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Home loan interest rates: What external benchmark means for your floating rate loan

If the benchmark is external, the bank does not have any control or influence, and the reset of loan rates will be more equitable and fair.

January 24, 2019 / 08:43 IST
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Joydeep Sen

Let us see how the interest rate on your loan works. In a fixed rate loan, let’s say a fixed rate home loan, the rate of interest is fixed for the entire tenure, unless there is a clause in the fine print that allows the lender to change the interest rate even in a so-called fixed rate loan. If it is a fixed rate home loan in the true sense, the rate of interest will not change.

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In a floating rate loan, the rate of interest is ‘floating’ because it is not fixed; it varies over the life of the loan. There is a benchmark, which is the reference point for determining the rate, and there is a spread, which is the additional component that you have to pay over the benchmark. For example, if the benchmark is the bank’s Marginal Cost of Funds-based Lending Rate (MCLR), then the MCLR plus spread is the rate of interest to be paid.

There will be a reset period e.g. if it is annual reset, the rate of interest will be reset with the benchmark every year. The benchmark rate itself is variable, which is why the rate is called floating.