Asset price concerns

Explore Business Standard

| From the borrower's viewpoint, if the additional risk provisioning is passed on fully to the borrower, it amounts to an extra Rs 1,000 a month. This doesn't seem like much when the EMI (equated monthly instalment) is already around Rs 18,000 for a 20-year mortgage. An increase of 50 basis points in the lending rate will have a similar impact on the EMI. For both factors, the lenders have the option, and they have been exercising it, to stretch out the duration of the loan while keeping the EMI constant. As far as the provisioning requirement itself is concerned, in response to the policy announcement, the head of a large bank said that his institution already makes provisions in excess of the statutory requirement, so the change would have no impact. The bottom line, then, is that the affordability of housing finance for this class of borrowers is hardly going to change. The growth momentum in lending should not therefore be seriously impacted by this measure or, for that matter, small increases in interest rates. |
| However, there is a deeper significance to the increase in the provisioning requirement. Property prices have been skyrocketing of late, with annual increases of 30-40 per cent typical for many locations. This would mean that loan sizes are increasing, with a larger percentage crossing the Rs 20 lakh threshold. Two risks emerge in this scenario. One, the average borrower is stretching his household budget to a point where, say, a job loss or any other shock, however transient, could push him into default. Two, if prices have risen so high so fast, they may well fall before stabilizing. Home buyers who see the value of their properties fall below the outstanding loan value will, quite rationally, default. This is more likely if a significant proportion of purchasers are speculators rather than end-users. At times like this, it is hard to distinguish between the two. It appears that while Dr Reddy is not inclined to take a firm stand against rapidly appreciating asset prices just yet, he is concerned about their implications for the banking system. One could take this as a precursor of further measures to increase the level of protection that the banking system achieves against a sharp decline in asset prices. As with most things to do with central banking, it will prove to be a tightrope walk, but then, that's what governors are paid to do. |
First Published: Apr 21 2006 | 12:00 AM IST