Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

RBI’S liquidity gambit may succeed where rate cut failed

- Reuters feedback@livemint.com

MUMBAI: The Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI) $5 billion plan to swap rupees for dollars with domestic banks will help achieve its twin objectives of pushing interest rates down while also preventing a sharp appreciati­on in the rupee, analysts said on Thursday.

In a bid to mop up dollars and pump in rupees, the central bank said on Wednesday it will conduct its first dollar/rupee buysell swap auction on March 26, analysts said.

“In order to meet the durable liquidity needs of the system, the Reserve Bank has decided to... inject rupee liquidity for longer duration through long-term foreign exchange buy/sell swap,” the RBI said.

Aside from easing cash conditions in the banking system, the swap would increase cash available to borrowers during a tight re-election race for Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government.

“This will achieve multiple objectives including bringing down short-term interest rates for borrowers, helping the RBI to mop up lump sum amounts of dollars at one go, infusing liquidity and preventing any sharp appreciati­on in the rupee in face of a strong pipeline of flows in the near term,” said A Prasanna, head of fixed income research at ICICI Securities.

Despite cutting its key policy rate last month, the RBI has struggled to get banks to reduce lending rates due to tight cash conditions and high deposit rates.

E c o n o mi c g r o wt h h a s slumped to its lowest level in five quarters, posing a challenge for Modi as he seeks a second term in elections set to be held in April and May.

The RBI move could increase fund flows to credit-starved shadow banks which accounted for a third of new loans until September 2018, when debt defaults by an infrastruc­ture lender hit the sector, bankers and analysts said.

Despite several measures by the government and RBI to ringfence weak financial institutio­ns and relax funding lines for nonbank finance companies, banks and mutual funds are reluctant to lend to this sector, adding to the economic slowdown.

The RBI’S measure is likely to prod reluctant bankers to cut lending rates as funding conditions improve.

“To the extent RBI is infusing money, if that money stays in the system and overall liquidity improves, then there will be scope to lower lending rates,” said Parthasara­thi Mukherjee, managing director and chief executive at private lender Lakshmi Vilas Bank.

After the RBI announceme­nt, the rupee weakened to as much as 69.78 to the dollar, while the one-year forward premium on the unit in dollar-rupee forward contracts fell to 3.63 from 3.89.

The 10-year benchmark bond yield was up two basis points to 7.57% as the move reduced expectatio­ns for bond purchases by the central bank, traders said.

 ?? AFP ?? The RBI’S measure is likely to prod reluctant bankers to cut lending rates as funding conditions improve.
AFP The RBI’S measure is likely to prod reluctant bankers to cut lending rates as funding conditions improve.

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