RBI needs to ensure nascent revival of economic activity shows signs of durability: Governor Shaktikanta Das

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Reserve Bank of India Governor Shaktikanta Das said the central bank needs to ensure that the nascent revival of economic activity shows signs of durability and sustainability. At the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) meeting, held between October 6 and 8, 2021, Das referred to an ever evolving and dynamic environment, with the outlook overcast by several uncertainties including the fact that the pandemic is far from over.

“At this critical juncture, our actions have to be gradual, calibrated, well-timed and well-telegraphed to avoid any undue surprises,” the Governor said.

Professor Varma’s take

According to the Minutes of the MPC meeting released by the RBI on Friday, Jayanth R Varma (Professor, Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad) was the only MPC member who voted against the accommodative stance and was not in favour of the decision to keep the reverse repo rate at 3.35 per cent. He had taken a similar stand at the previous MPC meeting.

Varma reiterated that the Covid-19 pandemic has mutated into a human tragedy rather than an economic crisis, and monetary policy is not the right instrument to deal with this.

“…The ill effects of the pandemic are now concentrated in narrow pockets of the economy, and monetary policy is much less effective than fiscal policy for providing targeted relief to the worst affected segments of the economy,” he said.

“…Inflationary pressures are beginning to show signs of greater persistence than anticipated earlier,” the Professor said.

He flagged two other risks – one to inflation (the ongoing transition to green energy worldwide poses a significant risk of creating a series of energy price shocks) and the other to growth (the tail risk to global growth posed by emerging financial sector fragility in China) – are well beyond the control of the MPC, which warrant a heightened degree of flexibility and agility.

Varma opined that a pattern of policy making in slow motion that is guided by an excessive desire to avoid surprises is no longer appropriate.

Views of other members

Shashanka Bhide, Senior Advisor, National Council of Applied Economic Research, Delhi, noted that in the context of the uncertainties in the external demand and price conditions and an uneven sectoral growth pattern, an accommodative monetary policy stance and broader policy support are necessary at this juncture for strengthening the growth momentum and reducing inflation pressures.

Ashima Goyal, Emeritus Professor, Indira Gandhi Institute of Development Research, Mumbai, observed that global price shocks have turned out to be more persistent, contributing to sticky core inflation.

She emphasised that tax cuts on petroleum products are essential to break the upward movement that could impart persistence to domestic inflation.

Goyal felt that liquidity needs to be kept in sufficient surplus to absorb large shocks from foreign flows, government cash balances and currency leakages even as the excess is reduced allowing the reverse repo to rise gradually and arrangements for non-banks remain in place.

She suggested that a higher fixed reverse repo rate for banks could be linked to raising their interest rates on deposit accounts.

‘Close watch needed’

MD Patra, Deputy Governor, RBI, said even as domestic macroeconomic configurations are improving, the risks from global developments are rising and warrant a close watch as they could stifle the recovery that is underway in India.

“…In my view, the biggest risks to India’s macroeconomic prospects are global and they could materialise suddenly,” he cautioned.

Mridul K Saggar, Executive Director, RBI, stated that if at all some guidance is needed at this stage, it has to be a soft one, with the Reserve Bank preparing markets that while policy stance is likely to remain accommodative till growth is revived on a durable basis, liquidity levels will be adjusted dynamically to appropriate lower levels that are still consistent with accommodative stance.

“…In my judgement, if no new disruptions to growth emerge, output gap will close sometime in 2022-23 and monetary policy should start to gradually reposition to lowering underlying inflation and inflation expectations next year, especially if inflation edges up from the energy and services side amid sticky goods core inflation,” Saggar said.

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FinMin announces repayment of oil bonds worth ₹5,000 cr

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The Finance Ministry has announced payment of ₹5,000 crore for oil bonds issued during 2005 and 2010 in lieu of selling oil product below the cost.

“The outstanding balance of ‘7.75% OMC GoI Special Bonds 2021’ is repayable at par on November 26, 2021,” the Ministry said in a statement. Further it mentioned that no interest will accrue thereon from the said date. In the event of a holiday being declared on repayment day by any State Government under the Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881, the loan/s will be repaid by the paying offices in that State on the previous working day.

Last month, the government paid ₹5,000 crore for another tranche of oil bond, taking total payout at ₹10,000 crore in the fiscal. After this, next tranche of ₹22,000 crore will be due in 2023. With this total principal amount pending would be over ₹1.20-lakh crore to be repaid between 2023 and 2026.

A mechanism of the regulated era, the bonds were issued to the oil companies for not increasing retail prices of petrol and diesel to reflect rising crude oil prices. The ‘under-recoveries’ of the oil companies due to their bearing the subsidy burden was converted into oil bonds by the then government. These bonds are interest-bearing, having a fixed coupon rate and paid on a half-yearly basis. The annual interest due of around ₹10,000 crore has been provided for in the Budget.

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Reserve Bank of India – Notifications

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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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Reserve Bank of India – Press Releases

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1. Reserve Bank of India – Liabilities and Assets*
(₹ Crore)
Item 2020 2021 Variation
Oct. 16 Oct. 8 Oct. 15 Week Year
1 2 3 4 5
4 Loans and Advances          
4.1 Central Government
4.2 State Governments 14867 9800 8296 -1504 -6571
* Data are provisional.

2. Foreign Exchange Reserves
Item As on October 15, 2021 Variation over
Week End-March 2021 Year
₹ Cr. US$ Mn. ₹ Cr. US$ Mn. ₹ Cr. US$ Mn. ₹ Cr. US$ Mn.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
1 Total Reserves 4824947 641008 30526 1492 605994 64024 753075 85888
1.1 Foreign Currency Assets 4350293 577951 24557 950 426125 41257 592363 65629
1.2 Gold 290389 38579 5343 557 42666 4699 21304 1895
1.3 SDRs 144876 19247 422 -21 134013 17762 134021 17767
1.4 Reserve Position in the IMF 39389 5231 204 6 3191 306 5386 597
*Difference, if any, is due to rounding off

4. Scheduled Commercial Banks – Business in India
(₹ Crore)
Item Outstanding as on Oct. 8, 2021 Variation over
Fortnight Financial year so far Year-on-year
2020-21 2021-22 2020 2021
1 2 3 4 5 6
2 Liabilities to Others            
2.1 Aggregate Deposits 15755753 156805 734455 642240 1364025 1453805
2.1a Growth (Per cent)   1.0 5.4 4.2 10.5 10.2
2.1.1 Demand 1786335 -37405 -147025 -74858 128813 316356
2.1.2 Time 13969418 194210 881480 717098 1235211 1137449
2.2 Borrowings 253399 7501 -54194 9374 -87371 -1846
2.3 Other Demand and Time Liabilities 584167 782 -83914 -72440 13120 64405
7 Bank Credit 11013458 56641 -27366 63949 554114 669963
7.1a Growth (Per cent)   0.5 –0.3 0.6 5.7 6.5
7a.1 Food Credit 62408 66 11629 1154 3103 -985
7a.2 Non-food credit 10951050 56575 -38995 62795 551011 670948

6. Money Stock: Components and Sources
(₹ Crore)
Item Outstanding as on Variation over
2021 Fortnight Financial Year so far Year-on-Year
2020-21 2021-22 2020 2021
Mar. 31 Oct. 8 Amount % Amount % Amount % Amount % Amount %
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
M3 18844578 19567496 171461 0.9 1006273 6.0 722918 3.8 1919671 12.1 1761260 9.9
1 Components (1.1.+1.2+1.3+1.4)                        
1.1 Currency with the Public 2751828 2830514 15582 0.6 259405 11.0 78685 2.9 478935 22.5 221360 8.5
1.2 Demand Deposits with Banks 1995120 1920877 -37359 -1.9 -146786 -8.4 -74243 –3.7 133734 9.2 329971 20.7
1.3 Time Deposits with Banks 14050278 14768367 192401 1.3 889288 7.0 718089 5.1 1296976 10.6 1205064 8.9
1.4 ‘Other’ Deposits with Reserve Bank 47351 47738 838 1.8 4365 11.3 387 0.8 10026 30.5 4865 11.3
2 Sources (2.1+2.2+2.3+2.4-2.5)                        
2.1 Net Bank Credit to Government 5850374 6124433 48310 0.8 669497 13.5 274059 4.7 724319 14.8 494574 8.8
2.1.1 Reserve Bank 1099686 1138634 20124   -66591   38949   -72585   213033  
2.1.2 Other Banks 4750689 4985798 28186 0.6 736088 18.5 235110 4.9 796904 20.4 281541 6.0
2.2 Bank Credit to Commercial Sector 11668466 11720568 54556 0.5 -33079 -0.3 52101 0.4 601750 5.8 715002 6.5
2.2.1 Reserve Bank 8709 4434 -1363   1638   -4275   7192   -10370  
2.2.2 Other Banks 11659757 11716134 55918 0.5 -34717 -0.3 56376 0.5 594558 5.7 725372 6.6

8. Liquidity Operations by RBI
(₹ Crore)
Date Liquidity Adjustment Facility MSF* Standing Liquidity Facilities Market Stabili sation Scheme OMO (Outright) Long Term Repo Opera tions& Targeted Long Term Repo Opera tions# Special Long- Term Repo Operations for Small Finance Banks Special Reverse Repo£ Net Injection (+)/
Absorption (-)
(1+3+5+ 6+9+10 +11+12-2- 4-7-8-13)
Repo Reverse Repo* Variable Rate Repo Variable Rate Reverse Repo Sale Purc hase
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14
Oct. 11, 2021 263634 250 -263384
Oct. 12, 2021 272080 200013 562 -471531
Oct. 13, 2021 262968 540 –2300 -264728
Oct. 14, 2021 208245 450 -207795
Oct. 15, 2021 1124 595 -529
Oct. 16, 2021 51112 28 -51084
Oct. 17, 2021 5311 8 -5303
* Includes additional Reverse Repo and additional MSF operations (for the period December 16, 2019 to February 13, 2020).
# Includes Targeted Long Term Repo Operations (TLTRO) and Targeted Long Term Repo Operations 2.0 (TLTRO 2.0) and On Tap Targeted Long Term Repo Operations. Negative (-) sign indicates repayments done by Banks.
& Negative (-) sign indicates repayments done by Banks.
£ As per Press Release No. 2021-2022/177 dated May 07, 2021. From June 18, 2021, the data also includes the amount absorbed as per the Press Release No. 2021-2022/323 dated June 04, 2021.

The above information can be accessed on Internet at https://wss.rbi.org.in/

The concepts and methodologies for WSS are available in Handbook on WSS (https://rbi.org.in/scripts/PublicationsView.aspx?id=15762).

Time series data are available at https://dbie.rbi.org.in

Ajit Prasad
Director   

Press Release: 2021-2022/1087

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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 10,000 October 27, 2021
(Wednesday)
October 28, 2021
(Thursday)
2 182 Days 3,000
3 364 Days 7,000
  Total 20,000    

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 Wednesday, October 27, 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, October 28, 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: 2021-2022/1085

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Yes Bank posts 74% jump in Q2 net profit

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Private sector lender Yes Bank’s standalone net profit surged by 74.3 per cent to ₹225.5 crore in the second quarter of the fiscal led by a sharp jump in non-interest income and lower provisions.

The bank’s standalone net profit stood at ₹129.37 crore in the second quarter of last fiscal.

For the quarter-ended September 30, 2021, Yes Bank reported a 23.4 per cent drop in its net interest income to ₹1,512 crore as against ₹1,973 crore a year ago.

Net interest margin stood at 2.2 per cent in the second quarter of the fiscal as against 3.1 per cent in the corresponding period last fiscal. Non-interest income jumped by 30.2 per cent on a year-on-year basis to ₹778 crore during the quarter.

Provisions were 65 per cent lower at ₹377 crore in the second quarter as against ₹1,078 crore a year ago. Asset quality saw some improvement but non-performing assets remained high.

Gross NPAs stood at ₹28,740.59 crore or 14.97 per cent of gross advances as on September 30, 2021 versus 16.9 per cent a year ago. Net NPAs stood at 5.55 per cent of net advances at the end of the second quarter as against 4.71 per cent a year ago.

Prashant Kumar, Managing Director and CEO, Yes Bank said the resolution momentum of the bank continues with ₹987 crore of cash recoveries and ₹969 crore of upgrades in the second quarter of the fiscal.

“We are on track to meet the target of ₹5,000 crore through recoveries and upgrades this fiscal,” he told reporters.

Dish TV

On the issue of Dish TV, Kumar said the bank is doing everything to secure the asset and will explore legal recourse to maximise the recovery.

The bank would inform if and when it approaches the courts on the issue.

The bank is also moving toward setting up its asset reconstruction company (ARC) and expects to announce the name of the foreign partner in the next 60 days. “We have got a fantastic response from international investors. We hope to conclude the deal before the end of the financial year,” he said, adding that the lender will transfer all NPAs to the ARC.

“We will make our bank 0 per cent NPA as of March 31, 2022,” he said.

Restructuring

The bank said that ₹421.01 crore of the ₹4,621.74 crore restructured under the Reserve Bank of India’s Resolution Framework 1.0 had slipped into NPA during the half-year. Of this, it has written-off ₹8.06 crore.

Under the Resolution Framework 2.0, it has received requests for resolution of 17,778 personal loans, 2,634 business loans and 1,588 small businesses involving a total exposure of ₹857.64 crore. It has increased provisions by ₹125.86 crore on account of the resolution.

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New global rules leave just 10 big EU banks short of capital, draft shows, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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* Capital shortfall seen at less than 27 bln euros

* Basel III directive also tackles climate change, branches

FRANKFURT, – Only 10 major European banks may need to raise capital as a result of the rollout of new global rules and their shortfall could be smaller than 27 billion euros ($31.43 billion), according to draft European Union regulation seen by Reuters.

The impact would be much smaller than the 52.2 billion euros estimated by the European Banking Authority (EBA) last year, a sigh of relief for a sector that has been plagued by low profits for a decade and is still recovering from a pandemic-induced recession.

The draft of European Commission‘s Basel III directive, which transposes the final batch of global rules aimed at avoiding a repeat of the 2008 financial crisis, put the increase to EU banks’ minimum capital requirements at between 0.7% and 2.7% by 2015 and 6.4%-8.4% by 2030.

“According to estimates provided by the EBA, this impact could lead a limited number of large EU banks (10 out of 99 banks in the test sample) to have to raise collectively… less than 27 billion euros,” the Commission said in the document.

The EBA said the banks in the test sample were from 17 EU countries and represented around 75% of total EU banks’ assets.

Banks had lobbied for a more flexible interpretation of the “output floor”, which limits their discretion in setting their own capital requirement, but their wishes were not fulfilled.

The European Parliament will have the final say on approving the rules, but regulators have warned the bloc not to stray from the standards already agreed at a global level.

The directive, which is due to be published next week, also gives supervisors the power to impose requirements relating to climate risk and contains stricter rules for branches of foreign banks in the EU.

This gives extra legal backing to the European Central Bank, which has been putting pressure on banks to disclose and tackle risks relating to climate change, such as weather hazards and changes in regulation.

As regards foreign branches, which had assets worth 510 billion euros at the end of last year and are concentrated in Belgium, France, Germany and Luxembourg, they will now be subject to a common authorisation procedure.

They will also have to comply with requirements relating to their capital, liquidity, governance and risk management, the draft shows. ($1 = 0.8591 euros) (Reporting by Huw Jones, Writing By Francesco Canepa in Frankfurt, Editing by Alex Richardson)



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Yes Bank Q2 profit jumps 74% to Rs 225 crore, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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New Delhi, Yes Bank on Friday reported a 74 per cent increase in standalone net profit to Rs 225 crore for the second quarter ended September. The private sector lender had earned a profit of Rs 129 crore in the corresponding quarter of previous fiscal.

Total income slipped to Rs 5,430.30 crore during the July-September period from Rs 5,842.81 crore in the same quarter last year, the bank said in regulatory filing.

Gross bad loans declined to 14.9 per cent of gross advances as on September 30. The same stood at 16.9 per cent in the year-ago period.

However, net Non-Performing Assets (NPAs) or bad loans rose to 5.55 per cent in the quarter under review from 4.71 per cent a year ago.

The bank has made prudent provisioning of Rs 336 crore on a single telecom exposure in the latest quarter. PTI DP RAM

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KVGB disburses ₹44.28 cr loan at outreach programme

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The Dharwad region of Karnataka Vikas Grameena Bank (KVGB) disbursed loans to the tune of ₹44.28 crore to nearly 725 beneficiaries under various heads at the customer outreach initiative organised under the aegis of state-level bankers’ committee (SLBC), according to P Gopi Krishna, Chairman of KVGB.

He said the customers outreach initiative was organised on Thursday to boost credit in retail, agriculture and MSME sectors.

Speaking on the occasion, B Chandrasekhar Rao, convenor of the SLBC, advised bankers to focus on agriculture lending and to ensure financial inclusion of all sections of society. He asked the small and medium scale entrepreneurs and citizens to utilise loan facilities offered by various banks, including regional rural banks. He handed over loan sanction letters to the borrowers of KVGB.

KVGB highlighted solar-powered livelihood solutions at the customer outreach initiative.

Ullas Gunaga, Chief Manager of KVGB, said the bank is financing the livelihood solutions backed by solar power. The intention is that these livelihood solutions will help micro and small entrepreneurs, economically weaker sections, and help in sustainable agriculture and women empowerment. He said the solar technology company SELCO provides technological interventions, market linkages, banking and financial inclusion support and training for capacity building.

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Bank of India opens first-ever branch in Ladakh, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Leh, Bank of India on Friday extended its operations to the Union Territory of Ladakh by opening its first-ever branch here with its top official asserting that the bank is fully committed to extending its banking services to the people living in far-flung areas of the country.

This was the 5,086th branch opened by a bank in the country and abroad, and is fully computerised and digitised with a facility of E-Gallery to provide 24×7 banking to the residents of Leh, a spokesperson of the Bank of India (BOI) said.

He said BOI Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer A K Das opened the branch in the presence of Field General Manager A K Jain, Zonal Manager Vasudev, Branch Manager Sangeeta and various local dignitaries and customers.

“The bank is fully committed to extending its banking services to the people living in the far-flung areas of the country. The opening of a branch here is an important step towards this goal,” Das said.

He said it would not only boost economic activities in the region but will also help the local people to use various banking products like housing, vehicle, education and agriculture loans, and also reap the benefits of other government schemes.

Das added that the bank has a unique salary account scheme for defence and paramilitary personnel providing free insurance cover.

“The bank also provides home, vehicle and consumer loans at low rates. Recently, the bank has reduced the interest rate for housing loans to 6.50 per cent and that for vehicle loans to 6.85 per cent,” he said.

Das added that the bank will continue to endeavour to provide the best-quality banking facilities to its customers and connect more and more people to mainstream banking with fully digitised facilities.

Meanwhile, in continuation to the bank’s mission to reach maximum customers across India, it also conducted a ‘customer outreach programme’ at Leh branch, wherein Das distributed loan sanction letters to various beneficiaries, the spokesperson said.

Under the bank’s corporate social responsibility, he said Das is presenting ‘paper cutting machine’ to a non-governmental organisation of Ladakh, People’s Action Group for Inclusion and Right, who is assisting differently-abled persons by empowering them with various skills to earn their livelihood and live a respectable life. PTI TAS AB HRS hrs



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