SBI links pricing of loans, deposits to repo rate of RBI

SBI Representative image | Reuters

In a first-of-its kind move that will ensure faster monetary transmission, the nation's largest lender, State Bank of India, on Friday announced linking of its savings deposit rates and short-term loans to the RBI's repo rate.

The new rates, linked to the external benchmark rate, would be effective May 1, SBI said in a late-evening statement.

The move would help speed up the monetary transmission process wherein lenders pass on RBI's rate cuts as well as hikes to borrowers. The RBI has been unhappy with delays in transmission of rate cut benefits by the banks.

SBI said it would exempt savings bank account holders with balances up to Rs 1 lakh and borrowers with cash credit accounts and overdraft limits up to Rs 1 lakh from linkage to the repo rate.

This would insulate small deposit-holders and small borrowers from the movement of external benchmarks.

"To address the concern of rigidities in the balance sheet structure and address the issue of quick transmission of changes in the RBI policy rates, effective May 1, 2019, we've taken the lead in linking key pricing decisions for savings bank deposits and short-term loans to the repo rate of the RBI," SBI said.

Savings bank deposits above Rs 1 lakh constitute around 33 per cent of SBI's total deposit books, SBI Managing Director P.K. Gupta said. Currently, the bank is offering interest rate of 3.50 per cent for savings bank deposits up to Rs 1 crore and 4 per cent for deposits above Rs 1 crore, he added.

"This is a major policy decision we have taken. A 25 basis points reduction in the repo rate can result in a 7-8 basis points cut in our Marginal Cost-Based Lending Rate (MCLR) now," Gupta told PTI.

The new regime would be applicable only for those account holders with a balance of over Rs 1 lakh in their accounts. Currently, repo rate is 6.25 per cent.

Also, the move will, in fact, see large depositors losing on the interest rate as, at present, a savings bank holder gets paid 4 percent per annum, after the RBI under D. Subbarao had deregulated the pricing of deposit rates.

SBI said it would link the savings bank deposits, with balance above Rs 1 lakh to the repo rate with current effective rate being 3.50 per cent per annum, which is 2.75 per cent below the present repo rate.

The bank has also linked all cash credit accounts and overdrafts with limits above Rs 1 lakh to the repo rate plus a spread of 2.25 percent.

The risk premia over and above this floor rate of 8.50 percent will be based on the risk profile of the borrower, as is the current practice, SBI said.

In a note, Anil Gupta, vice-president and head of financial sector ratings at ICRA, said "linking the savings deposit rates with policy rate will help faster repricing of liabilities for banks and help protect their profit margins".

"We expect more banks, especially all the public sector ones, and a few large private banks to follow suit, which will also be in line with RBI requirements to link these rates to external benchmarks," he added.

India Ratings director and head financial institutions Prakash Agarwal said "the move will help the bank reduce volatility in its margins".

Despite the recent RBI rate cut, banks were struggling to reduce their lending and deposit rates as the deposit accretion continued to lag behind credit growth. Cutting deposits rate was not a feasible option amid slowing deposit growth.

Earlier, banks were always slow to pass on the entire benefit of RBI rate cuts to borrowers, thus delaying the monetary transmission process. This had governors from the time of Subbarao chiding banks for the delay.

This disconnect had forced Subbarao to end the Benchmark Prime Lending Rate (BPLR) regime, which was very opaque and usher in the bank rate. But this too did not have the desired effect as the new pricing regime was opened only to new borrowers and the existing borrowers, who are the vast majority, lost out.

Following this, his successor as RBI governor, Raghuram Rajan, made bankers change the model and ushered in the base rate regime, again without much success on the monetary transmission front.

Then the last governor, Urjit Patel, ended the base rate regime and launched the MCLR regime. Again banks were slow to move on the transmission front, forcing him to announce that from April 2019, all loan pricing will move onto an external benchmark.

However, present Governor Shaktikanta Das has lifted the deadline given the poor balance sheets of banks.