BusinessLine (Delhi)

Big liquidity surplus prompts RBI to soak it up via VRRR auctions

- K Ram Kumar

With shortterm liquidity turning into a big surplus, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) conducted two backtoback variable rate reverse repo (VRRR) auctions on Tuesday .

The shortterm liquidity surplus stood at ₹1,62,347 crore as of March 4 against ₹65,620 crore on March 3, per RBI’s data on money market operations. Overall excess liquidity stood at ₹40,902 crore against a deficit of ₹19,220 crore. The funds which banks otherwise deploy in weekly government security (GSec) auctions are now available with them as the government’s borrowing programme ended in midFebruar­y. Moreover, banks are seeing accretion in funds due to government spending.

At the first oneday VRRR auction for a notified amount of ₹1lakh crore, banks deployed funds totalling ₹72,840 crore. The RBI accepted these funds at a weighted average rate (WAR) of 6.49 per cent.

At the second oneday VRRR auction for a notified amount of ₹75,000 crore, banks deployed funds totalling ₹11,185 crore. The RBI accepted these funds at the aforementi­oned WAR.

Venkatakri­shnan Srinivasan, Founder & Managing Partner, Rockfort Fincap LLP, noted that excess banking system liquidity reached ₹40,901.86 crore after many months. He expects the RBI to resort to continuous shortterm VRRR auctions to tighten liquidity.

“Deployment in the Standing Deposit Facility (SDF), which allows banks to park excess liquidity with the RBI, reached ₹1,18,731 crore against ₹65,639 crore on the previous day. The improved liquidity conditions are due to the completion of scheduled GoI borrowings in February. The system liquidity improves in the beginning of the month due to the government’s monthend spending and drains out over the period due to tax outflows,” he said.

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