HomeNewsBusinessEconomyNew base rate math: Impact on aam aadmi and corporates

New base rate math: Impact on aam aadmi and corporates

The move toward marginal cost of funds methodology for interest rate on advances is aimed at ensuring faster transmission of changes in RBI policy rates to banks' lending rates

December 22, 2015 / 15:47 IST
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The Reserve Bank last Thursday announced a new base rate formula — moving toward marginal cost of funds methodology for interest rate on advances, which will be effective from April 1, 2016. This move is aimed at ensuring faster transmission of changes in RBI policy rates to banks' lending rates. But what does it mean for borrowers?

While this may seem beneficial to borrowers in a falling interest rate scenario, when rates go up, the increase too will be immediately passed on to borrowers.

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A Business Standard report titled 'RBI's rate diktat cuts both ways' says the biggest impact will be felt by home loans borrowers because these are long-tenure loans. There will also be an impact on mortgage loans. Banks usually prefer to increase or decrease the tenure of the loan rather than tinker with interest rates. But in case of longer-tenure loans, the room to do so (especially increasing the tenure) is limited. In such a scenario, borrowers may have to pay higher EMI if and when RBI increases its repo rate.

But the impact on largely fixed-rate loans such as automobile and personal loans may be limited, and also in the case of hybrid home loans, where rates are partly fixed and partly floating, that on the floating portion should adhere to the MCLR guidelines, according to RBI, the BS report states.