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Bankers plead for rate cut on Dec 18

PM says inflation should come down to 5-6%

Indivjal Dhasmana New Delhi

Ahead of RBI's monetary review next week, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh today said inflation has risen to "unacceptably" high levels in the last two years and needs to be brought down to 5-6 per cent from over 7.24 per cent in November. However, bankers, including the largest lender SBI, made a case for a cut in the repo rate.

Chief economic adviser Raghuram Rajan said inflation is expected to soften from January. He did not specify when should RBI start cutting rates, but said if inflation is controlled, interest rates may turn benign and industry concerns over high interest rates should be taken into account.

 

"Inflation rates in the last two years have increased to unacceptably high levels and need to be brought down to no more than five to six per cent," the Prime Minister said at the annual general meeting of the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FICCI).

Inflation came down to a ten-month low of 7.24 per cent in November against 7.45 per cent in October, fuelling hopes of rate cut by the RBI in its monetary review on December 18. Economists, however, did not expect RBI to cut the repo rate.

Bankers, however, wanted the RBI to cut the rate.

SBI Managing Director Diwakar Gupta told reporters on the sidelines of Delhi Economic Conclave, organised by the Finance Ministry, that RBI should consider cutting both repo rate and the cash reserve ratio (CRR).     

"As a banker, I can always say that our wish-list is that rate should change, they should reduce. Both repo and CRR," he said.  

He said the RBI has already reduced the CRR fairly, though some more cut would be good. 

"CRR has already been brought down significantly by the Reserve Bank, if they do a little more that will be great. Repo cut will actually bring down rate systematically in the system. So deposits will be cheaper therefore people will lend cheaper. Overall there will be a downward bias which has been required," he said.

At the same event, Indian Overseas Bank Chairman M Narendra told reporters reduction of 25 basis points in the repo rate was expected in the upcoming monetary policy review as inflation had come down.

He said the central bank might also cut cash reserve ratio by 25 basis points as short-term liquidity is tight due to advance tax payments.

The core inflation (manufactured products sans food items), which many consider a key part of the rate of price rise for RBI to take a call on the policy rate, plunged to a 32-month low at 4.49 per cent in November versus 5.19 per cent in the previous month.

Rajan told reporters on the sidelines of the FICCI AGM that the very fact that core inflation came down quite strongly in the latest number is a reason for confidence.

He said the RBI has been saying that because of base effect, it expected inflation would be lower in the early part of the next year.

"So, January-February (inflation should ease). There may be a blip now, but as we go into the next year, some easing of inflation is to be expected," he said.

When asked whether dropping of inflation in November makes a case for RBI to cut the repo rate, he evaded a direct reply, saying, "that is an RBI decision."

However, taking a question from the floor at the FICCI event, he said interest rates may soften as inflation comes down. "Hopefully, with the RBI working on bringing down inflation, things will start looking up in terms of interest rates."

He agreed with the questioner that interest rates in India are high.

"But, they are high because nominal interest rates are high. We have high inflation. In, real terms they are not so high, but still the concerns that industry is borrowing at high nominal interest rates has to be taken into account," he added.

In its October review, the RBI had cut the cash reserve ratio (CRR) 25 basis points to 4.25 per cent, injecting around Rs 17,500 crore of liquidity into the banking system.

However, it had retained repo rate at eight per cent.

On the beleaguered Kingfisher Airlines, the SBI Managing Director said there is no need to panic as long as there are assurances from the airline.    

"Kingfisher has been a good airline at some point of time. They are going through their set of problems. And there is no reason for bankers to panic as long as they say that they are looking for a solution. The assurance only is that they are trying," he said.    

SBI is the lead banker in the 17-lenders consortium that extended Rs 7,000 crore loans to the now grounded Kingfisher.     

The lender has an exposure of Rs 1,500 crore to the Kingfisher Airlines, which has not been serviced since January, 2012.    

Kingfisher has not reported any profit since its inception in 2005. It has debt over Rs 7,000 crore.     

Gupta also said the bank's high non-performing assets (NPAs) are 'temporary'.     

"NPAs continue to be a challenge. But I don't want to put a number to it. I can only tell you that large part of the NPAs is really because of the external economy and I would think that they are temporary only," he said.

SBI's NPAs rose to 5.15 per cent in the second quarter ended September, from 4.19 per cent over the year-ago period because of deteriorating asset quality.   

He said the bank has made adequate provisioning norms.     

"We have been providing in excess of the prudential provisions. Whatever Reserve Bank asked us to provide, we have been providing that, plus a little more." Gupta said.     

The Reserve Bank recently increased the provisioning for standard restructured assets for banks to 2.75 per cent from 2 per cent.

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First Published: Dec 15 2012 | 9:07 PM IST

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