
SBI will not raise lending rate
The lender believes the move will make it uncompetitive.
The country's largest lender State Bank of India (SBI) said Wednesday it was not in favour of hiking lending rates despite the Reserve Bank's 12th consecutive rate increase last month.
"We had contemplated that (interest rate hike). Right now indications are that the margins are quite robust and the net interest income for the September quarter is also pretty good. That is why we didn't think it was necessary to hike the rates," SBI Chairman Pratip Chaudhuri told reporters.
Additionally, "a hike in rates will also make us uncompetitive," he said, adding early next week SBI's asset liability committee (Alco) will meet to take a final call.
A majority of the lenders have refrained from hiking rates after the RBI hiked its key rates by 25 basis points in a mid-quarter policy review on September 16.
Two mid-sized private lenders, ING Vysya and Dhanlaxmi, are the only ones that have passed on the rate increase to their customers following the RBI move.
SBI's base rate, or the minimum rate of lending, stands at a competitive 10 per cent following the increase effected after the July policy hike of 50 bps.
View the full story in Money Control.