Drop in home loans upto 50%

Housing loan growth rate drops by more than half
RBI report High interests & property prices subdue economic activity; personal loan rise dips from 31% to 13%; non-food credit expansion down from 29% to 22%

APRIL 29: With interest rates remaining high and real estate prices yet to show any decline, the growth in demand for housing loans is on the decline. The growth in housing loans, which was 25.8 per cent (Rs 46,019 crore) during the period ended February 16, 2007, has declined to 12 per cent (Rs 26,930 crore) during the period ended February 15, 2008, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has said. The outstanding housing loans as on February 15, 2008, is Rs 251,688 crore.

According to the RBI report on Monetary and Macroeconomic Developments, credit growth is slackening. The expansion in bank credit to the commercial sector moderated during fiscal 2007-08 and remained within the Reserve Bank’s policy projection in April 2007, after a strong pace of credit expansion for three consecutive years. Non-food credit by scheduled commercial banks (SCBs) expanded by 22.3 per cent (Rs 4,19,425 crore) year-on-year as on March 28, 2008, compared with 28.5 per cent (Rs 4,18,282 crore) a year ago.

The personal loan segment showed slower growth during the year. While personal loans witnessed a rise of 30.6 per cent to Rs 104,225 crore during the period ended February 16, 2007, the rise declined to Rs 58,669 crore, a growth of 13.2 per cent. The growth in loans to the real estate sector declined to 26.7 per cent (Rs 11,361 crore) against 79 per cent (Rs 18,770 crore) in the previous year. “The deceleration in credit growth relative to the acceleration in deposit growth has led to a decline in the incremental credit-deposit ratio, year-on-year, of SCBs to 71.9 per cent as at end-March 2008 from 84.3 per cent a year ago,” it said.

On the other hand, the corporate sector continued to rely on a variety of non-bank sources of funds such as capital markets, external commercial borrowings (ECBs) and internal generation of funds. Resources raised through domestic equity issuances during 2007-08 (Rs 48,153 crore) were 68 per cent higher than those a year ago. Net mobilisation through external commercial borrowings (ECBs) during April-December 2007-08 increased by 54 per cent over the corresponding period of the previous year.

Mobilisation through issuances of commercial paper (CPs) during 2007-08 was nearly three times the issuances during the previous year. Internal generation of funds continued to provide strong support to the funding requirements of the corporate sector, despite the profits after tax (PAT) of select non-financial non-government companies witnessing some deceleration in April-December 2007-08 compared with the corresponding period of the previous year, the RBI said.