Central bank digital currency can boost innovation in cross-border payments: RBI Deputy Governor

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A central bank digital currency (CBDC) can boost innovation in cross-border payments, making these transactions instantaneous and help overcome key challenges relating to time zone and exchange rate differences, according to Reserve Bank of India (RBI) Deputy Governor, T Rabi Sankar.

A CBDC is the legal tender issued by a central bank in a digital form. It is the same as a fiat currency and is exchangeable one-to-one with the fiat currency. Only its form is different.

Speaking at IAMAI’s Global Fintech Fest 2021, Sankar observed that the frictions relating to time zone and exchange rate differences as also varying legal and regulatory requirements across jurisdictions can be solved through platform-based solutions.

These solutions can make real-time price discovery possible even for retail-sized transactions.

Sankar said settlement of cross-border payments in CBDC can happen without the settlement system of either of the countries or both countries being open.

Costly transactions

A July 2021 BIS report noted that cross-border payments suffer from long transaction delays and can be particularly costly due to the involvement of a high number of intermediaries across different time zones along the correspondent banking process.

The report said CBDCs can be open 24/7, eliminating any mismatch of operating hours. It could settle instantly, reducing the need for status updates

In a speech in July 2021, Sankar said going forward, after studying the impact of CBDC models, launch of general purpose CBDCs will be evaluated.

“The RBI is currently working towards a phased implementation strategy and examining use cases which could be implemented with little or no disruption,” he added.

Some key issues under RBI’s examination include the scope of CBDCs, whether they should be used in retail payments or also in wholesale payments, the underlying technology – whether it should be a distributed ledger or a centralised ledger, for instance, and whether the choice of technology should vary according to use cases, the validation mechanism – whether token based or account based, degree of anonymity etc.

However, conducting pilots in wholesale and retail segments may be a possibility in near future, Sankar said.

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Rupee Bank notifies refund scheme, relief for depositors of up to Rs 5 lakh, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Pune: The stressed Rupee Cooperative Bank has notified the scheme of the Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporation (DICGC) to refund account holders up to Rs5 lakh.

The DICGC announcement is valid for 21 insured banks operating under all-inclusive directions (AID), including Rupee Bank. Rupee Bank administrators said they will forward all claims made under the scheme to DICGC by October 15, 2021, after which approved claims will be settled by the DICGC within 90 days.

Rupee Bank administrator Sudhir Pandit said it is “premature” to say what will happen in case of depositors holding amounts exceeding Rs5 lakh. “The DICGC told us to maintain expenses to run the bank for the next six months, within which hopefully there will be a resolution plan for the bank; be it merger with a larger bank, or its revival. We even met Union finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman,” said Pandit.

“A resolution plan or revival will ensure that larger depositors do not lose most of their money, because if the bank is liquidated, large depositors may collectively lose Rs 375 crore,” added Pandit.



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Rupee Bank notifies refund scheme, relief for depositors of up to Rs 5 lakh, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Pune: The stressed Rupee Cooperative Bank has notified the scheme of the Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporation (DICGC) to refund account holders up to Rs5 lakh.

The DICGC announcement is valid for 21 insured banks operating under all-inclusive directions (AID), including Rupee Bank. Rupee Bank administrators said they will forward all claims made under the scheme to DICGC by October 15, 2021, after which approved claims will be settled by the DICGC within 90 days.

Rupee Bank administrator Sudhir Pandit said it is “premature” to say what will happen in case of depositors holding amounts exceeding Rs5 lakh. “The DICGC told us to maintain expenses to run the bank for the next six months, within which hopefully there will be a resolution plan for the bank; be it merger with a larger bank, or its revival. We even met Union finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman,” said Pandit.

“A resolution plan or revival will ensure that larger depositors do not lose most of their money, because if the bank is liquidated, large depositors may collectively lose Rs 375 crore,” added Pandit.



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How digital cash can lift gross national happiness, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The tiny Himalayan kingdom of Bhutan, landlocked between the teeming multitudes of China and India, shot to global fame in the 1970s with gross national happiness: a broad measure of overall welfare it prefers over the more traditional metric of gross domestic product, which only includes production of goods and services, even those that ultimately leave us miserable.

More recently, the hydroelectric-powered nation decided to become not just carbon neutral — but carbon negative, its pristine forests acting as a sink-hole to absorb the greenhouse gases released by its coal-burning neighbors.

And now Bhutan wants a digital currency.

Will a new payment instrument make the 800,000-strong, mostly Buddhist society happier than it already is? My answer: It might.

Cash is a relatively new construct in Bhutan. Up until the 1950s, the people were still bartering in rice, butter, cheese, meat, wool, and hand-woven cloth. Even civil servants accepted their pay in commodities. Seven decades later, the Royal Monetary Authority has announced a pilot with San Francisco-based Ripple for a national currency running on distributed electronic account-keeping.

The open-source XRP ledger claims to be carbon neutral and 120,000 times more efficient than proof-of-work blockchains. Unlike El Salvador, which has chosen to use the volatile and energy-guzzling Bitcoin as money alongside U.S. dollars, Bhutan wants to retain the ngultrum, the national currency. The bet is that a paperless version of the central bank’s liabilities would be a more attractive alternative to bank deposits for a sparse population scattered across a rugged, mountainous terrain.

Big gains are expected from the monetary authority making its IOUs available to the public directly, as electronic cash that can be spent or saved without requiring a commercial bank in the middle. The goal of 85% financial inclusion by 2023 is a substantial jump over the 67% of adult Bhutanese who have bank accounts. Only a fifth of the population has any credit facility.

Bhutan is moving to test wholesale, retail and cross-border applications of its central bank’s tokens, even as advanced nations are still debating their utility. The Federal Reserve is yet to make up its mind; research that will reveal its assessments of the pros and the cons of a digital dollar is eagerly awaited around the world. Among larger economies, China’s e-CNY plans are the most advanced.

That creates a bit of a problem for the government in Thimphu, the Bhutanese capital. The ngultrum is pegged 1:1 to the Indian rupee, which also circulates freely. Since India is the main trading partner by far, the arrangement works fine. But already, 97% of the population has access to the Internet, most of them via their mobile phones. Any sudden preference among the people to use the e-CNY because it’s convenient to send and receive via smartphones could be destabilizing. With the Reserve Bank of India in no hurry to start offering a digital rupee, Bhutan is perhaps right to press ahead with its own plans.

In fact, the $2.5 billion economy would be doing its 1,000-times bigger neighbor a favor. Bhutan’s pilots would be extremely valuable to the Reserve Bank in Mumbai. That’s because the digital ngultrum will be an exact representation of the Indian currency — only twice removed. Important questions about the future rupee tokens, such as whether they will rob commercial banks of deposits, can be answered by looking at how the Bhutanese people use them.

Digitizing the currency may only be the first step. A far more ambitious idea, which was discussed in a conference late last year attended by the local financial industry as well as United Nations officials, is to tokenize happiness.

A digital commodity in happiness could be like cap-and-trade carbon credits, with all 20 districts — or dzhongkhags — given quotas based on the gross national happiness index, an aggregate of nine indicators including education, health, psychological well-being, governance and culture. The laggards would have to obtain tokens from the overachievers. The “price” of happiness could create an incentive for the strugglers to perform better.

Far fetched? For now, perhaps. But Bhutan is a neat little laboratory. With just five banks, there isn’t much by way of entrenched traditional finance. Only 6.5% of the population has all three: a savings account, insurance and some credit. Bank of Bhutan Ltd., which had roughly 300,000 deposit accounts in 2019, more than any other lender, had only 140,000 mobile banking customers.

The central bank’s desire to take cash digital could create opportunities for blockchain-based decentralized finance. Hopefully, it won’t use up too much energy and will leave people happier than they are now. Especially in remote places like the northernmost dzhongkhag of Gasa, which has all of two ATMs.

(Views are personal)



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Rupee inches 8 paise higher to 73.75 against US dollar in early trade

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The Indian rupee appreciated 8 paise to 73.75 against the US dollar in opening trade on Tuesday, tracking positive domestic equities.

Forex traders said rupee is trading in a narrow range as weakness of Asian currencies, firm crude oil prices and strong dollar weighed on the domestic unit.

At the interbank foreign exchange, the rupee opened at 73.79 against the dollar, then edged higher to 73.75, up 8 paise over its previous close.

On Monday, the rupee had settled at 73.83 against the US dollar.

Dolla index rises

Meanwhile, the dollar index, which gauges the greenback’s strength against a basket of six currencies, rose 0.06 per cent to 93.44.

The Indian rupee opened on a flat note this Tuesday morning against the dollar, tracking the strength of the greenback and strong crude oil prices, Reliance Securities said in a research note.

Moreover, most emerging market and Asian currencies have started weaker this Tuesday morning and will weigh on sentiments, the note added.

Meanwhile, foreign institutional investors were net sellers in the capital market on Monday as they offloaded shares worth ₹594.63 crore, as per exchange data.

On the domestic equity market front, the BSE Sensex was trading 16.19 points or 0.03 per cent higher at 60,094.07, while the broader NSE Nifty advanced 24.75 points or 0.14 per cent to 17,879.85.

Meanwhile, global oil benchmark Brent crude futures rose 0.79 per cent to $80.16 per barrel.

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SEBI tightens risk management rules for mutual funds

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India’s market regulator on Monday tightened risk management rules for mutual funds,including specifying guidelines to identify, measure and report various risks, in an effort to protect the interest of investors in a fast-growing industry.

The new rules mandate the appointment of a chief risk officer, creation of risk management committees and maintaining metrics such as investment risk, liquidity risk and credit risk for each scheme, the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) said.

The new framework comes a month after it barred Kotak Mahindra Asset Management, one of the country’s largest mutual fund managers, from launching any fixed maturity plans (FMPs) for six months and fined it for breaking rules.

SEBI also barred Franklin Templeton in India in June from launching any new debt schemes for two years after it found”serious lapses and violations” at the firm when it decided to suddenly shut several schemes. Franklin has appealed against the decision, but agreed it would not launch any new debt funds for the time being.

In its new rules on Monday, SEBI provided detailed guidelines on the risk management roles for an asset management company’s board, trustees, chief executive officer, chief investment officer, other senior officials and fund managers.

The mutual fund industry has grown rapidly in India,especially with interest from retail investors in systematic investment plans that allow investment of a fixed amount regularly in schemes.

Assets managed by India’s mutual fund houses have increased to about 36 trillion rupees ($487.72 billion) in August from nearly 28 trillion rupees a year earlier, according to the Association of Mutual Funds in India (AMFI).

SEBI said fund houses have to adhere to the new risk management rules from January 1 and review their compliance every year.

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Top corporates, banks go big on ‘swaption’ deals, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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MUMBAI: Top private and foreign lenders and corporates including ICICI Bank, IndusInd Bank, Standard Chartered Bank, HSBC and Reliance Industries, are cutting ‘swaption‘ deals, a risk-focused interest-rates derivative product introduced about a month ago, multiple people familiar with the matter told ET.

In the past six weeks, the notional value of transactions rose to Rs 1,900 crore on the platform, which helps both local borrowers and investors to rein in funding costs in a rising rate scenario and retain investment returns in a falling rate cycle.

To be sure, the data available with the Clearing Corporation of India point to only interbank transactions and exclude corporate client statistics, which can be meaningful but not yet made public.

“Swaptions have begun to gain traction as a derivative instrument to help manage interest rate risks more effectively,” said B Prasanna, Group Head, Global Markets, Sales, Trading and Research, ICICI Bank. “While we and some banks have already started dealing in this instrument, others are setting up the infrastructure. The product should be a success with participation from both banks and end-users, such as corporates.”
Top corporates, banks go big on ‘swaption’ deals
HDFC Bank seems keen on swaption. Besides Reliance, some other large corporates are also said to be interested in swaption deals.

Reliance Industries, HDFC Bank and IndusInd Bank did not reply to ET’s query.

“We expect demand for interest rate swaptions from domestic clients to continue to grow,” said Parul Mittal Sinha, Head – Financial Markets, India Standard Chartered Bank. “In the current macroeconomic backdrop, demand for interest rate swaptions should probably see an increase as they provide an additional avenue for flexibly hedging interest-rate risks.”

Swaptions are based on OIS (Overnight Indexed Swap), which is a relatively liquid instrument that potentially offers good enough scope for hedging.

“Interest rate risk management has to be an active part of any financial institution’s asset-liability management,” said Ashish Vaidya, head of treasury and markets at DBS Bank India. “If the regulatory framework moves toward mark-to-market practices, then the dynamics of portfolio management will be required.”

This, in turn, will pave the way for a more liquid and vibrant swaption market, he said.

A swaption gives the buyer the right, but not the obligation, to enter into an interest rate swap. Banks and primary dealers will likely be involved in market making along with corporates.

“We have executed a couple of interest rate options (IROs) products…,” said Pradeep Khanna, Interim Head of Markets, HSBC India. “With time, we hope the depth of the markets increase so as to enable constituents to have one more product to manage INR interest rate risks on an ongoing basis.”

Issuers selling bonds with put options that get exercised in rising interest rate markets now have a tool to protect them.

If a borrower raises local bonds with a ‘put’ option, investors could well surrender those papers in rising interest rate scenarios, forcing a borrower to issue new bonds at higher rates.

This is where the utility comes in for a borrower if it buys a swaption contract. That will protect the borrower against any rate losses in case investors exercise the put option on the bonds.

The reverse is also true in case bonds issued with call options.



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Federal Bank launches contactless credit card

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The card comes with the lowest annual percentage rate, starting at 5.88% per annum, the bank said.

Federal Bank on Monday launched the ‘Federal Bank RuPay Signet’ contactless credit card in association with the National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI) .

Virtually launching the card, Shalini Warrier, the bank’s executive director & business head- retail, said, “Federal Bank has, yet again, ensured that the mantra of ‘Digital at the fore, human at the core’ comes to life via this latest offering, the RuPay credit card.

This card is also a symbol of our strong partnership with NPCI, an entity known for innovation in the retail payments space.” The card comes with the lowest annual percentage rate, starting at 5.88% per annum, the bank said.

Praveena Rai, COO, NPCI, said, “… This card has significant potential to attract new-age customers as it has a complete package of benefits suiting their lifestyle backed up with an innovative cashback scheme. At NPCI, for RuPay, we continue to work towards offering a delightful and contactless shopping experience to all our customers. We also believe our association with Federal Bank will provide a wider penetration of RuPay contactless cards in the country.”

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