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State Bank of India (SBI), India’s largest lender, has raised its marginal cost of funds-based lending rate (MCLR) by 10 basis points. The revised rates are effective from August 14, 2024.
SBI Revised MCLR Rates
SBI’s overnight MCLR has increased from 8.10% to 8.20%. The monthly MCLR has risen from 8.35% to 8.45%, and the 3-month MCLR has also gone up by 10 basis points, from 8.40% to 8.50%.
The changes in MCLR rates are as follows:
Impact On Loans
The interest rates on loans are also likely to rise by a similar measure, and EMIs rise on linked loans.
MCLR is a crucial factor in determining the cost of borrowing for individuals and businesses in India.
MCLR is essentially the minimum interest rate a bank can charge on a loan. This rate is determined by considering the bank’s cost of funds, operating costs, and a certain profit margin.
In July, SBI had raised its MCLR by 5-10 basis points.
Recently, state-owned PNB raised the MCLR by 0.05%, or 5 basis points, across tenors, making most of the consumer loans costlier.
The benchmark one-year tenor MCLR is at 8.90% against the earlier rate of 8.85%, PNB had said in a regulatory filing.
The three-year MCLR stands at 9.20%.
Among others, the rate of one-month, three-month and six-month tenors is in the range of 8.35-8.55%.
The MCLR on overnight tenor is 8.30%.
The new PNB rates were effective from August 1, 2024.
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