• Key Highlights: 
  • RBI reduces risk weight of home loans and provided 0.25% standard provision
  • Bankers sees RBI's move on lowering risk weight positive for home loans
  • Housing loans accounts 12% of the total credit disbursed by banks 

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has lowered the risk weights and standard asset provisioning on housing loans in selective loan size category.

COMMERCIAL BREAK
SCROLL TO CONTINUE READING

Here are the detail of RBI's move on home loan rates.

ALSO READ: Bi-Monthly monetary policy: RBI pushes for affordable housing but will interest rates come down?

Largest PSU lender State Bank of India's chairperson Arundhati Bhattacharya also said, “The decision to reduce the risk weights for home loans over Rs. 30 lakh category will release capital for the banking industry and is a positive move."

SBI following this move also trim down interest rates for its home loans above Rs 75 lakh. Revised interest rates will be 8.55% per annum for salaried women borrowers and 8.60% per annum for others. 

ALSO READ: After RBI's changes in risk-weight; SBI reduces home loan rates by another 10 basis points

Rajnish Kumar, MD, National Banking, SBI said, “Taking a cue from the recent RBI reduction in risk weightage on home loans, SBI is passing on the benefit to its customers by reducing its interest rates on home loan above Rs. 75 lakhs."

However, as per Alka Anbarasu and Jason Sin, analysts at Moody's Investors Service, the move is credit negative for Indian banking sector because lower capital requirements will weaken banks’ protection from the housing sector, which has grown rapidly in recent years, and will encourage greater lending.

"Over the next 12-18 months, we expect overall system credit growth to remain muted given banks’ weak balance sheets amid continued asset quality deterioration, " said analysts at Moody's.

At the end of March 2017, annual bank credit growth was 7.6%, down from 10.2% the previous year. 

Further the duo at Moody's added, “This growth is occurring as non-bank finance companies increasingly target the home-loan segment, posing greater downside risk if there is a correction in property prices.”

Although lower risk weights would boost sluggish credit growth while limiting the effect on banks’ capital position, Moody's analysts believe competition for housing loans has significantly increased among banks and non-bank finance companies. 

After carrying out discussion with banks, Moody's have confirmed that some areas of weaknesses have emerged in the luxury property segment following the Indian government’s demonetisation.