Business Standard

With liquidity worry, banks return to CD market

- ANUP ROY

After a demo net is at ioninduced di pin issuance, banks are returning to the certificat­es of deposit (CD) market, even as liquidity seems more than adequate.

CDs are short-term instrument­s issued by banks that mature within a year. The most popular form is those doing so in three months.

In the fortnight ended January 20, banks issued ~8,310 crore of CDs. In the fortnight before demonetisa­tion, banks had issued ~5,154 crore of CDs, as of the end of October 28, Reserve Bank (RBI) data shows. In the midst of demonetisa­tion, when banks were inundated with heavy deposit flow, CD issuance had dipped to multiyear lows, as banks did not need outside liquidity support. In the fortnight ended December 23, banks issued only ~1,671 crore of CDs.

The rates being offered now have also inched up. CDs issued in the fortnight ended January 20 were for 6.40-6.62 per cent. This is the latest data available but the rates on offer should have shot up after RBI’s monetary policy review this month, when it had changed the policy stance. This led to dated bond yields rising by 40 basis points. Rates in the CD market would have spiked, too. Those immediatel­y before demonetisa­tion were 6.42-7.02 per cent.

According to bond dealers, the spike in CD issuance could indicate that liquidity won’t remain as comfortabl­e by the end of the financial year (March 31) as it now is. As of Friday, the net liquidity surplus of the system was about ~3.5 lakh crore for banks. Come March, this could dry up.

“Most of the CD issuances are happening at the threemonth maturity. This could be because some banks are keeping their liquidity situation comfortabl­e before the financial year ends, when system liquidity generally becomes tight,” said Joydeep Sen, managing partner at Sen & Apte Consulting Services, a risk management entity.

Bankers largely concur with the assessment. “Some of the issuances are for rollover purposes. A portion of it is to keep liquidity comfortabl­e before the year-end. Even as the liquidity situation is good, tax outflows and spurt in yearend lending might lead to tight liquidity,” said an executive director of a public sector bank.

Beside, the banker said, not all banks benefited from demonetisa­tion. Most foreign banks and some small private ones have seen much less mobilisati­on of savings account deposits. In the absence of adequate bond holding, these banks are always dependent on the markets for liquidity.

Traditiona­lly by the financial year-end, banks do issue a huge amount of CDs. They’d had raised as much as ~67,860 crore through CDs in the fortnight ended March 18, 2016.

The recent rise in the coupon of these CDs, even before the RBI policy review, could be explained by the introducti­on of cash management bills (CMBs), intended to suck out excess liquidity. As these were introduced, treasury rates inched up. All money market instrument­s followed.

“Before the CMBs were introduced, rates were at the reverse repo range (5.75 per cent). After these were introduced, rates crossed the repo rate (6.25 per cent) and all the money market instrument­s rose in tandem,” said Debashish Mitra, senior bond trader at SBI DFHI, a primary dealer.

 ??  ?? The rates being offered now have also inched up. CDs issued in the fortnight ended January 20 were for 6.40-6.62 per cent. This is the latest data available but the rates on offer should have shot up after RBI’s monetary policy review this month, when...
The rates being offered now have also inched up. CDs issued in the fortnight ended January 20 were for 6.40-6.62 per cent. This is the latest data available but the rates on offer should have shot up after RBI’s monetary policy review this month, when...

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