Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

RBI move boosts banks’ lending ability by $42 bn

- Reuters feedback@livemint.com

RELAXED NORMS The central bank agreed at its board meeting to extend a deadline for lenders to further lift capital conservati­on buffers by a year to March 31

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) estimates that Indian banks will have capacity to lend an extra ₹2.5 lakh crore to ₹3 lakh crore ($35 billion to $42 billion) over the next year after it decided to relax a deadline for lenders to boost capital ratios, two people aware of discussion­s on the matter said on Tuesday.

Under pressure from Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government to spur lending ahead of elections, the RBI agreed at its board meeting on Monday to extend a deadline for lenders to further lift capital conservati­on buffers by a year to March 31.

The relaxation will also reduce banks’ capital requiremen­ts by about ₹30,000 crore to ₹35,000 crore of capital, the two people said, adding that the numbers were shared by the RBI at the board meeting.

The relaxation is a credit negative for Indian banks, internatio­nal credit rating agency Moody’s Investors Services said.

During Monday’s nine-hour meeting, the board advised the central bank to act to support small businesses and give banks more time to step up capital norms. The government had been lobbying furiously for such moves for weeks.

“The RBI has agreed at the board meeting to allow banks to restructur­e the stressed loans to small and medium size companies,” the first person told Reuters, though the central bank had not been so specific in its press statement on Monday.

MUMBAI/NEW DELHI:

The RBI’s board meeting, usually a staid affair, came sharply into focus after top government officials 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 let the government use more of the RBI’s surplus reserves to boost the economy.

“The broad concern that board members wanted the RBI to address was that no one should be starved of credit,” the second person said.

The person said there were no fireworks at the meeting unlike during the run-up, when strains between the government and the central bank became public, leading to speculatio­n that Governor Urjit Patel might resign.

“Everyone was sophistica­ted in their behaviour and everyone participat­ed in the discussion­s. All the decisions were taken with everyone’s consent,” the person said.

Three topics were discussed at the meeting—lending to small businesses, capital buffers for banks and the RBI’s reserve adequacy. Presentati­ons were made by RBI as well as finance ministry officials.

The Modi government wants to boost growth as it is concerned that low crop prices and difficulti­es faced by small businesses may dent its prospects in numerous state polls over coming weeks, and a nationwide election due by May next year.

Seeking help to bolster the economy, government officials and one independen­t RBI director had called for strong actions by the central bank.

Unhappy over the persistent pressure on the RBI, deputy governor Viral Acharya warned last month that underminin­g central bank independen­ce could be “catastroph­ic”.

The next meeting on December 14 will take up issues on liquidity, risk weights and capital provisioni­ng for banks and governance of the RBI, the first person said.

“The RBI, the government and the independen­t board members—all of us are on the same page when it comes to doing what’s the best for the country. The only difference in opinion is on how and how much,” the person added.

 ?? MINT ?? The relaxation by the RBI will also reduce banks’ capital requiremen­ts by about ₹30,000 crore to ₹35,000 crore of capital
MINT The relaxation by the RBI will also reduce banks’ capital requiremen­ts by about ₹30,000 crore to ₹35,000 crore of capital

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