The Reserve Bank of India (RBI), in its fourth bi-monthly monetary meet held on October 9, 2020 , has decided to keep the repo rate unchanged yet again with accomodative stance. This is the second time in a row the apex bank has kept the key rates unchanged.
The repo rate and reverse rate remain at 4 per cent and 3.35 per cent, respectively, after the announcement. RBI keeping the repo rate unchanged in this monetary policy review was expected by many market participants due to the rising inflation and growth uncertainty in the country.
Borrowers who are facing salary cut/job loss due to the novel coronavirus pandemic situation and were looking for some reduction in their equated monthly instalment (EMI) burden will have to wait a little longer. On the other hand, no change in policy rates means good news for fixed deposit (FDs) investors as banks may go slow on cutting interest rates on FDs.
Here's what borrowers and fixed deposit investors can do after today's announcement.
Existing borrowers
A) Loans linked to external benchmark
Borrowers whose loans are linked to an external benchmark are likely to pay the same EMI for now unless their bank reduces the margin or spread on loan interest rates. However, if your bank raises the risk premium on your loan account, then the EMI on your home loan is likely to increase.