Indian Bank's home loan rates up
Feb. 2: Indian Bank has
raised its home loan rates by 0.25 percentage
points from February 1 following a 25-basis-point
hike by the Reserve Bank of India in its key
short-term lending rate on January 31.
Indian Bank has raised its benchmark prime
lending rate (PLR) by 50 basis points to 12.50
per cent from February 1.
Some other banks are also expected to increase
their home loan rates. On Wednesday, Yes Bank
chairman and managing director Rana Kapoor
said the bank would increase its PLR by 50
basis points from February 1. ICICI Bank is
also contemplating an increase in its benchmark
PLR.
Since a bank's floating rates for retail loans,
including housing loan, are directly linked
with their respective prime lending rates,
once a bank increases its PLR, the rates for
retail loans also go up in the same proportion.
"Banks' borrowing from RBI becomes costlier
when the apex bank raises its repo rate. It
is also a signal from the Reserve Bank for
the commercial banks to increase their lending
rates in tandem. We have followed the regulator
and raised our rates," said K.C. Chakrabarty,
chairman and managing director of Indian Bank.
Punjab National Bank may also increase its
home loan and other personal loan rates. "We
will take a decision in a day or two,"
S.C. Gupta, chairman and managing director
of Punjab National Bank, said.
However, .P. Bhatt, chairman and managing
director of the State Bank of India, said
it would not need to increase its benchmark
PLR, as the bank had already factored in the
possibility of a repo rate hike when it last
raised its BPLR to 11.50 per cent on December
26.
"The rate hikes will be bank-specific
depending on a bank's profitability and liquidity
positions," Gupta said.
Indian Bank has also raised its other lending
rates by 50 basis points. The bank is coming
out with its initial public offering on February
5. "The offer is for 8.59 crore shares
and the price band has been fixed at Rs 77
-91 a share," said M.S. Sundararajan,
executive director of Indian Bank.
The government holds a 100 per cent stake
in the bank. After the IPO, it will come down
to 80 per cent.
Indian Bank's equity capital before the initial
public offering stands at Rs 343.82 crore
after the capital restructuring, in which
the bank's accumulated loss of Rs 3,830.14
crore was set off against its original capital
base of Rs 4,573.96 crore. It then converted
Rs 400 crore as perpetual cumulative bonds
issued to the government at a coupon interest
rate of 8 per cent.
The bank is planning to set up branches in
Hong Kong and Dubai. Indian Bank already has
full-fledged branch offices in Colombo and
Singapore.
Source: Telegraph India