It’s June, but lending rates aren’t falling

There is no sign of credit rates coming down... banks are becoming richer, but businesses are suffering

  • Shekhar Golchha, Senior vice-president, FNCCI

Kathmandu, June 8

It’s the second week of June, the time of the year when government spending starts gathering pace, raising deposit level at banks. This is also the time of the year when banks put the brakes on lending, as books must be closed in mid-July when the fiscal year ends. This combination of higher deposit inflow and low credit disbursement generally exerts downward pressure on lending rates.

This year too deposit stock has gone up and credit growth has slowed. Yet sky-high lending rates have not come down, disappointing borrowers, especially businesses.

In about one-month period till June 1, commercial banks collected Rs 62 billion in fresh deposit and disbursed Rs 50 billion in loans, shows the latest report of Nepal Bankers’ Association.

Deposit raised in the one-month period accounted for 25 per cent of the deposit collected by banks in the 10-and-a-half-month period since mid-July when the fiscal year began. This shows deposit collection has lately gathered pace. On the other hand, loans released in the one-month period accounted for 15.5 per cent of the total credit disbursement since mid-July. This means loans are not being issued as rapidly as in the previous months when credit disbursement had surpassed deposit collection.

The combination of higher deposit flow and lower credit disbursement, however, has not reduced lending rates. “And there is no sign of credit rates coming down,” said Shekhar Golchha, senior vice-president of the Federation of Nepalese Chambers of Commerce and Industry, the largest private sector umbrella body.

Commercial banks are charging interest as high as 24.7 per cent on loans, with Century Commercial Bank topping the list. Close on the heels are Mega Bank (22 per cent) and Nepal Bangladesh Bank (21.4 per cent). The maximum lending rate of nine other banks exceeds 18 per cent, an analysis of lending rates published on websites of banks shows.

“Can the economy afford such high-cost fund for rapid and sustained growth as envisaged by the government?” wonders Golchha, a leading industrialist.

Enterprises have long been complaining about high lending rates, which, they say, have inflated debt servicing cost. The businesses cannot transfer all of the additional cost to consumers, as they must keep prices competitive to gain an edge. This is squeezing their profits.

“So, banks are becoming richer, but businesses are suffering,” said Golchha, pointing to return on equities of Nepali banks, which stood as high as 39 per cent in the third quarter of this fiscal. “This is one of the highest in the world,” he added.

A number of bankers that THT talked to said lending rates were high because of ‘soaring credit demand’.

“One of the reasons for this is expansion in the base of borrowers,” said Himalayan Bank CEO Ashoke Rana. “In the past, many small businesses used to bank with smaller financial institutions. Today, many of them are our clients.”

But entrepreneurs such as Golchha cite ‘protection provided to banks’ as the main reason for runaway lending rates. “Look at the policy on interest spread, which allows banks to set lending rates by adding a premium of five percentage points to deposit rates,” said Golchha. “Also, nobody reminds banks to reduce lending rates even when it’s time to.”

Does the private sector think it has become the victim of regulatory capture — the tendency of regulators to act in the interest of businesses that they should be regulating? It’s not clear. But Golchha said, “The state must ensure equality of opportunity and healthy competition. Otherwise, businesses cannot survive.”

NRB Spokesperson Narayan Prasad Paudel said discussions were underway with representatives of the private sector and commercial banks in the run-up to the formulation of the new Monetary Policy. “I can’t say what the policy will include, but we are closely monitoring developments in the banking sector,” he said.

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