RBI reduced the repo rate by 25 basis points (bps) to 7.75 per cent on January 15. The two banks also reduced their base rate by 25 bps each.
Base rate is the benchmark lending rate to which all loan rates are linked.
Several banks, however, explored whether there was room for reduction in the base rate over the past fortnight in the asset liability committee. The answer was negative in all those reviews.
While the cost of funds has not fallen to the extent that could translate into a lending rate cut, the rise in yield on advances has further acted as a hindrance for a lending rate reduction. For example, Bank of Baroda (BoB) and Union Bank of India, the two large lenders that have announced their October-December quarter earnings, reported a decline in yield on advances sequentially. While BoB’s domestic yield on advances dropped to 11.01 per cent in Q3, against 11.17 per cent in Q2, for Union Bank of India, the fall in domestic yield on funds was 13 bps to 9.21 per cent.
Bankers said a base rate cut now would further squeeze their margins, at a time when credit growth is lowest in many years. As on January 9, bank loan growth on a year-on-year basis was 10.7 per cent, compared with 14.5 per cent in the corresponding period last year, which is lowest in more than 15 years, according to latest data released by RBI.
In the current financial year so far, loan growth was 6.6 per cent, against 9.7 per cent during the corresponding period last year. Bankers are looking at the grim possibility of single-digit growth in the current financial year.
“Where is the question of a base rate cut? You cut price, when there is demand, so that increase in volume offsets the loss in margin. That is not the case now,” said the chief executive of a state-run bank.
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