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RBI board meets amid row with government, Indian markets on guard

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MUMBAI: A Reserve Bank of India board meeting began on Monday with investors waiting to see if central bank and government policymake­rs could bridge difference­s over several key issues.

Top government officials and one independen­t director have pressed the RBI to ease lending and capital rules for banks, provide more liquidity to the shadow banking sector, support lending to small businesses and to let the government use more of the RBI’s surplus reserves to boost the economy.

Unhappy over the pressure, RBI Deputy Governor Viral Acharya had warned that underminin­g central bank independen­ce could be“catastroph­ic”.

The very public row led to speculatio­n that RBI Governor Urjit Patel might resign, though officials have since sought to dampen such talk.

Yesterday, the Business Standard newspaper cited unnamed sources saying the RBI might agree at the board meeting to remove some banks from a so-called prompt corrective action plan as the government has made commitment­s to recapitali­se them soon.

The corrective action plan has led to sharp slowdown in lending in 11 state-owned banks.

With nothing emerging from the meeting so far financial markets showed little movement.

The 10-year benchmark bond yield was at 7.81% compared with 7.82 at Friday’s close, while the Indian rupee was at 71.89 per dollar versus 71.92 on Friday.

The broader NSE stock index was little changed at 0.3%.

Investors were on guard against any resurrecti­on of the row between the central bank and government officials, but few were expecting fireworks as both sides have tried to dispel fears of a more serious falling out.

That has left traders still anxious to see how far the central bank might be ready to compromise to meet the government’s demands.

“Foreign investors will wait to get some cues from today’s meeting on the extent to which the central bank is autonomous, but it will be good for bond markets in the shortterm if the

“RBI gives in to the government’s demand for more liquidity,” said a dealer at a foreign bank.

The board meeting was specially convened to followthro­ugh on its last meeting on Oct 23, otherwise such meetings seldom draw attention as they typically focus on standard discussion­s on macro-economic variables. — Reuters

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