Hyderabad: Recently, RBI announced a 3-month extension to the loan moratorium, thereby taking the total moratorium period to 6 months till 31 August, 2020. Many people have rejoiced and felt a big relief that they need not pay EMIs for another three months.
In fact, data from some of the largest banks and NBFCs like ICICI Bank, Axis Bank, Bajaj Finance show that around 25-30% of the loans were under the 3-month moratorium announced in March. For Bandhan Bank, a staggering 71% of the loans are under moratorium.
Read more:SC gives 3 days to Fin Min, RBI to decide on moratorium period interest
Surprisingly, even though the moratorium would lead to significant additional interest burden and strain on one’s personal finances, a lot of people have been opting for it, probably without understanding the adverse effect it would eventually have.
A moratorium does not mean that the EMIs are being waived off, it merely means deferment of payments. On top of that, interest will continue to accumulate on the outstanding amount even during the period of moratorium. (For ease of understanding, consider a loan outstanding of Rs 10 Lakhs with an interest rate of 10% per annum. The annual interest comes out to be Rs 1 Lakh per year. By deferring payments for six months, you will easily accumulate an additional interest of Rs 50,000/-).
The only benefit apart from having the option to delay EMI payments by 6 months is that these will not be counted as defaults and hence bank would not charge an additional penalty. Also it would not impact your credit ratings. However, these benefits come at a significant cost in the form of additional interest.
This is unlike salary cuts or salary deferment, which many of us might be currently taking. Most likely, no interest will be given for deferred salaries.
Hence, one needs to be very careful and understand the actual financial impact a loan moratorium can make before opting for such a scheme. The additional interest to be paid would also depend on how you restart your EMIs again. Following are the three options that you would have with increasing order of negative impact:
- Repay additional interest accumulated in the last 6 months directly in one shot – might not be feasible for many though
- Request bank to increase the amount of each EMI, but keep tenure fixed – next best possible option
- Keep EMI amount same as original, but increase tenure – leads to maximum additional interest payment
Let's take a look at a few examples to compare the additional interest which needs to be paid under these options.