Reserve Bank of India – Press Releases

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Reserve Bank of India announces the auction of Government of India Treasury Bills as per the following details:

Sr. No Treasury Bill Notified Amount
(in ₹ crore)
Auction Date Settlement date
1 91 Days 15,000 May 25, 2021
(Tuesday)
May 27, 2021
(Thursday)
2 182 Days 15,000
3 364 Days 6,000
  Total 36,000    

The sale will be subject to the terms and conditions specified in the General Notification F.No.4(2)-W&M/2018 dated March 27, 2018 along with the Amendment Notification No.F.4(2)-W&M/2018 dated April 05, 2018, issued by Government of India, as amended from time to time. State Governments, eligible Provident Funds in India, designated Foreign Central Banks and any person or institution specified by the Bank in this regard, can participate on non-competitive basis, the allocation for which will be outside the notified amount. Individuals can also participate on non-competitive basis as retail investors. For retail investors, the allocation will be restricted to a maximum of 5 percent of the notified amount.

The auction will be Price based using multiple price method. Bids for the auction should be submitted in electronic format on the Reserve Bank of India’s Core Banking Solution (E-Kuber) system on Tuesday, May 25, 2021, during the below given timings:

Category Timing
Competitive bids 10:30 am – 11:30 am
Non-Competitive bids 10:30 am – 11:00 am

Results will be announced on the day of the auction.

Payment by successful bidders to be made on Thursday, May 27, 2021.

Only in the event of system failure, physical bids would be accepted. Such physical bids should be submitted to the Public Debt Office (email; Phone no: 022-22632527, 022-22701299) in the prescribed form obtainable from RBI website (https://www.rbi.org.in/Scripts/BS_ViewForms.aspx) before the auction timing ends. In case of technical difficulties, Core Banking Operations Team should be contacted (email; Phone no: 022-27595666, 022-27595415, 022-27523516). For other auction related difficulties, IDMD auction team can be contacted (email; Phone no: 022-22702431, 022-22705125).

Ajit Prasad
Director   

Press Release: 2021-2022/255

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Reserve Bank of India – Tenders

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e-Tender – RBI/Lucknow/Estate/496/20-21/ET/768

E-Tenders are invited from manufactures/ their authorised agents/distributors/ suppliers to provide Computer Cartridges/Toner to Reserve Bank of India, Lucknow from July 01, 2021 to March 31, 2022. The tendering would be done through the e-Tendering portal of MSTC Ltd (https://mstcecommerce.com/eprochome/rbi/). All interested manufactures/their authorised agents/distributors/suppliers must register themselves with MSTC Ltd through the above mentioned website to participate in the tendering process. The last date for submission of e-Tender on RBI portal of MSTC website (https://mstcecommerce.com/eprochome/rbi/) is 17:00 hrs, June 24, 2021. Pre-bid meeting for any clarification, is scheduled at our office at 15:00 hrs on May 28, 2021.

2. Any amendments / corrigendum to the tender, if any, issued in future will only be notified on the RBI Website and MSTC Website as given above and will not be published in the newspaper.

Regional Director Lucknow

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Reserve Bank of India – Press Releases

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April 14, 2015





Dear All




Welcome to the refurbished site of the Reserve Bank of India.





The two most important features of the site are: One, in addition to the default site, the refurbished site also has all the information bifurcated functionwise; two, a much improved search – well, at least we think so but you be the judge.





With this makeover, we also take a small step into social media. We will now use Twitter (albeit one way) to send out alerts on the announcements we make and YouTube to place in public domain our press conferences, interviews of our top management, events, such as, town halls and of course, some films aimed at consumer literacy.




The site can be accessed through most browsers and devices; it also meets accessibility standards.



Please save the url of the refurbished site in your favourites as we will give up the existing site shortly and register or re-register yourselves for receiving RSS feeds for uninterrupted alerts from the Reserve Bank.



Do feel free to give us your feedback by clicking on the feedback button on the right hand corner of the refurbished site.



Thank you for your continued support.




Department of Communication

Reserve Bank of India


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China fund managers embrace robots as competition intensifies, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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By Samuel Shen and Andrew Galbraith

SHANGHAI: Chinese fund managers, grappling with a rapidly-growing list of publicly-traded securities and mountains of data, are rapidly embracing machine learning and other types of artificial intelligence (AI) to boost efficiency and bolster returns.

From using computers for analyzing news and research reports and crunching numbers to getting robots to pick stocks, the move comes as foreign players are expanding their footprint in China’s $3.4-trillion mutual fund industry.

While AI has already been widely used in China’s mammoth e-commerce and manufacturing sectors, it is now being adopted by asset managers as Beijing aims to digitize the economy further and close the technology gap with the western world.

Last week, Zheshang Fund Management Co launched a fund that uses robots to predict the market outlook and select stocks. It came after China Asset Management Co (ChinaAMC) announced its partnership with Toronto-based AI company Boosted.ai.

“I think it’s a must. Every major player is actively looking for AI solutions. The competition is really tough,” said Bill Chen, chief data officer of ChinaAMC, which managed $246 billion worth of assets at the end of last year.

Global fund managers such as BlackRock Inc have been using computer artificial intelligence (AI) to analyze fundamentals, market sentiment and macroeconomic policies in the last couple of years to get an investment edge.

“Companies like BlackRock have very powerful, advanced technology. They are leading us in AI for sure, by at least several years,” said Chen. “But I think we understand the Chinese market better.”

Fund managers’ increased usage of AI in the world’s second-largest economy comes as Beijing is stepping up digitalization drive, a trend accelerated by the COVID-19 pandemic and as it increasingly clashes with the West over technology policy.

China’s stock market listing reforms have boosted the number of public companies, leading to a data explosion that also fuels demand for AI, said Zhou Yu, chief product officer of ABC Fintech, a Beijing-based AI company.

ABC Fintech counts asset managers such as China Universal Asset Management and Hwabao WP Fund Management Co as clients, and serves as their data factory, Yu said.

REGULATORY CHALLENGES
Growing investments into AI are also being fueled by early signs of success.

Zheshang Fund’s first AI-powered fund, Zheshang Intelligent Industry Preferred Hybrid Fund has gained 68.34% since its launch in Sept 2019, according to its Q1 report, compared with a 21.64% gain in its benchmark, which is a combination of stock and bond indexes.

The fund has built an “AI Beehive strategy model” in which robots team up like humans to buy stocks. More than 400 robots compete for the right to make decisions as their models constantly evolve through trial and error.

Peter Shepard, managing director at MSCI Research, said that instead of providing super-human intelligence, AI provides super-human scale that will open up fresh sources of information that drive new levels of insight and efficiency.

“These new tools on their own can’t predict the future any better than people can, but they are key to unlocking new, alternative and unstructured data sets that will continue to transform the investment process.”

“AI will be an important edge,” said Larry Cao, senior director at CFA Institute, who authored several reports on AI-powered investing. “The hard truth with AI is that the bigger firms can invest a lot more resources.”

Some Chinese industry officials, however, expressed concerns that the use of machine learning algorithms to pick stocks and better returns could run into regulatory challenges.

“From a regulatory perspective, you need to go through a lot of compliance procedures. You need to write reports on your decision making. Some AI-powered models are like black boxes, and unexplainable,” said Yu of ABC Fintech.

“That’s hardly acceptable to regulators.”

As learning algorithms are increasingly used in trading rooms, local fund managers are working with regulators to try to design new standards for the industry.

“One of the main barriers we face … is that we are so highly regulated,” ChinaAMC’s Chen said. “Every decision you make, you have to be responsible for that decision, and you should be able to explain a decision when you lose money.”



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US regulators signal stronger risk, tax oversight for cryptocurrencies, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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WASHINGTON: US Federal Reserve chief Jerome Powell turned up the heat on cryptocurrencies on Thursday, saying they pose risks to financial stability, and indicating that greater regulation of the increasingly popular electronic currency may be warranted.

The Treasury Department, meanwhile, flagged its concerns that wealthy individuals could use the largely unregulated sector to avoid tax and said it wanted big crypto asset transfers reported to authorities.

The back-to-back announcements came in a week when Bitcoin, the most popular cryptocurrency, took a wild ride, falling as much as 30% on Wednesday after China announced new curbs on the sector, underscoring the volatility of the sector.

Powell underlined cryptocurrency risks in an unusual video message that also laid out a clearer timetable as the Fed explores the possibility of adopting a digital currency of its own.

While highlighting the potential benefits of advances in financial technology, Powell said cryptocurrencies, stablecoins and other innovations “may also carry potential risks to those users and to the broader financial system.”

As the technology advanced, “so must our attention to the appropriate regulatory and oversight framework. This includes paying attention to private-sector payments innovators who are currently not within the traditional regulatory arrangements applied to banks, investment firms, and other financial intermediaries.”

Powell’s comments signaled how seriously the Fed has been forced to reckon with the surge in popularity and market values of non-traditional currency options such as Bitcoin, especially as it looks at developing a digital version of the U.S. dollar, the world’s reserve currency.

Speculative Assets
The Fed and Treasury consider cryptocurrencies, which now have a market capitalization of about $2 trillion, to be more like art, gold or other highly speculative assets.

A central bank digital currency, though, offers whoever holds it – a person, a business, even another government – a direct claim on that central bank, which is exactly what holding a paper dollar bill does now.

Powell said the Fed would release a discussion paper this summer on digital payments, with a focus on the benefits and risks of establishing a central bank digital currency, and will also seek public comment.

He noted that “to date, cryptocurrencies have not served as a convenient way to make payments, given, among other factors, their swings in value.”

The Treasury also flagged cryptocurrency risks, including opportunities for wealthy individuals to move taxable assets into the largely unregulated crypto sector.

“Cryptocurrency already poses a significant detection problem by facilitating illegal activity broadly including tax evasion,” the Treasury said.

Its proposal, disclosed as part of a policy report https://home.treasury.gov/system/files/136/The-American-Families-Plan-Tax-Compliance-Agenda.pdf detailing the Biden administration’s $80 billion IRS enforcement proposal to boost revenue collection, would provide additional resources for the IRS to address crypto assets,

In addition to the reports of $10,000-plus cryptocurrency transfers that would parallel bank reports of similarly sized cash transfers, the Treasury also proposed that crypto asset exchanges and custodians also report transactions to the IRS related to bank interest, dividend and brokerage transactions.

The reporting requirements, depending on how they are structured, could also allow the government to gain insight about US companies that are extorted to pay hackers ransoms, almost invariably in cryptocurrency, to regain control of their IT systems.

Law enforcement and private sector cybersecurity experts alike have complained that a lack of transparency around these ransomware incidents contributes to their continued occurrence.

The Treasury disclosure took the wind out of a rally in the dollar value of Bitcoin on Thursday that followed steep plunges for Bitcoin and etherium on Wednesday. Bitcoin was up 8.7% in afternoon trade after an earlier gain of 10%.

While the Fed and some other developed economies are still conducting research on what a central bank digital currency would look like, China is moving ahead at a fast clip and is currently piloting a digital version of the yuan, with plans to ramp up usage before the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing.

Powell said last month that the Fed would not rush its efforts in response to China’s more aggressive pace, noting that the approach taken there would not work in the United States.

“It is far more important to get it right than it is to do it fast,” Powell said after the April policy setting meeting.

The Boston Fed is currently working with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology to research the technology that could be used for a central bank digital currency and will be releasing those findings in the third quarter.

Congressional action would be required before a digital currency could be developed.

Also on Thursday, U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission Chair Gary Gensler said he would like to see more regulation around cryptocurrency exchanges, including those that solely trade bitcoin and do not currently have to register with his agency.

“This is a quite volatile, one might say highly volatile, asset class, and the investing public would benefit from more investor protection on the crypto exchanges,” he said at the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority’s annual conference.



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South Indian Bank posts net profit of nearly ₹7 crore in Q4

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South Indian Bank has registered a net profit of ₹6.79 crore in the fourth quarter of FY21 against a loss of ₹143.69 crore during the corresponding period of the previous year. The net profit for the entire FY21 is ₹61.91 crore as against ₹104.59 crore of the previous financial year.

Murali Ramakrishnan, Managing Director & CEO said the lower quarterly profit was mainly on account of credit cost on the fresh slippages during the fourth quarter, as a result of additional stress in the economy due to Covid-19 pandemic. “Bank has strengthened the review and monitoring system of the advance portfolio to improve the credit quality and thereby bringing drastic reduction in the slippages and improve upgrades/ recovery,” Ramakrishnan said.

Vision 2024

The bank has come up with a 3-year Medium Term Strategy (Vision 2024) wherein the focus will continue in the areas of MSME and Retail Loans with improved underwriting standards. The technology initiatives will be leveraged to improve the CASA and the technology income in the coming quarters.

The prevailing Covid-19 pandemic has impacted the growth in the business and personal loan segment. “As part of the business strategy to reduce the exposure in the corporate advances, the bank has brought down the share of corporate advances from 28 per cent as on March 31, 2020 to 25 per cent as on March 31,” he said.

The bank has also been able to meet the targeted levels of recovery/ upgrades which has helped in containing the GNPA level despite higher slippages numbers during the year on account of the pandemic. The provision coverage ratio has improved to 58.73 per cent from 54.22 per cent.

The Capital Adequacy Ratio stands comfortable at 15.42 per cent as on March 31. The bank has raised the equity capital during the quarter for an amount of ₹240 crore which strengthened the Common Equity. “The bank plans to raise further capital during FY21-22 to strengthen the capital base,” he added.

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What’s the endgame of all the speculation & hoarding in Bitcoin, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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LONDON: Bitcoin‘s wild ride this week is far from unusual for the largest crypto token – but the rollercoaster is also its inherent contradiction.

Speculators betting for years on bitcoin becoming a stateless digital currency that’s widely used for online retail and payments are largely responsible for its parabolic price rises. But they also seed the sort of blinding volatility that makes that ambition almost untenable.

Bitcoin’s 30 per cent plunge on Tuesday after another Chinese government crackdown is not unique. Daily moves of more than 20 per cent have been frequent during the past 6 years. At almost 4.5 per cent, median daily price swings over that time period are more than 6 times that of the main Transatlantic euro/dollar exchange rate.

And while some online retailers might accept bitcoin as payment for goods priced in dollars, few could manage the potential accounting chaos of sticker pricing in bitcoin if its value can routinely shift by a fifth in just hours.

The flipside is true for buyers. If you think bitcoin’s price keeps on rising over time – much like the latest quadrupling over the past 12 months – then why would you surrender those gains by paying for anything with bitcoin today?

And so if that role as a transaction currency or stable store of value remains elusive, it’s essentially just a game of hoarding a finite number of tokens by small groups of people that routinely involves wild, illiquid swings whenever regulators pounce, backers tweet support or big players cash in.

As ever, arguments about pros and cons of crypto tokens divide among believers and non-believers – blind faith versus instant dismissal, cheer-leading versus scorn.

Deutsche Bank this week likened bitcoin belief structures to the so-called “Tinkerbell effect” – a theory drawing from childrens’ book character Peter Pan‘s claim that the fairy only exists because the kids believe she does.

“In other words, the value of Bitcoin is entirely based on wishful thinking,” wrote Deutsche analyst Marion Laboure.

Laboure estimates that less than 30 per cent of transactions in bitcoin are currently related to payments – the rest is trading, speculation, investment or related activities.

And she reckons its liquidity as an investment asset is low. With about 28 million bitcoins changing hands last year, that’s 150 per cent of all those in circulation – almost half the equivalent metric for Apple shares.

TINKERBELL, ARK AND MUSK
With a market capitalisation still about $1 trillion, governments can’t ignore bitcoin, even if central banks continue to dismiss its wider systemic importance. They may even welcome the fact its emergence over the past decade has spurred so-called “fintech” innovation as they gradually develop their own central bank digital currencies over the coming years.

But Deutsche’s Laboure reckons more crackdowns will come – and most likely the whenever bitcoin even looks like rivalling their currencies for payment.

“It is no surprise that governments are not inclined to give up their monetary monopolies. Throughout history, governments first regulate and then take ownership.”

If so, what’s the endgame of all the speculation and hoarding – which just further limits bitcoin supply and drives the price higher? Is it just “pass the parcel” while the music keeps playing? Or are people with money to burn punting for quick gains and trading strategically by timing entry and exits?

Some argue there is genuine demand for crypto transfers within the half trillion dollars per year of global remittances, as migrant workers often need to funnel money back to poorer countries with strict formal exchange controls.

Others claim crypto privacy features draw in demand from criminals, as per this month’s ransomeware hack at Colonial pipeline. But that will just hasten more regulation. Investment arguments beyond simply punting it ever higher range from a lack of “correlation” with other assets to a potential role as an inflation hedge – an odd assertion given its latest reversal comes amid all the post-pandemic inflation scares.

Powerful backers have a outsize say too, but are increasingly erratic.

Tesla billionaire Elon Musk drove the price skywards earlier this year by saying Tesla would accept bitcoins as payment for its dollar-priced electric vehicle and add bitcoin to the company balance sheet – only to backtrack last week by warning about excessive energy usage in bitcoin mining.

With no obvious rationale, star tech stock investor Cathie Wood of Ark Invest claimed this week that bitcoin would rise another tenfold again after it registered a 50 per cent loss in a month.

At the $500,000 level she posits, the market cap of bitcoin would then be $10 trillion – or a third of the entire M1 money supply of G20 economies.

London School of Economics‘ Jon Danielsson reckons that as a result of the concentration of bitcoin ownership, that sort of move would create new multi billionaires – or even the first trillionaire. And that would wildly exaggerate existing wealth skews as the gap between bitcoin haves and have-nots soars to intolerable levels, making a mockery of claims of crypto “democratisation”.

As a result, he thinks co-existence of bitcoin and so-called fiat currencies is impossible. It’s all or nothing.

If it replaces all G20 currencies in circulation, that would then see each bitcoin priced at $1.5 million.

Reality or fiction?

“Bitcoin is a bubble,” Danielsson concludes. “It makes sense to ride the bubble as long as possible – just get out in time.”

(By Mike Dolan, Twitter: @reutersMikeD)



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Reserve Bank of India – Press Releases

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    5.63% GS 2026* GOI FRB 2033** 6.64% GS 2035*** 6.67% GS 2050****
I. Notified Amount ₹11,000 cr ₹4,000 cr ₹10,000 cr ₹7,000 cr
II. Cut off Price / Implicit Yield at cut-off 100.29/5.5597% 98.98/4.8779% 100.44/6.5910% 97.48/6.8698%
III. Amount accepted in the auction ₹13,500 cr ₹4,430 cr ₹12,500 cr ₹7,380 cr
IV. Devolvement on Primary Dealers Nil Nil Nil Nil
* Greenshoe amount of ₹2500 crore has been accepted
** Greenshoe amount of ₹430 crore has been accepted
*** Greenshoe amount of ₹2500 crore has been accepted
**** Greenshoe amount of ₹380 crore has been accepted

Ajit Prasad
Director   

Press Release: 2021-2022/253

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Corrigendum – Request for Proposal (RFP) for Next Generation Firewall Solution, Endpoint Protection (EPP) – EDR and Email security with Sandbox Solution-Supply, Design, Installation, Implementation, Integration, Maintenance and Facilities Management

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E-tender No: RBI/Central Office/DIT/19/20-21/ET/753

A Pre-bid meeting in connection with the above tender, floated for ‘Next Generation Firewall Solution, Endpoint Protection (EPP) – EDR and Email security with Sandbox Solution-Supply, Design, Installation, Implementation, Integration, Maintenance and Facilities Management’ was held on May 18, 2021 in the virtual presence of the prospective tenderers using web conferencing platform. The meeting was held in the presence of Shri. Vishwanath Giriraj, IAS (Retd.) who has been appointed as the Independent External Monitor (IEM) for RBI.

The queries raised by the vendor participants on the captioned tender document (E-tender No: RBI/Central Office/DIT/19/20-21/ET/753) of DIT, RBI CO were addressed. A Corrigendum to the RFP document has been uploaded on MSTC e-tendering portal (https://www.mstcecommerce.com/eprochome/rbi) for information and necessary compliance.

All other terms and conditions of the RFP shall remain unchanged.

Chief General Manager-in-Charge
Department of Information Technology

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RBI board approves ₹99,122 cr surplus transfer to govt

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The Reserve Bank of India’s Central Board on Friday approved the transfer of ₹99,122 crore as surplus to the Central government for the accounting period of nine months ended March 31, 2021 (July 2020-March 2021). This is 73.50 per cent higher vis-a-vis the ₹57,128 crore transfer approved in the accounting year 2019-20.

This transfer of higher surplus comes in the backdrop of the government stepping up spending for healthcare and social sector schemes in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic. This will boost its capacity to spend.

“In our projections, we had factored in a dividend of ₹65,000 crore from the RBI, while the government’s budget estimates included ₹45,000 crore from the Central bank. A larger-than-expected dividend from the RBI provides the fiscally stretched government with room to provide more relief measures to alleviate the impact of the second Covid-19 wave,” said Rahul Bajoria, Chief India Economist, Barclays Securities (India) Pvt Ltd, and Shreya Sodhani, Research Analyst, Barclays Investment Bank, Singapore.

They observed that the upside surprise could have been driven by increased returns from domestic assets and changes in accounting practices by the Central bank – the RBI recently allowed itself to book profits on its foreign exchange transactions from a weighted average cost perspective.

“Our estimates show that this move could have helped the Central bank boost yields on its foreign asset holdings. Further, increased holdings of domestic government securities likely further amplified the Central bank’s income for the year,” Bajoria and Sodhani said.

Risk buffer

The Board, at its 589th meeting on Friday, decided to maintain the Contingency Risk Buffer at 5.50 per cent.

“The Board reviewed the current economic situation, global and domestic challenges and recent policy measures taken by the Reserve Bank to mitigate the adverse impact of the second wave of Covid-19 on the economy,” RBI said in a statement.

With the change in the Reserve Bank’s accounting year to April-March (earlier July-June), the Board discussed the working of the RBI during the transition period of nine months (July 2020-March 2021) and approved the Annual Report and accounts of the Reserve Bank for the transition period.

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