Home Loan Defaults 'bite' banks
APRIL 28, 2007: Faced with an increase in
defaults on home loans, banks are beginning
to feel the 'bite' after growing their portfolios
at breakneck pace in the last three years,
according to State Bank of India Chairman
O P Bhatt.
"The capacity of Indian banks to identify
and price risk is not adequate and in many
cases absent"."The balance sheet
may show net NPAs (non-performing assets or
sticky loans) coming down, but that is more
due to write-offs and provisioning. The highest
rise (in NPAs) is in real estate, particularly
housing loans. This is beginning to bite,"
Bhatt said.
For SBI, the gross NPAs in the home loan
portfolio rose 50 basis points to nearly 4
per cent in 2006-07. SBI's home loan portfolio
grew 20.2 per cent in April-December 2006
to reach Rs 36,475 crore. Housing loans account
for over 52 per cent of its retail advances.
Citigroup Chief Executive (India) Sanjay
Nayar and Standard Chartered India CEO Neeraj
Swaroop agreed with Bhatt's prognosis about
home and SME loans, though Swaroop clarified
that his bank had not suffered a rise in home
loan defaults.
On business growth estimates for 2007-08,
Swaroop said the economy is showing signs
of moderation and in keeping with it the growth
in advances is expected to be 25 per cent,
against 28 per cent last year. Deposit growth
was expected in the range of 20-22 per cent
in 2007-08.
Source: rediff