New loan product for affordable homes

Updated - January 12, 2018 at 04:02 PM.

The loan will be given at a fixed rate of 8.50 per cent for two years. After the two-year period, the loan will be linked to the MCLR, with the current spread being maintained: SBI chief

For the affordable homes segment in the up to ₹30-lakh category, State Bank of India has brought in a new loan product, which carries fixed interest rate for the first two years. In the subsequent years, it turns to a floating rate loan.

“We will give this loan at a fixed rate of 8.50 per cent for two years. After the two-year period, the loan will be linked to the marginal cost of funds-based lending rate (MCLR), with the current spread being maintained,” said Chairman Arundhati Bhattacharya even as she emphasised that this loan product is not a ‘teaser loan’.

The SBI chief explained that teaser loan is one where the interest rate is fixed for the initial period, but the rate for the following years is not known.

“Here (SBI’s new loan product), it is nothing of the sort. Here, it is very clearly said that this is the spread above the MCLR at which the interest rate is fixed. At the end of two years the spread will be the same, only the MCLR linkage will change.

“So, this is a fixed rate product. I don’t think there will be any issues on this. Should there be any queries from the regulator, we should be able to convince them,” she added.

Bhattacharya said the per annum saving on equated monthly instalment (EMI) on this home loan would be ₹19,356. This works out to a saving of ₹5,80,680 over the entire 30-year tenor of the loan.

On the bank’s regular loan of up to ₹50 lakh, it will charge 8.60 per cent interest. On this loan, the savings to the customer on the monthly EMI would be ₹2,333. The per annum saving will be ₹27,996 and over a period of 30 years the saving will be ₹8,39,880.

“In our book, the average loan size of a home loan is ₹30 lakh. So, even for an average (loan) size, your saving is more than ₹1,630 per month, which is not a small amount of saving,” she said.

Bhattacharya said that if existing customers would like to move into the prevailing spread and MCLR, they can do so at a switching fee of a minimum ₹10,000 or a maximum of 0.5 per cent of the loan amount.

“We are giving the facility of adding the switching fee to the loan amount so that they don’t have to pay anything upfront,” she added.

Published on January 2, 2017 16:57