries of billions worth of toxic assets.
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