In a bold and unexpected policy shift on June 6, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) cut the repo rate by 50 basis points, bringing it down from 6% to 5.5%, and also slashed the Cash Reserve Ratio (CRR) by 100 basis points. This twin action was aimed at boosting liquidity in the financial system, supporting loan growth, and reigniting the economy — and the markets took notice.
The impact was instant.
Major public and private sector banks like HDFC Bank, Bank of Baroda, Punjab National Bank, Bank of India, UCO Bank, and Karur Vysya Bank immediately revised their lending rates. The reductions, rolled out via Repo-Linked Lending Rates (RLLR) or Marginal Cost of Funds-Based Lending Rates (MCLR), ranged between 10 to 50 basis points across loan tenures and types — from housing to business loans.
For borrowers, this is game-changing. If you have a floating-rate loan — especially home, auto, or personal — expect lower EMIs soon. For new borrowers, this is a golden entry point. Home loan rates have already dropped below 8%, unlocking opportunities to buy property or refinance at some of the most attractive rates seen in years.
The market response? Explosive.
The Nifty Bank index surged past 57,000, hitting new all-time highs. Investor sentiment has turned bullish on banking and NBFC stocks, as cheaper credit is expected to drive credit offtake, boost corporate capex, and stimulate consumer spending.
The CRR cut is equally important — it effectively frees up thousands of crores of additional funds for banks to lend, improving liquidity at a time when global financial conditions remain tight.
With this move, the RBI has made it clear that it is committed to supporting growth without compromising financial stability. For borrowers, investors, and businesses, this may just be the beginning of a more credit-friendly environment.
So whether you’re planning to take a loan, refinance one, or invest in the Indian financial space — the time to act might be now.