Chief Economist, Bank of Baroda The structural shift in the non-food credit growth in favour of "overheated" sectors, that too with the economy's rapid growth, is worrisome The RBI has been giving repeated warnings to banks about the escalating prices of housing and real estate in the country. It has also been monitoring property loans bank-by-bank and branch-by-branch, and making direct contact with those deemed to be lending too aggressively. From the risk management perspective, the RBI has increased the risk weights for advances to commercial real estate initially from 100 per cent to 125 per cent (in July 2005) and then from 125 per cent to 150 per cent (in April 2006). It has also increased the provisioning requirements for standard advance under commercial real estate and housing loans of Rs 20 lakh and above from the earlier 0.4 per cent to 1.0 per cent in April 2006. |
| As the protector of "financial stability", the RBI has every valid reason to raise its brows. Indian banks have gone on a lending spree since the second half of 2004-05 with overall credit growth exceeding 30 per cent in the last one year. While credit to agriculture and industrial sector has increased by 27 per cent and 37 per cent respectively, retail credit has surged to 47 per cent. According to the latest data released by the RBI, housing loans are up 54 per cent (y-o-y) and commercial real estate 104 per cent (y-o-y) by June 2006. As a result, the share of retail credit in total banking credit has increased from 26.8 per cent in June 2005 to 27.3 per cent in June 2006. |
| There are two major concerns for the RBI at this juncture, which it feels have potential to endanger financial stability "" first, credit is growing at over 30 per cent for the third year in succession against a deposit growth of 18 per cent to 19 per cent, and secondly, credit to "real estate and housing sector" is leading the list, when Indian property prices are rising disproportionately too fast. One should not forget that "real estate and housing" is a multiplier industry. The impact of the growing crisis in this segment affects a wide range of industries and workers. Steel, cement, lumber, wood, furnishings, banks and housing finance companies are closely linked to this sector, wherein asset prices have been moving too fast. |
| Most of the banks have responded to RBI measures by hiking the home loan rates by 50 to 75 basis points in the last six months. Yet, the boom in real estate market is not showing any signs of abating. In fact, property prices have appreciated by 60 per cent to 100 per cent over the past one year in most towns. Furthermore, Indian property developers intend to raise a massive amount of $4 billion in domestic and international share offerings by March next year. Analysts estimate India's property industry will be worth $50 billion in sales by 2010, from $12 billion last year. Property companies are reported to have plans in the pipeline worth up to three times the value of all the projects they completed in the past five years. |
| For India, the worrisome thing is the structural shift in the non-food credit growth in favour of sectors, which are "overheated" not just domestically, but also globally. That too at a time when the country has become one of the world's fastest growing economies. It has well been observed that when the services sector was primarily contributing to growth, India's growth hovered at around 6.5 per cent to 7.0 per cent. With a broad-based recovery in the manufacturing sector, the overall growth has moved to 8.0 per cent-plus growth. For taking this growth to 10 per cent-plus level, there is an urgent need to focus on those sectors, where huge mismatches exist between demand and supply such as agriculture and agricultural infrastructure, education, health, power networks, roads, transport systems, ports, and so on. |
| The most important lesson brought home forcefully by the east-Asian crisis of late 1990s is the importance of a healthy financial sector. Banks can effectively contribute to the overall growth only if they provide credit to sectors that offer highest risk-adjusted returns. The RBI wants banks to not just grow bigger, but also more "diversified" in terms of the risks they are assuming. Otherwise, the Indian dream will remain only a dream! The views are personal |
Managing Director, HDIL
India needs more than 50 urban cities with great infrastructure to move to the next level of growth - what you're seeing is just the tip of the iceberg
No, the Indian real estate market is not over-heated. The economy is witnessing an unprecedented growth across sectors since the last decade. Forget the stupendous growth numbers for a moment and imagine India as the "super-economy" of tomorrow. The liberalisation programme kick-started in 1991, has catapulted India as one of the most talked-about growth economies in the world. Sceptics point out caveats to our policy makers on three counts: infrastructure, infrastructure and infrastructure. And this is being built with a visionary zeal, unprecedented perhaps, in the history of modern India.
The views are personal
