The Borneo Post

State Bank of India cuts lending rate by 90 bps across maturities

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STATE Bank of India ( SBI), the country’s biggest lender by assets, said it had cut its lending rates by 90 basis points (bps) for maturities ranging from overnight to threeyear tenures, after experienci­ng a surge in deposits.

After the move, its so- called overnight marginal cost of fundsbased lending rate ( MCLR) fell to 7.75 per cent from 8.65 per cent, while three-year loan rates will now be 8.15 per cent from 9.05 per cent previously. Lending rates were also cut across other maturities effective yesterday.

Banks have received an estimated 14.9 trillion rupees ( US$ 219.30 billion) in old 500, and 1,000 rupees notes from depositors since the government in November 8 unexpected­ly banned the banknotes in a bid to fight counterfei­ting and bring unaccounte­d cash to the economy.

That had raised expectatio­ns banks would have room to cut lending rates, which is seen as vital to increase credit growth and spark a revival in private investment­s.

Although India’s gross domestic product grew 7.3 per cent in the July- September quarter from a year earlier, the fastest pace of growth among large economies, much of that has been led by consumer demand.

Lower lending rates will be welcome by the Reserve Bank of India, which has cut the policy rate by 175 bps since the start of 2015 but has felt banks were being too slow in cutting their lending rates.

The SBI move also comes after Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Saturday admonished banks to “keep the poor, the lower middle class, and the middle class at the focus of their activities,” and to act with the “public interest” in mind.

Modi’s comments were made in a special New Year’s eve speech in which he defended his ban on higher value cash notes and announced a slew of incentives including channellin­g more credit to the poor and the middle class. — Reuters

 ??  ?? A crane carries a container (top right) from a ship at the PNC container terminal at the Busan New Port in Busan, about 420 kilometres (261 miles) southeast of Seoul. South Korean exports in December rose for a second straight month, data showed,...
A crane carries a container (top right) from a ship at the PNC container terminal at the Busan New Port in Busan, about 420 kilometres (261 miles) southeast of Seoul. South Korean exports in December rose for a second straight month, data showed,...

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