SBI spares edu, home loans from PLR
hike
February 20, 2007: State Bank of India (SBI),
the country’s largest bank, today raised
its prime lending rate (PLR) for the second
time in less than three months, but decided
to spare existing home and educational loan
borrowers from the hike.
SBI has raised its PLR by 75 basis points
to 12.25 per cent with effect from February
20 and also announced it will offer the highest
interest rate of 9.5 per cent among commercial
banks for deposits with maturity of four years
to less than five years.
The bank said existing housing loans up to
Rs 15 lakh which qualify as priority sector
lending and existing educational loans have
been excluded from the hike in PLR and the
necessary adjustment in the spreads above/below
the PLR would be made.
Existing and new agricultural loans up to
Rs 3 lakh and new educational loans up to
Rs 4 lakh have also been exempted from the
hike.
SBI Managing Director T S Bhattacharya said,
“We were lending at up to PLR minus
to 2-2.5 percentage points. Now, we will lend
at nothing less than 10 per cent since deposit
rates are also in double digits. The real
estate sector will be hit the most.”
SBI decided to offer 9.5 per cent interest
on deposits so as not to depend on bulk deposits
for resources with rates on the large deposits
having already touched 10 per cent.
SBI’s net interest margin has been under
pressure because of rising cost of deposits.
Its NIM had shrunk to 3.29 per cent in October-December
2006 from 3.50 per cent a year earlier.
Source: Business Standard