Business Standard

‘Interest on interest’ is the lesser burden

Simple interest accumulate­d during moratorium remains the bigger concern for borrowers

- SANJAY KUMAR SINGH & BINDISHA SARANG

The government has announced it will take upon itself the burden of ‘interest on interest’ incurred by borrowers during the moratorium period. Loans of up to ~2 crore will be eligible.

Suppose you had a loan of ~1 lakh at the start of the moratorium period. The interest rate is 10 per cent and repayment period is 5 years. Your EMI is ~2,027, of which ~1,361 is the principal component and ~667 the interest. “When you avail of a moratorium, you don’t repay the principal component of the EMI, so the loan outstandin­g remains the same. And you also don’t pay the interest component, so that gets added to the outstandin­g,” says Aditya Mishra, founder and CEO of Switchme, a digital home loan broker.

In this example, the outstandin­g at the end of the first month of the moratorium will be ~1,00,667. In the second month, the EMI will be calculated not on ~1 lakh but on ~1,00,667. Again, the principal will not be repaid. The interest component in the second month will be higher than ~667. This process will repeat for the rest of the period.

Another way to see this is that your loan will have simple and compound interest. The difference — what ‘interest on interest’ amounts to — is what the government will pay.

Since simple interest keeps accumulati­ng, your outstandin­g at the end of the moratorium will be higher than at the start. “Remember that the interest itself is not being waived. Only the interest on interest is being waived. And the interest component is the bigger burden,” says Mishra.

Do not do anything for the present. Once the Supreme Court pronounces its decision, the government will, in all likelihood, provide further details of the relief. You will then have to see how your bank operationa­lises all of this. Borrowers who wish to restructur­e their loans should be careful.

“Read the fine print of the restructur­ed loan agreement because each bank will have its own policy. Watch out for any hidden charges,” says Raj Khosla, founder and managing director of Mymoneyman­tra.

The best way to neutralise the higher interest burden to arise because of the moratorium will be to pre-pay the loan. “Use the bounce-back method, that is, aim to pre-pay up to 120 per cent of EMIS you had deferred within 12 months from September 2020. If you had deferred five EMIS, pre-pay six EMIS over and above your regular EMIS. This will erase the burden of the additional interest you will otherwise have to pay,” says Adhil Shetty, CEO, Bankbazaar.

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