Indian Banks Restrict Home Lending
MARCH 13, 2007: Banks have reduced their
pace of providing home loans. The latest figures
by RBI reveal that from October 2005 to October
2006, banks granted Rs 51,191 crore as home
loans as compared to Rs 60, 495 crore from
June 2005 to June 2006.
HFCs or Housing finance companies have also
reported a decline in disbursal. In the fiscal
2005-06, HFCs disbursed a total sum of around
Rs 27,412 crore as housing finance. On the
other hand, the amount was approx Rs 26,043
crore in the fiscal 2004-05. According to
the latest annual report of National Housing
Bank (NHB), in 2005-06, the total disbursement
by SCBs (scheduled commercial banks) was nearly
Rs 58,623 crore as compared to Rs 50,398 crore
in 2004-05.
This indicates that the total growth in housing
loan during the period 2005-2006 was just
12.55%. Housing finance companies grew at
a rate of 5.26% while banks showed a growth
rate of 16.32% as compared to last years'
25-30%.
Also, lending for individuals is not an 'affordable'
affair any more as banks have also increased
their lending rates. It goes with housing
finance too. Both specialized housing finance
operators and banks have taken their loan
rates for home loans a few scores higher over
the past twelve months.
However, the demand for home loans will not
sag much. The reason is a substantial rise
in the income-generating capability of Indian
youth. So this particular section will keep
the housing loan demand high and increased
lending rates can only shelve their plans
for some time.
RNCOS report "Opportunities in Indian
Housing Sector (2006-2007)" says that easy
availability of home loans has been a major
growth-fuelling factor in Indian housing sector,
despite the recent hike in interest rates.
The research report also discusses the outlook
of Indian housing sector, role of housing
finance companies, growth of housing finance
market, housing finance disbursements, and
housing loan disbursements by public sector
banks.
Source: Indiatimes