State Bank of India 
Business

SBI hikes lending rate by 10 bps across tenors, raising EMIs for borrowers

The benchmark one-year tenor MCLR, which is used to price most consumer loans such as auto and personal, is now pegged higher at 8.95 per cent against the earlier rate of 8.85 per cent, according to the information posted on its website.

PTI

NEW DELHI: State Bank of India, the country's biggest lender, has raised the Marginal Cost of Funds-based Lending Rate (MCLR) by 10 basis points (0.1 percentage point), across tenors, making most of the consumer loans costlier. This is the third time in a row that the bank has increased MCLR.

The benchmark one-year tenor MCLR, which is used to price most consumer loans such as auto and personal, is now pegged higher at 8.95 per cent against the earlier rate of 8.85 per cent, according to the information posted on its website.

The three-year MCLR is 9.10 per cent, while the two-year is now 9.05 per cent, up 10 basis points. Among others, the rates of one-month, three-month and six-month tenors are in the range of 8.45-8.85 per cent.

The MCLR on overnight tenor will be 8.20 per cent against 8.10 per cent. The new rates are effective from August 15, 2024, it said. The rate hike has come days after RBI kept its benchmark lending rate unchanged at 6.5 per cent for the ninth consecutive time earlier this month.

Major setback for AIADMK as three MLAs resign, set to join TVK

CBI set to take over Twisha Sharma probe, team sent to Bhopal

Three resigned AIADMK MLAs join TVK as party turmoil deepens

Vilathikulam student murder: DNA test helps nail culprit Muneeswaran, courts awards him double death penalty

Rubio downplays anti-India rhetoric row, says Trump a 'big fan' of Modi