RBI mandate credit negative for banks: Moody's

RBI mandate credit negative for banks: Moodys
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The Reserve Bank of India mandating banks to link certain loans to the external benchmark-based interest rate from October 1 is credit negative to the lenders as it will limit their flexibility in managing risks, Moody's Investors Service said on Tuesday.

New Delhi: The Reserve Bank of India mandating banks to link certain loans to the external benchmark-based interest rate from October 1 is credit negative to the lenders as it will limit their flexibility in managing risks, Moody's Investors Service said on Tuesday.

Last week, the RBI had stated that banks are not satisfactorily transferring the cuts in policy interest rates to borrowers as it asked lenders to mandatorily link all new floating rate personal or retail loans and floating rate loans to micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs) to an external benchmark.

The central bank has so far this year cut interest rate by 110 basis points, but lenders have transmitted only a part of it to borrowers in the form of a lower cost of taking loans.

"This is credit negative for India's banks as it will limit their flexibility in managing interest rate risk," Moody's said in a statement.

This new external reference rate could either be the repo rate, three-month or six-month treasury bills, or any other benchmark market interest rate published by Financial Benchmark India Pvt Ltd, an entity that administers benchmark rates.

Banks will be free to decide the spread over the external benchmark. Subsequently, credit risk premiums may undergo change when a borrower's credit assessment also undergoes a substantial change, as agreed upon in the loan contract, Moody's said.

Furthermore, other components of spreads, including operating costs, can be altered once every three years. It said banks currently benchmark floating rate loans against the marginal cost of funds-based lending rates (MCLR).

With changes in lending rates aligned to changes in the cost of funding, banks are able to mitigate their interest rate risk.

"Under the new rules, this direct linkage between lending rates and funding costs will no longer exist. This will expose banks to asymmetrical movements in the cost of funding and loan yields, thus exposing them to interest rate risks," it said.

Moody's said that under the new regime, while the floating-rate loan book will get re-priced, only the non-CASA (current and savings accounts) deposits will see a re-pricing on deposits.

"This will cause volatility to banks' net interest margins (NIMs), with NIMs rising when interest rates increase and declining when interest rates fall.

This volatility in NIMs will translate into volatility in the overall profitability of banks," it said.

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