Business Standard

RBI’s liquidity clean-up to push bond yields LIQUIDITY ABSORPTION

Central bank has become more aggressive in its liquidity absorption exercise and sold ~90,000 crore of bonds in the open market

- ANUP ROY

One year after demonetisa­tion was announced, banking system liquidity is still in surplus territory even as the central bank and the government used all that they had in their means to neutralise the surge of deposits in the banking channel.

Only in the Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI’s) liquidity adjustment facility alone, banks parked their surplus liquidity in excess of ~5 lakh crore on November 25, 2016, prompting the RBI to announce 100 per cent cash reserve ratio (CRR), from the normal four per cent, for incrementa­l deposit mobilised over a certain period. CRR is the share of deposits banks maintain with the central bank free of cost.

Data compiled by rating agency Icra show at its peak, net absorption of liquidity — through various instrument­s by the central bank and the government— reached about ~8 lakh crore by early January, indicating the extent the banks put their money in the central bank.

The central bank has become more aggressive in its liquidity absorption exercise since then, and has sold ~90,000 crore of bonds in the open market to remove excess liquidity. Besides, between December 2, 2016, and March 13, 2017, the government issued cash management bills (CMBs), or specialise­d short-term treasury bills, issued under the market stabilisat­ion scheme (MSS) to neutralise excess liquidity. At its peak in mid-January, CMB outstandin­g was worth more than ~5 lakh crore.

The daily average liquidity absorption under the liquidity adjustment facility of the RBI declined to ~2.74 lakh crore during the second quarter (Q2) of FY18, from ~3.52 lakh crore in the first quarter (Q1). Including CMBs and treasury bills issued under MSS, the daily average surplus liquidity eased mildly to ~4.38 lakh crore in Q2, from ~4.58 lakh crore in Q1, said Liquidity infusion (-) / absorption (+) (net overnight and term repos / reverse repos; MSF; MSS) (~ crore) Icra in a research note.

The reason why it was important to drain excess liquidity was that it would have stoked inflation, which the central bank is fighting to keep under four per cent. However, a surplus liquidity regime also distorts the transmissi­on of the RBI policy rates. In response to the central bank’s cumulative 200-basis points (bps) policy rate cut, bank lending rates have fallen by about 120 bps. One reason cited by banks was that they cannot cut deposit rates drasticall­y even as people continue to park their money. And since deposit rates have not fallen, lending rates cannot fall too, they say.

Draining liquidity would help the central bank get a grip on the situation and direct banks as the situation prevails for an effective transmissi­on.

But, according to Soumyajit Niyogi, associate director of India Ratings and Research, draining liquidity would make it difficult for banks to cut rates. It is a dilemma for the central bank that wants the banks to lower lending rates faster.

Even as deposit growth shot up, credit growth for the most part of last year remained in mid-single digits. Only now, there are some signs that credit growth is picking up. Credit growth is now at 7.5 per cent, whereas deposit growth is 8.7 per cent and growth rates are converging.

As credit and deposits growth converge, liquidity will tighten even further, said Nomura in a report. “We expect this trend of convergenc­e between credit and deposit growth to continue. A cyclical recovery and higher commodity prices should boost working capital needs, while the availabili­ty of growth capital after the recently announced recapitali­sation plan should also enable public sector banks to extend additional loans,” Nomura said.

This would also mean an improvemen­t in credit deposit ratio to a near normal level of 75 per cent, from 72.6 per cent in midOctober and would “tighten banking system liquidity incrementa­lly,” Nomura said.

The implicatio­n of this is hardening of bond yields. From 6.41 per cent in end-July, the yields on the 10-year bond have risen to 6.94 per cent and bond dealers expect the yields to cross the seven per cent mark quite soon.

The daily average liquidity absorption under the liquidity adjustment facility of the central bank declined to ~2.74 lakh crore in Q2 of FY18, from ~3.52 lakh crore in Q1

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