Do More With Reuters
Partner Services

SBI sees rates rising in six months

Mon Jul 13, 2009 4:25pm IST
 
Email | Print | | Single Page
[-] Text [+]

KOLKATA (Reuters) - State Bank of India, the country's top lender, sees interest rates rising by up to 100 basis points in six months if cash conditions tighten, its chairman said on Monday.

Banks are now flush with cash but this could come under pressure after the government last week announced record borrowings of 4.5 trillion rupees ($92 billion) in 2009/10 and as economic activity picks up in the coming months.

"There is a possibility of interest rates going up by 25 to 100 basis points, if liquidity is not managed well when the busy season picks up," O.P. Bhatt told reporters on the sidelines of a banking seminar.

He was referring to the second half of the fiscal year that began in April.

Commercial bank lending rates have fallen by about 200 basis points since last October after the central bank slashed its main lending rate by 425 basis points to lift a slowing economy.

"I don't see interest rate going down further," Bhatt said. "Inflation is going up, government borrowing will increase and liquidity in the system would come down, so in the next 3-6 months we could see interest rate firming up again."

Indian bank loan growth slowed to around 15 percent in June from about 30 percent in 2007/08, but is expected to pick up in the coming months as economic activity revives.

State Bank, which along with its associates controls a quarter of Indian bank loans and deposits, has not yet seen demand for loans picking up despite low interest rates.

The bank, which offers home loans for as low as 8 percent and clutch of other advances for small and medium firms and auto loans well below its benchmark rate, has seen only marginal loan growth in the June quarter from January-March, Bhatt said.  Continued...

Britain's Prime Minister Gordon Brown speaks, as finance minister Alistair Darling listens at the G20 Finance Ministers meeting in St. Andrews, Scotland. REUTERS/POOL New
UK joins G20 push for world levy on banks

Britain threw its weight behind proposals to impose a global levy on banks to fund future bailouts and called on the G20 to work toward a $100 billion deal to meet the cost of climate change.  Full Article | Full Coverage 

Photo

special coverage

Photo
Central Banks Cautious

Reuters tracks the policies of the world's top central banks as the debate over global economic recovery rages on.  Full Coverage 

Market Update

  • IndiaIndia
  • USUS
  • UKUK
  • Asia
  • Most Actives

column

Nipun Mehta
Nipun Mehta, SG Private Banking
India - planning the road to recovery

There needs to be an acceptable balance created between education & healthcare and infrastructure spend.  Full Article 

SHOWCASE

Robot Asimo

Snapshots of Honda Motor's humanoid robot Asimo  Slideshow 

 
Marketing Strategy
Marketing Strategy

Companies are now using direct marketing methods to sell their products.  Full Article 

 
Out of Woods?
Out of the Woods?

Analysis - CIT's bankruptcy exit fraught with uncertainty  Full Article 

 
Exit Plans
Exit Plans

Factbox - Stimulus exit plans for Asia-Pacific's big 5 economies  Full Article