Business Standard

BANKS OPPOSED ANY CHANGE IN MCLR CALCULATIO­N: RBI

- ANUP ROY

Banks are opposed to a move to link the marginal cost of funds-based lending rate to an external, market-linked bench mark, the RBI has revealed ina rare disseminat­ion of feedback on such a move on its website. An internal study group proposed in October 2017 that banks must take into account either of the three external benchmarks— the treasury bill rate, the certificat­e of deposit rate, and the RB I’ s policy rep or ate from April 1,2018. ANUP ROY writes

Banks are opposed to the move to link marginal cost-based lending rate (MCLR) to an external, market-linked benchmark, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has revealed in a rare disseminat­ion of feedback on its website.

While it is standard practice for RBI-appointed committees to prepare their reports and seek feedback, those are not publicly disclosed.

The internal study group, looking at the issue of effective monetary transmissi­on, proposed in October 2017 that banks must take into account either of the three external benchmarks — the treasury bill rate, the certificat­e of deposit (CD) rate and the RBI’s policy repo rate from April 1, 2018. These proposals met with resistance from Day One, with bankers commenting publicly that such linking was not possible when a bank’s deposit rates were not linked to the market rate.

In an addendum on its website, the internal group said such an asymmetry exists in the banking system, as depositors were not ready to invest in floating rate deposits. “The IBA (Indian Banks’ Associatio­n) and banks, in general, have expressed that the MCLR system is working well and it should continue. All banks, barring some foreign ones, are of the view that none of the three external benchmarks recommende­d by the study group can be adopted in the near- to mediumrun, since banks’ funding cost is not related directly to any of the proposed external benchmarks,” the addendum said.

Banks said loans of most lenders were funded primarily by retail deposits and not by the wholesale market, as was the practice abroad. “Therefore, if interest rates on deposits remain sticky, banks cannot lend at rates linked to an external benchmark, which may change every day, unless they manage this interest rate risk well,” the addendum said.

Banks said in the absence of an effectiv interest rate swaps (IRS) market, they cannot hedge the risk, for their profitabil­ity would come under pressure or spreads would be higher than necessary as a compensati­on for interest rate risk.

“Banks have also highlighte­d that in the absence of a reliable term money market, use of any benchmark would leave the discretion on pricing the term premiums with the banks,” the paper said.

Rather, the banks proposed: “More ideal benchmark could be constructe­d based on deposit rates of the banking system as a whole.”

Banks also said the reset period for computatio­n of MCLR could not always be fixed on a quarterly basis. The current practice was to match the tenor of the loan with a one-year reset period, thereby addressing the interest rate risk in the banking book. “Moreover, Indian Accounting Standards (IndAS) and Internatio­nal Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) also suggest compatibil­ity between tenor of the loan and reset period. Even if an external benchmark is adopted, the reset period should be linked to the tenor of the underlying external benchmark.”

While longer reset periods increase transmissi­on lags, shorter resets increase interest rate risk for banks. Besides, customers would be averse to such frequent revision on their interest payment obligation, too.

Banks added “in a deregulate­d interest rate environmen­t, spread over the benchmark — be it internal or external — must be the exclusive domain of commercial banks.” The spread could not be fixed forever for a variety of loans, as credit risk premium was time-varying and expected credit losses do change over time. “According to banks, with the switchover to an external benchmark, the spread decisions may get even more complex, because of the uncertaint­y about managing interest rate risk, which may partly influence spreads.”

Banks preferred market competitio­n alone to lead to convergenc­e of spreads, and regulatory prescripti­ons on whether the spread should change or remain fixed would not be in sync with the spirit behind deregulati­on.

Banks, therefore, preferred to continue with the MCLR regime, seeking more time to enable a fuller assessment of its performanc­e on transmissi­on. “One and a half years, according to banks, is too short a period to assess the effectiven­ess of a new regime, given the normal lags in transmissi­on.”

Rather, banks voluntaril­y sought a sunset date for base rate customers to be converged to MCLR, something that the RBI policy advocated in its sixth bi-monthly monetary policy review on February 7.

 ?? ILLUSTRTIO­N: AJAY MOHANTY ??
ILLUSTRTIO­N: AJAY MOHANTY

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