Thursday, December 11, 2008

SBI says economy likely to need more help

State Bank of India, India's biggest bank, said today there was some concern the economy would require further stimulus beyond large interest rate cuts and extra government spending announced last weekend.

Chairman O.P. Bhatt's comments followed remarks from the central bank (RBI) governor on yesterday that India's growth projections for the current financial year ending in March 2009 may be cut and 2009/10 may be a "more difficult year".

"There are still concerns the economy may require more," SBI Chairman O.P. Bhatt told reporters at a banking conference in New Delhi, although he did not elaborate on what measures were needed to counter the deepest global financial crisis in 80 years.

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) slashed its key short-term rate by 100 basis points and the central government announcing $4 billion in extra funding at the weekend.

The head of a banking sector body said banks would consider interest rate cuts for housing and small and medium-sized firms that have been hit by the credit crisis.

"We will see what relief can be given. It can entail interest rates also," said T.S. Narayanasami, head of the Indian Banking Association and chairman of state-run Bank of India.

Analysts from firms such as JPMorgan, Morgan Stanley and Citigroup have said while the fiscal package and rate cuts were welcome, they were unlikely to reverse a slowdown.

Morgan Stanley yesterday cut its forecast for India's economic growth in 2009/10 to 5.3 percent from 5.7 percent, saying higher cost of capital could crimp domestic demand.