Decoding banks deposit-lending rate action

Shreya_Anaokar Shreya Anaokar Shreya Anaokar 15th December 2022 - 08:37 am
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In the recent monetary policy by RBI, the RBI hiked the repo rate by 90bps to 4.9% and the withdrawal of the accommodative stance has raised questions with respect to banks’ NIMs and earnings trajectory in immediate, near, and medium terms.

How are banks immediately reacting to repo rate hikes?

Leading banks have raised MCLR by 25-65bps since Jan’22. HDFC Bank and Kotak have taken the lead with a 65bps hike (to 7.85%) followed by SBI and Axis by 40bps (to 7.4% and 7.75%, respectively), IDFC First Bank by 25bps each, and RBL by 45bps. EBLR (external benchmark lending rate) particularly repo linked for home loans has witnessed a similar rise as repo rate with leading banks’ home loan rates now being revised to 7.5-7.6% (compared to 6.6-6.7%) prior to the rate hike cycle.

Since Jan’22, SBI has raised retail term deposits in <2 years bucket by 20bps, 2-3 years by 25bps, and >3 years by 10-15bps. Similarly, HDFC Bank and Axis have raised in <2 years bucket by 35bps and 15bps respectively, in >2 years bucket by 20-25bps. Kotak has been at the forefront, hiking Term Deposit rates by 45-50bps across 1-5 years bucket. IDFC FIRST Bank, too, has increased retail term deposits in < 1-year bucket by 100bps and in 1-2 years bucket by 75bps. Bandhan has increased term deposit rates by 50bps in 1-2 years bucket.

Bulk deposit rates have witnessed the sharpest spike of 100-170bps in the one-year bucket. In less than a year bucket, the differential between retail and bulk deposit rates is entirely bridged compared to >100bps variance earlier. In fact, in the 3-6 months bucket, bulk deposit rates are at 80-125bps premium to retail deposit rates compared to similar rates being offered earlier till Dec’21.

The median savings deposit rate declined during the rate cut cycle by 60bps from 3.5% in Jan’19 to 2.9% in Mar’22. Hence, it will be raised as well with a lag in the rising interest rate scenario. Kotak has taken a lead by increasing the savings rate by 50bps to 4% for >Rs.5 million deposit balance. Also, Federal Bank has raised the savings rate for the balance above Rs.50 million to 4%. IDFC FIRST Bank has been an early mover, raising the savings rate in May itself by 100bps to 6% for a savings balance of Rs.1-5 million and for Rs.10-50 million.

G-sec yields surged 75bps since Mar’22 to 7.6% and corporate bond yields by >80bps. AAA corporate bond spreads over G-sec have remained stable at ~40bps with BBB- corporate spreads around 4.5%.

What does a deposit rate hike mean for the cost of deposit trajectory evaluating banks’ deposit profile?

- For leading private banks, ~20% of deposits are bulk in nature for HDFC bank and Axis,  23% for Bandhan, 15-16% for IDFC First bank, and 10-12% for SBI and Kotak. Retail term deposits constitute 30-40% of deposits for most of them.

- The proportion of current account deposits (not impacted by rate hike) is amongst the highest for Kotak at >20%, followed by 18% for IDFC First Bank, 15% for HDFC Bank, Axis, and RBL, and 6% for SBI.

- Savings deposits constitute 40% for Kotak and 30-32% for IDFCF Bank and Federal Bank and will be impacted by the rate hike affected them. Other banks have not yet tweaked their savings deposit rate.

How is a bank credit portfolio positioned for effective rate transmission?

- Proportion of EBR-linked loans (of the floating rate loans) for private bank is as high as 57% as of Dec’21 (compared 43% / 17.5% in Mar’21 / Mar’20) while that for PSU banks was at 28% in Dec’21 (vs 20.3% / 4.8% in Mar’21 / Mar’20). More than 60% of PSU banks’ floating-rate loans are still linked to MCLR.

- Amongst banks, 50% of the overall loan portfolio of Kotak is linked to EBLR, followed by HDFC Bank and Axis at 39%, and SBI at 34%.

- SBI and IndusInd have a relatively higher proportion of loans linked to MCLR at 41% and 47%, respectively.

- The proportion of loans of fixed-rate nature is ~45% for IIB and HDFCB and 30-32% for Axis and Kotak.

Banks have also raised deposit rates across maturity buckets with peak retail Term Deposits rates being at 5.75-5.9%. With further repo rate hikes in the offing, rates will be further revised upwards in the coming months

 

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Disclaimer: Investment/Trading is subject to market risk, past performance doesn’t guarantee future performance. The risk of trading/investment loss in securities markets can be substantial. Also, the above report is compiled from data available on public platforms.

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