Bitcoin is facing a make-or-break moment, technicals show, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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By Vildana Hajric and Lu Wang

Bitcoin is facing a make-or-break moment following a recent bout of selling, according to technical analysis.
Though the cryptocurrency has rebounded above its average price over the past 100 days, it’s still trading below its 50-day moving average. Such a dynamic typically indicates an asset is nearing an inflection point.

If Bitcoin can’t overtake its 50-day mean — which currently sits at about $57,000 — then it might be in for a period of volatility as the gap between the two trend lines converges. Technical indicators suggest breaking out might not be an easy feat — Bitcoin failed to do so on several occasions last week.

Trading in the world’s largest digital asset has been choppy in recent days after it hit a record high in mid-April above $64,000. It’s down more than 15% since then, though it rebounded earlier this week amid positive news, including comments from Tesla Inc.’s chief financial officer that reiterated the company’s commitment to the cryptocurrency.

Bitcoin is facing a make-or-break moment, technicals show
“The drastic — relative to what we’ve seen of late — pullback certainly was a point of eyebrows being raised, but at the end of the day, I think the fact that things were able to rebound and stabilize is a good thing,” said David Tawil, president of ProChain Capital. “It shows real power to the token, the staying power to the asset class.”

The coin fell 1.4% on Wednesday following an announcement by the Securities and Exchange Commission that it will delay a decision on a Bitcoin exchange-traded fund. It was at about $54,586 as of 9:43 a.m. in Hong Kong Thursday.

Sam Stovall, chief investment strategist at CFRA Research, says that if the stock market continues its advance, he expected Bitcoin to follow.

Despite its recent turbulence, Bitcoin is still up 511% over the past year. Inflation and central bank policies have been its biggest drivers during the past 12 months, according to Quant Insight, a London-based analytics research firm that studies the relationship between assets and macro factors.

Bitcoin is facing a make-or-break moment, technicals show
While some dispute the idea that Bitcoin can act as an inflation hedge, the argument has been a key tenet for its bullish thesis and rings true for a lot of crypto fans. Proponents have seized on the money-printing narrative to promote the notion that Bitcoin is a store of wealth, an explanation that’s gained traction in recent months with economists expecting price pressures to pick up.

“No question about it — what drives a big chunk of the interest in Bitcoin has been just the tremendous amount of money that has been printed and will be printed and really the fundamental thought that you cannot have that much money in the system and not have it be inflationary,” said Chuck Cumello, president and chief executive officer of Essex Financial Services.



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Bank FD rates set to rise as inflation, recovery take hold, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Banks and non-banking finance companies have started increasing deposit rates across tenures, especially rates on longer-term FDs on likely recovery in credit demand and rising inflation.

The number of lenders offering higher rates may go up over the next few months.

HDFC, Bajaj Capital

Mortgage lender HDFC has increased rates on fixed deposits maturing between 33 and 99 months by 10-25 basis points for the first time in 29 months. HDFC said from March 30, fixed deposits of 33-month duration will fetch 6.2% annualised returns while fixed deposits with 66-month maturity will now fetch 6.6% interest rate and the 99-month deposits will receive 6.65% interest rate. Further, senior citizens would get 0.25% more on the above-mentioned rates. Worth mentioning here is that this is the first time after October 2018 that HDFC Ltd has raised deposit rates. In February, Bajaj Finance, another top-rated lender had raised interest rates on fixed deposits by 40 basis points. Fixed deposits from Bajaj Finance with tenures of three to five years earn 7%.

Negative rate prospects

The finance ministry gave a scare of a rate cut on small savings schemes as such a move would have put pressure on reduction in bank deposit rates.

With inflation above 5%, deposit rates are already threatening to veer into negative territory, any rate cut would be a double whammy for depositors.

Retail depositors have struggled during the pandemic to maintain their earnings and also ensure inflation doesn’t erode their savings.

If inflation continues to rise, banks will have to offer higher deposit rates to investors, who in sight of negative returns, may shift their money elsewhere.

Rates kept down

In 2020, due to the pandemic, the Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI) adopted an accommodative stance with measures to keep the policy rates down throughout the year. It also announced measures to infuse liquidity in the banking system to be able to provide affordable financing and hence, support economic growth. Extra liquidity also kept interest rates down. The credit offtake was low as banks adopted a cautious stance towards lending across all sectors of the economy, which led to lower rates.

Growth this year

However, the banking system’s credit growth will almost double to 10 per cent in 2021-22 on the economic recovery and policy interventions.

The economic growth pegged at 10.5% by RBI for FY21-22 and 12% by foreign rating agencies. From a banks’ credit growth perspective, the agency said the expansion will accelerate by 4-5 percentage points to 9-10 per cent in 2021-22.

The faster credit growth will be led by retail loans, which are expected to grow in mid-teens, while corporate loans, which de-grew during 2020-21, are also likely to show a 5-6 per cent jump. This is expected to be driven by investment demand from infrastructure and real estate sectors as well as the release of pent-up consumer demand, thus resulting in high growth in retail finance.

The growth and demand for credit is likely to push up fixed deposit rates in the next 3-9 months.

RBI measures

Contrary to its accommodative stance, RBI has already reduced its liquidity support to the market with no additional liquidity measures announced in the latest monetary policy review in February 2021. It has withdrawn the 1% Cash Reserve Ratio relaxation for banks and now the CRR must be brought up to 4% in two tranches. A hike in CRR will lead to a reduction in liquidity available with banks which may force them to look out for more funds from retail depositors to meet their credit demand, thus adding another factor that can result in higher deposit rates.



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Govt’s Rs 12 lakh crore borrowing programme a tightrope walk for RBI, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The central government’s plan to borrow a massive Rs 12 lakh crore in 2021-22 and additional Rs 80,000 crore in fiscal 2021 from the market has spooked the bond market.

Bond investors are seeking higher yields as with the rise in demand the prices should rise.

They see RBI winding back its accommodative measures as the economy recovers from the pandemic. Traders, therefore, see few incentives to buy bonds.

Borrowing costs

However, RBI, the manager of government borrowing, has to keep costs low for the government and is therefore looking at pumping liquidity to ensure yields are capped.

To support the programme, the RBI will seek to buy more than Rs 3 lakh crore of debt while capping the benchmark yield at 6%.

However, the benchmark 10-year bond as its yield keeps breaching 6%, a level that’s seen as a line in the sand for the Reserve Bank of India.

The central bank typically raises funds from banks, financial institutions, mutual funds and foreign institutions. It recently allowed retail investors also in the bond market.

Inflation woes

With the rising inflation, RBI, which operates the monetary policy, is mandated to raise rates to tame inflation. This brings in conflict with its role to keep borrowing costs low for the government.

Experts this conflict rising in the coming years as the government has guided that the fiscal deficit will higher for the next few years.

So how is RBI managing?

As long as inflation is low, the RBI steps in and purchases bonds, but when interest rates start rising, it will have to increase liquidity in the system and push down rates.

The central bank is already resorting to measures such as Operation Twist, or simultaneous buying and selling of bonds via open market operations (OMOs).

It has already conducted Rs 3 lakh crore of bond purchases under OMOs this year.

In Operation Twist, the central bank buys longer maturity papers and sells shorter maturity papers to keep liquidity neutral.

However, as corporates raise money at shorter yield, Operation Twist is crowding them out of the market.

The central bank has also undertaken measures such as long-term repo operations and targeted long-term repo operations to infuse liquidity into the system.

The hitch

However, the market is jittery over such a huge borrowing plan and it also sees certain RBI measures veering from the accommodative stance as inflation rises.

Already, the borrowing programme of the central government for this financial year till date has been of around Rs 13.17 lakh crore and those of state governments around Rs 7.17 lakh crore. All these purchases are reflecting losses on investor balance sheets.

The RBI which had cut cash reserve ratio (CRR) by 100 bps in March 2020 for a period of one year, has recently announced a phased restoration of CRR to 4 per cent from March 27, which is being seen as a move towards reversal of accommodative stance.

The RBI’s strategy of pursuing multiple objectives such as exchange rate management to stop the rupee from appreciation, inflation control and liquidity management has led to confusion in the market.

Due to this the yields remain elevated. The spread of 10-year government bond over the repo rate has remained widened as also the spread of 10-year bonds over 1 year T-bills has also widened.

Some relief

The recent rise in international oil prices may reduce upward pressure on the rupee, which may give RBI elbowroom to reduce dollar purchases and step up bond buys to ensure adequate liquidity in the local market, and help the government borrowing programme.

While the market remains unconvinced over RBI’s ability to manage the government’s borrowing programme, in February, RBI governor Shaktikanta Das had exuded confidence that it will able to manage the high quantum of government borrowings at Rs 12 lakh crore for the next fiscal in a “nondisruptive” manner.



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Monetary policy: RBI keeps rates on hold, promises ample liquidity

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“The cost of capital for companies is going to go up,” bankers said.

Despite worries on inflation, Reserve Bank of India (RBI) on Friday opted to leave policy rates unchanged even as it promised an accommodative stance for rates and, critically, liquidity. “The RBI stands committed to ensure the availability of ample liquidity in the system…As the government’s debt manager and banker, the Reserve Bank will ensure the orderly completion of the market borrowing programme in a non-disruptive manner,” RBI governor Shaktikanta Das observed. The central bank expects the economy to grow at 10.5% in 2021-22.

However, despite assurances from the central bank it would ensure the government’s large borrowing plan of Rs 12 lakh crore went through smoothly, the bond markets remained somewhat nervous with yields trending up.

Experts noted interest rates are headed up and that the trading range for the benchmark which has been ruling at 5.75-6% is expected to shift upwards. Moreover, the quantum of surplus liquidity could be smaller in 2021-22.

“The cost of capital for companies is going to go up,” bankers said.

Pranjul Bhandari, chief economist, HSBC, believes the aim of the central bank will be to ensure that financial conditions do not tighten too sharply over the foreseeable future.

Economists believe the policy repo rate will stay unchanged through 2021 and rise as growth picks up. “We expect the policy stance to shift to ‘neutral’ from ‘accommodative’ in Q3, the normalisation of the policy corridor to begin in Q4, and 50 bps worth of repo rate hikes in H1 2022,” Sonal Varma, chief economist at Nomura, wrote.

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Will RBI’s MPC take the Budget 2021 route?, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The Reserve Bank of India’s Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) began its meeting on Wednesday, and it is expected that the committee would maintain the interest rates and continue with an accommodative policy stance to push the growth.

Meanwhile, the Budget has revised the fiscal deficit to 9.5% for FY21 and 6.8% for FY22, indicating that the government’s borrowings would be high and in such a scenario it would be difficult for the RBI to maintain low interest rates — to encourage banks to lend more.

Jyoti Prakash Gadia, Managing Director, Resurgent India, said, “We expect a status quo to be maintained by RBI, in policy rates, with a pause for the 1st quarter of the next fiscal… A shift from the accommodative stance may not emerge in the short run, as the position gets cleared on the inflation and interest rate benchmarks. The continued tilt in favour of growth, in the growth – inflation tradeoff is need of the hour and basic expectation.”

Since the last three meetings, the MPC has kept the rate unchanged at a record low of 4%, and the reverse repo rate is 3.35%.

Aditi Nayar, principal economist, Icra, said that despite a drop in inflation in December 2020, the trajectory remains unpalatable. “We expect an extended pause for the repo rate, with the stance to be changed to neutral in the August 2021 policy review or later, once there is clarity on the durability of the economic recovery,” she said.

Inflation is now back within the MPC’s target band, despite concerns over rising input costs, and the economy appears well poised for a growth recovery, believes Rahul Bajoria, Chief India Economist, Barclays.

“While the MPC will likely draw comfort from the favourable developments on growth and inflation, it will wait to gauge the sustainability before signalling a change in approach. Liquidity guidance may take precedence over policy guidance in the interim,” he added.

Meanwhile, the price pressures have also been softening and with retail inflation posting successive downward surprises for November and December, the MPC may draw some comfort from this situation. Against the central bank’s estimate of 6.8% in Q4 2020 inflation averaged around 6.4% YoY. In addition, the price decline in vegetables has continued in January, which may drive CPI inflation closer to 4% YoY.

Softening of CPI inflation also reflects easing of supply side constraints that affected food inflation.

Experts believe the MPC may ensure availability of adequate liquidity to stimulate investments in the infrastructure sector after the Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, in her Budget 2021 speech, announced that the government would set up a dedicated infrastructure financing body.

The Gross Domestic Product (GDP) is projected to contract by 7.7% per cent in the ongoing fiscal year but is likely to rebound with a 11% growth in FY22, making for a “V-shaped” recovery, noted the Economic Survey 2021, taking cues from resurgence in high frequency indicators such as power demand, e-way bills, GST collection, etc.

It is also expected that the RBI may continue to hike banks’ held to maturity limits (HTM) till FY24 to fund high fiscal deficits without hardening yields. The RBI has already hiked banks’ HTM limit by 2.5% of book till FY22 to support recovery by enabling the Centre to run higher fiscal deficits.

“Banks will buy G-secs without fearing maturity to market (MTM) hits. RBI contains yields/lending rates by incentivising banks to invest the $80 billon money market surplus in G-secs without fear of MTM hits. As banks raise deposits at 5%, they would invest in G-secs at, say, 5.9% if exempted from MTM hits. It is fairly reasonable to assume that yields will rise over the next 12 months as growth normalises. Although we expect the RBI MPC to cut 50bp in 1H21, as inflation abates to the RBI’s 2-6% inflation mandate, we also see a 100bp hike in FY23. We are tracking December inflation at 5.2%,” said, Indranil Sen Gupta, India Economist, BofAS India.



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How you can take the benefit of indexation

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With the deadline for filing tax returns approaching, two friends, share their tax woes.

Ram: I made a neat gain of ₹1 lakh when I sold some of my old mutual funds (MF). But what the market giveth, the taxman taketh. I wonder what will be left after the taxman’s cut.

Shyam: Worry not. Let’s see if you can apply indexation.

Ram: What is indexation and what has it got to do with my taxes?

Shyam: Well, indexation is one of the few acts of kindness from the tax department. So, accept it graciously when you can! Under the Income-tax Act, you can apply indexation, that is, adjust the purchase price of an asset for inflation while calculating capital gains.

Ram: As if taxes were not enough, you want me to deal with inflation too!

Shyam: No. You see, this is one time, you wish inflation were higher! To calculate capital gains, you must deduct the purchase price of an asset from its sale price. But you also need to account for the erosion in the value of that asset over time due to inflation. So, the tax laws allow you to adjust your purchase price for inflation before you calculate your capital gain.

Ram: So, I can finally put the soaring Consumer Price Index inflation to some use.

Shyam: Not so fast. You can only use the Cost Inflation Index (CII), published by the Indian Income Tax Department for indexation. Let me give you an example. If you invested ₹2 lakh in debt MF schemes and redeemed your investments at ₹3 lakh a few years later, then your capital gain isn’t really ₹1 lakh.

Ram: Then what is it?

Shyam: If the CII for the year of purchase is 100 and for the year of sale, 120, then you can adjust your purchase cost by a multiple of 1.2 (120 / 100). That is, your inflation- adjusted purchase cost is ₹2.4 lakh (and not ₹ 2 lakh) and your capital gain effectively becomes ₹60,000 (₹3 lakh minus ₹2.4 lakh). It’s on this amount, that you pay 20 per cent tax.

Ram: Let me use indexation to get whatever I can out of my MF investments.

Shyam: It’s not that simple. You can seek refuge in indexation for investments made in debt MF schemes, but not equity schemes. Also, you can do this only for long-term capital gains, that is, only if you held on to your debt MF investments for 36 months or longer.

Ram: Should have known that ‘terms and conditions apply’ always!

Shyam: Don’t be disappointed. You can also use indexation for other assets such as property (land/ house) and gold (jewellery / ETF). Gains made on sale of property held for more than two years and gold held for more than 3 years are considered ‘long-term’.

Ram: Maybe I shouldn’t crib when my wife buys and sells gold. As long as she does it after three years!

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How the MPC’s policy rates matter to you

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Banker Balu’s long spell in front of the TV provoked his daughter Malathi into asking some questions.

Malathi: Dad, for God’s sake, stop watching that boring stuff and let me get to Netflix. How on earth is this speech on repo, Marginal Standing Facility, etc., useful to us!

Balu: Remember your savings account? Recall that fat education loan I took? The MPC’s decisions determine what rates you’ll earn on that deposit and what rates I’ll pay on your loan.

Malathi: Okay, if it’s about your money, I’m interested. What’s this repo and reverse repo rate thing which they’ve not changed?

Balu: The repo rate, short for repurchase rate, is the rate at which banks borrow quick money from the RBI, when they’re a little short of funds. The RBI keeps a special window called the liquidity adjustment facility (LAF) open for just this purpose.

Malathi: Don’t tell me banks run short of money and go broke!

Balu: He he! Sometimes they do, like one bank I won’t name. But we bankers often face temporary mismatches between our deposit inflows, repayments and loan outflows, which we try to plug with LAF. When we have extra money, we deposit it with the RBI at the reverse repo. Don’t you run to me to top up your account at month-ends?

Malathi: So, banks can simply walk up to the RBI and ask for money. Sounds lovely! Please open an LAF window for me, Daddy.

Balu: Sure, give me your smartphone as security. The RBI doesn’t hand out money to banks, it takes government bonds as collateral.

Malathi: Fat chance! The MPC just said that the repo rate is at 4 per cent. So, banks can borrow tonnes of money at 4 per cent and give us loans at 12 per cent? Now I know why you’re a banker.

Balu: The RBI allows banks to borrow from LAF upto a small fraction of their deposits, usually 0.25 per cent. If they need extra funds, they need to tap into the RBI’s Marginal Standing Facility, or MSF, at a higher rate.

Malathi: Why does this MPC tinker with the repo, MSF, etc? Can’t it just set them once and for all?

Balu: The MPC has to ensure that inflation doesn’t go out of control. So it regulates the price of the money – the interest rate.

When the price of money is high, there’s less of it chasing goods and services and presto, you have less inflation.

Malathi: But do repo changes affect our loans too?

Balu: Yes, your education loan is at 2 per cent over the banks’ lending rate, which is called MCLR. So, if the bank raises its MCLR, the loan becomes more expensive. But deposits will fetch me a little more, too, as my savings account rate is based on the repo rate.

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