The total trades took place in an announced bonds on Thursday is just 10% of the total trades of most liquid paper in the market.
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) on Thursday announced a second tranche of purchase of government securities under Government Securities Acquisition Programme (G-SAP 2.0) worth Rs 20,000 crore, but included illiquid papers for the second time in a row.
This time, the central bank included 6.18%-2024, 6.97%-2026, 8.20%-2028, and 6.79%-2029 gilts, which have a low trading volumes in the market. The total trades took place in an announced bonds on Thursday is just 10% of the total trades of most liquid paper in the market.
“Currently banks and PDs are stuck with a lot of illiquid papers due to the devolvement which took place in some weekly bond auctions, so RBI is trying to buy these papers under G-SAP and selling more liquid papers to make it more liquid,” a fund manager with a mid-sized fund house said.
The RBI, in a weekly bond auction to be held on July 15, is offering two most liquid papers such as 5.63%-2026 and 6.64%-2035. The multiple price method will be followed in which each successful bidder pays the price stated in his bid. In ‘uniform price’ auctions, all successful bidders pay the same price that is cut-off price at which the market clears the issue. So far, the RBI had purchased nearly Rs 1 lakh crore under G-SAP 1.0 and planned to buy Rs 1.2 lakh crore worth of outstanding government securities during July-September of 2021.
During the first G-SAP 2.0 auction on July 8, which was announced in the governor’s statement on June 4, the RBI purchased 8.24%-2027, 7.17%-2028, 7.59%-2029, 7.88%-2030, and 7.57%-2033 gilts. However, during G-SAP 1.0, the central bank had mostly purchased 5.85%-2030, which was most liquid and benchmark bond before announcement of new one 6.10%-2031.
The announcement of G-SAP, dealers said, was made to anchor the bond yields and make hefty government borrowing cheaper. During financial year 2020-21, the government had borrowed around Rs 12.8 lakh crore and another Rs 12.05 lakh crore is scheduled for current financial year.
Retail inflation print stayed above the upper band of the Reserve Bank of India’s 2-6% target for the second straight month in June, causing the stakeholders to watch its moves more intently. RBI started easing the policy rate since February 2019; it adopted ‘accommodative’ monetary policy stance in June 2019 and has since maintained it, given the grave challenge to economic growth due to the pandemic. Governor Shaktikanta Das expounds on the current priorities of the central bank, which is also the government’s debt manager, in an exclusive interview with Shobhana Subramanian and KG Narendranath.Excerpts:
Is the latest retail inflation number (6.26% in June, upon a high base of 6.23%) a cause for worry or has it come as a relief (given it eased a tad from a six-month high of 6.3% in May)? How long will the RBI be able to retain the growth-supportive bias in the conduct of monetary policy?
The CPI inflation number for June is on expected lines. The year-on-year growth in ‘core’ inflation (eased marginally to 6.17% in June compared with 6.34% in May. The momentum of the CPI inflation has come down significantly in the both headline and core inflation in June.
The current inflation is largely influenced by supply-side factors. High international commodity prices, rising shipping charges and elevated pump prices of diesel and petrol (which are partly due to high taxes) are putting pressure on input prices. Prices of several food items including meat, egg, fish, pulses, edible oils, non-alcoholic beverages have risen too.
Supply-chain constraints have also arisen out of the Covid 19 related restrictions on movement of goods, and these are easing slowly. Over the last few months, the government has taken steps to address the price rise in pulses, edible oils as also the imported inflation, but we do expect more measures from both the Centre and states to soften the pace of inflation.
Last year, in July and August, CPI inflation was in excess of 6%; in September and October, it was in excess of 7% and in November, almost 7%. That was the time when the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) had assessed that the spike in inflation was transitory and it would come down going forward. In hindsight, the MPC’s assessment was absolutely correct. Now, the MPC has assessed that inflation will moderate in Q3FY22, so I emphasise on the need to avoid any hasty action. Any hurried action, especially in the background of the current spike in inflation being transitory, could completely undo the economic recovery, which is nascent and hesitant, and create avoidable disruptions in the financial markets.
At 9.5% (real GDP) growth projected by us for FY22, the size of the economy would just about be exceeding the pre-pandemic (2019-20) level. Given that growth is still fragile, the highest priority needs to be given to it at this juncture.
We need to be very watchful and cautious before doing anything on the monetary policy front. Also, all this we have to see in the context of the truly extraordinary situation that we are in, due to the pandemic. It is not like any other year or occasion, when inflation goes up, you start tightening the monetary policy.
The Centre’s fiscal deficit is high (the budget gap more than doubled to 9.3% of GDP in FY21 and is projected to be 6.8% this year), but given the huge revenue shortfall, the size of the fiscal stimulus is limited and not adequate to push growth. Yet, the RBI needs to focus a lot on the yield curve to ensure that the government’s borrowing cost doesn’t skyrocket. Some would say the RBI’s debt management function is taking precedence over its core function, which is inflation-targeting. Is the RBI open to creating new money to directly finance the fiscal deficit?
I would not agree with the formulation that debt management is undermining inflation-targeting. In fact, our debt management operations throughout the past year and more has ensured better transmission of monetary policy decisions. We are using the instruments at our command to ensure transmission of rates. Thanks to our debt management operations, the interest rates on government borrowings in 2020-21 were the lowest in 16 years, and private-sector borrowing costs have also substantially reduced. If the real estate and construction sectors are out of the woods now, the all-time low interest rates on housing loans have had a big role in it.
We have not only reduced interest rates in consonance with monetary policy, but have also ensured availability of adequate – even surplus– liquidity in the system through OMO, Operation Twist and GSAPs. These have resulted in lower borrowing costs and financial stability across the entire gamut of stakeholders including banks, NBFCs and MFIs, and, therefore, been very supportive to economic growth.
If you look at the M3, the growth of money is just about in the range of 9-10%, meaning our accommodative stance is not really creating high inflation.
As far direct financing of the government’s fiscal deficit is concerned, this apparently easy option is out of sync with the economic reforms being undertaken; it is also in conflict with the FRBM law. In fact, this option has several downsides and the RBI has refrained from it.
What’s important is the (high) efficiency with which the RBI is meeting the borrowing requirement of the government. The Centre and states, among themselves, borrowed about Rs 21-22 lakh crore, a record high amount in FY21, but at historical-low interest rates. In the current year too, there could be a borrowing quantum of the same order, and the RBI will use all the tools at its disposal to ensure that the borrowings are non-disruptive and at low interest rates.
There is ample liquidity in the system, yet the banks appear to be extremely risk-averse. They would rather park the excess funds under the reverse repo window, than lend to the industry. Even the government’s schemes like ECGLS – which insulates banks from credit risk on loans to MSMEs and retail borrowers – and the targeted liquidity policy of RBI for small NBFCs don’t seem to change the outlook much. As the regulator, how do you get this fear psychosis out of banks?
The banks have to do prudent lending with proper appraisals. Risk aversion on the part of the banks is arising from the current pandemic situation, and its possible consequences. Demand for credit from the industry is also not as high as one would expect it to be. This is because there is still a large output gap that constrains new investments.
Many large companies considerably deleveraged their bank loans in FY21, while raising money from the corporate bond market. So banks have to lend where there is a demand, and that is one reason why lending to retail sector is growing. There is no gainsaying that bank credit needs to rise; I’m sure banks will indeed lend if there is demand for credit and the projects are viable.
There is a lot of demand for loans from companies that are relatively low-rated. Banks are not willing to take any risk…
Of course, the risk perception (among lenders) is high and, precisely for that reason, the government unveiled the ECLGS scheme (under which guaranteed loans up to a limit of Rs 4.5 lakh crore will be extended). If you see our TLTRO scheme or the refinancing support (special facilities for Rs 75,000 crore were provided last year to all India financial institutions, including Nabard and SIDBI; a fresh support of Rs 50,000 crore has been provided for new lending in FY22), the objective is that they would lend to small and micro businesses. We have also given Rs 10,000 crore to small finance banks and MFIs at the repo rate (4%), again to ensure adequate fund flow to micro and small firms.
As for the healthcare sector, banks are allowed to park their surplus liquidity up equivalent of the size of their Covid loan books with the RBI at a higher rate. We are also according priority-sector status to certain loans for the healthcare sector. So, because of the extraordinary situation, we are incentivising the banks to lend more through a series of measures.
As the regulator, our job is to provide an ecosystem where the banking sector functions in a very robust manner. But beyond that, who the banks will lend to or won’t lend to must be based on their own risk assessment, and the prudential norms.
In the recent financial stability report (FSR), the worst-case NPA scenario after the full withdrawal of forbearance is foreseen to be better than the best case perceived in the January edition…
We had a much clearer view of the assent quality in the July FSR than when the January edition was drafted, when the regulatory forbearance partially blurred the picture. Still, these are assumptions and analytical exercises rather than projections. These could serve as guidance to the banks in their internal analysis of, say, a possible severe stress scenario. We expect the banks could use these inputs to take proactive, pre-emptive measures on two fronts specifically: increasing the provision coverage ratio and mobilsing additional capital to deal with situations of stress or a severe stress, should these happen.
These assumptions, based on real numbers, could by and large hold true, unless a third Covid-19 wave plays spoilsport.
In the auction held on Friday, you allowed the benchmark yield to go up to 6.1%, while it had long seemed you won’t tolerate a rate above 6%…
We’ve never had any fixation that the yield should be 6%, but some of our actions might have conveyed that impression. After the presentation of the Budget (for FY22) and other developments such as the enhanced government borrowing, the bond yields suddenly spiked. The 10-year G-secs, for example, reached 6.26%. But after that, through our signals and actions (in the form of open market operations, Operations Twist and G-SAP, and our actions during auctions, going sometimes for the green-shoe option or sometime for cancellations, etc) we signalled our comfort level to the markets.
So, we are able to bring down the yield and the rates, by and large, remained less than 6% till about January or so. The first auction that we did last Friday when we introduced the new-tenure benchmark reflected one important thing that the focus of the central bank is on the orderly evolution of the yield curve and the market expectations seem to be converging with this approach. So, it will be in the interest of all stakeholders, the economy, if the same spirit of convergence between the market participants and other stakeholders, and the central bank continues and I expect it will continue.
A jump in the RBI’s ‘realised profits’ from sale of foreign exchange enabled you to transfer a higher-than-expected Rs 99,122 crore as surplus to the government for the nine months to March 31, 2021. Are you sticking to the economic capital framework as revised on the lines of the Bimal Jalan committee’s recommendations?
One of the key recommendations of the committee is that unrealised gains will not be transferred as a part of surplus and we are strictly following that. We intervene in the market to buy and sell foreign currencies, and what we earn out of that are realised gains. A large part of the surplus transfer constitutes the exchange gains from foreign exchange transactions. So whatever gains we make out of this are not unrealised (notional) gains (which can’t be transferred under ECF). We also make losses in such transactions, because RBI isn’t in the game of making profit but in the game of maintaining stability of the exchange rate and ensuring broader financial stability.
Last year, about Rs 70,000 crore had to be transferred to the contingency reserve fund because it was falling short of the 5.5% level recommended by the Jalan committee. This was because our balance sheet size grew substantially last year due to liquidity operations that we undertook in March, April and May. So, last year the larger size of the RBI’s balance sheet required that as much as Rs 70,000 crore be transferred to the contingency reserve fund. This year, the expansion of balance-sheet wasn’t that much, so the transfer was much less at about Rs 25,000 crore.
Our Bureau The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) on Thursday said it will purchase four Government Securities (G-Secs) aggregating ₹20,000 crore under its G-sec Acquisition Programme (G-SAP 2.0) on July 22 to support the market.
RBI will purchase the G-Secs maturing between 2024 and 2029. This will be its second purchase of G-Secs under G-SAP 2.0. The first purchase of five G-Secs, maturing between 2027 and 2033, aggregating ₹20,000 crore was conducted on July 8.
Under G-SAP 2.0, RBI has committed upfront to a specific amount (₹1.20-lakh crore in the second quarter of FY22) of open market purchases of G-Secs to enable a stable and orderly evolution of the yield curve amidst comfortable liquidity conditions.
The share of outstanding loans linked to external benchmarks increased from as low as 2.4 per cent during September 2019 to 28.5 per cent during March 2021, contributing to significant improvement in monetary policy transmission on the back of persisting surplus liquidity conditions, according to an article in the Reserve Bank of India’s monthly bulletin.
Notably, the outstanding loans (linked to both fixed and floating interest rates) in personal and micro, small and medium enterprise (MSME) segments accounted for 35 per cent of the outstanding loans as at end-March 2021, the article “Monetary Policy Transmission in India: Recent Developments” said.
Quarterly periodicity in re-setting interest rates for outstanding loans linked to external benchmark as against annual for MCLR (marginal cost of funds based lending rate) linked loans has contributed to the improvement in pass-through to lending rates on outstanding loans, opined RBI officials Avnish Kumar and Priyanka Sachdeva.
The article said monetary policy transmission is a process through which changes in the Central bank’s policy rate are transmitted to the real economy in pursuit of its ultimate objectives of price stability and growth.
External benchmark
RBI mandated all scheduled commercial banks (excluding regional rural banks) to link all new floating rate personal/ retail loans and floating rate loans to micro and small enterprises (MSEs) to an external benchmark with effect from October 1, 2019. This was extended to medium enterprises, effective April 1, 2020.
The external benchmark could be the policy repo rate or 3-month T-bill rate or 6-month T-bill rate or any other benchmark market interest rate published by the Financial Benchmarks India Private Ltd (FBIL).
Internal benchmark for pricing of loans
The authors emphasised that legacy of internal benchmark linked loans (Benchmark Prime Lending Rate, base rate and MCLR) – which together comprised 71.5 per cent of outstanding floating rate rupee loans as at March-end 2021 – impeded transmission. The share of loans linked to MCLR stood at 62.9 per cent as of March 2021.
“The opacity in interest rate setting processes under internal benchmark regime hinders transmission to lending rates, although the EBLR regime is indirectly also leading to moderate improvement in transmission to MCLR based loan portfolio,” the authors said.
MUMBAI: The Reserve Bank has extended the deadline till March 2022 for banks to use only lockable cassettes for replenishing cash in ATMs.
Currently, most of the ATMs (automated teller machines) are replenished by way of open cash top-up or by loading cash in the machines on the spot.
To do away with the current system, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) had asked banks to ensure that lockable cassettes are swapped at the time of cash replenishment in the ATMs.
Following representations received from banks citing difficulties in moving towards the lockable cassettes system, RBI has decided to extend the deadline for its implementation till March next year, according to a notification issued on Wednesday.
In April 2018, the apex bank had asked banks to consider using lockable cassettes in their ATMs which shall be swapped at the time of cash replenishment. It was to be implemented in a phased manner covering at least one-third ATMs operated by the banks every year, such that all ATMs achieve cassette swap by March 31, 2021.
“In this regard, representations have been received from Indian Banks’ Association on behalf of various banks expressing difficulties in meeting this timeline. Accordingly, it has been decided to extend the timeline for implementation of cassette swap in all ATMs till March 31, 2022,” RBI said.
Banks have also been asked to monitor progress and make the required course correction at the end of every quarter and report status to the RBI.
The recommendation to switch to lockable cassettes in ATMs was based on report of Committee on Currency Movement that was set up by the central bank.
At the end of May, there were 1,10,623 ATMs on site of banks and 1,04,031 of site-ATMs in the country.
The Reserve Bank of India‘s (RBI) insistence on companies opening current accounts with banks is among the factors that have helped large lenders such as HDFC Bank, ICICI Bank and SBI raise their shares of the competitive corporate banking market in 2020, according to a report.
Apart from the RBI rules, the government’s mega merger to reduce the number of state-owned banks has also helped in the trend, rating agency Crisil said on Wednesday in the report.
In mid-2020, the RBI had come up with the circular that specified which bank can open a current account for a borrower, in order to check any misuse through multiple current accounts.
A fourth of the large and medium corporates said they were banking with at least one among ICICI Bank, Axis Bank and HDFC Bank as against 17 per cent in 2016, it said adding that the private sector banks have grown at over 25 per cent per year.
In most of the four-year period, SBI defended its market-leading penetration levels but in 2020, the lender expanded its footprint. Now, nearly a third of corporates do business with the largest lender and 30 per cent name it as their cash management provider. The RBI circular
In its August 6, 2020, circular, the regulator had mandated that no bank shall open current accounts for customers who have availed credit facilities in the form of CC/OD from the banking system, and all transactions shall be routed through the CC/OD account. The RBI moved was targeted to ensure greater discipline and transparency in the way large borrowers move funds.
It had said that in case where a bank’s exposure to a borrower was less than 10% of the banking system’s exposure to that borrower, debits to the CC/OD account can only be for credit to the CC/OD account of that borrower with a bank that has 10% or more of the exposure of the banking system to that borrower.
“Several trends have contributed to the pick-up in market penetration among the leading banks, including the ‘mega merger’ of the country’s public sector banks and the Reserve Bank of India’s ‘circular on current accounts’, which essentially rules that banks can only open current accounts for companies to whom they are also major credit providers, the report said.
Consolidation
It said the pressures exerted by the pandemic will accelerate the consolidation of the Indian corporate banking industry, as the market’s biggest banks prove themselves best-positioned to help large- and middle-market companies overcome crisis disruptions.
“When the pandemic sent the country into lockdown last year, companies needed immediate assistance from banks, at first to ensure financial stability, and then to keep businesses running,” says Gaurav Arora, head of Asia at Coalition Greenwich, part of Crisil, said.
The 2021 ‘Coalition Greenwich’ research study mentioned State Bank of India, along with leading private sector banks Axis Bank and HDFC Bank, and foreign banks Citi and HSBC, as companies’ top sources of support during the crisis.
The report said that even before the start of the global pandemic, India’s corporate banking market was on a consolidation path, driven by decisive steps by regulators to solidify the country’s banking sector, and the rapid evolution and growth of the leading private banks.
Lenders such as Yes Bank and RBL Bank with exclusive tie-ups with Mastercard will now have to look for new partners, which could translate into an advantage for RuPay and Visa. Further, co-branded cards with Mastercard will also be impacted.
Private sector lender RBL Bank on Thursday said it has entered into an agreement with Visa on July 14 to issue credit cards enabled on the Visa payment network.
“RBL Bank expects to start issuance of credit cards on the Visa payment network post the technology integration which is expected to take eight to 10 weeks,” it said in a stock exchange filing.
Meanwhile, the bank’s current run rate of about 1 lakh new credit card issuances per month could potentially be impacted till such time that there is clarity from the regulator on issuing new credit cards on the Mastercard network or till the technical integration with Visa is complete, RBL Bank further said.
RBL Bank currently issues credit cards on the Mastercard network only. It has about 30 lakh credit card customers and is the fifth largest credit card issuer in the country with nearly five per cent market share.
A report by ICICI Securities said that RBL Bank and Yes Bank issue only cards with Mastercard. Other lenders like Axis Bank, Kotak Mahindra Bank and Citi have atleast two tie ups – with Mastercard and Visa.
Meanwhile, State Bank of India and HDFC Bank have tied up with more payment networks.
“The issuance of co-branded cards with Mastercard will also stop due to the RBI restriction. If a particular Mastercard co-branded credit card has high contribution to the overall mix of a credit card player, it will have a higher impact on the issuer’s business growth,” the report noted.
HDFC Bank has three co-branded cards with Mastercard, while SBI has two such cards.
The RBI on July 14 took supervisory action against Mastercard and barred it from acquiring new customers (debit, credit or prepaid) from July 22 for not complying with data localisation requirements.
RBL Bank on Thursday said its credit card issuance rate will be impacted post the Reserve Bank barring Mastercard Asia Pacific from onboarding new credit, debit and prepaid cards customers with effect from July 22 as it failed to comply with data storage norms.
RBL Bank, which currently issues credit cards on the Mastercard network only, said it has entered into an agreement with Visa Worldwide on Wednesday to issue credit cards enabled on the Visa payment network. “Our bank’s current run rate of approximately 1,00,000 new credit card issuances per month could potentially be impacted till such time that there is clarity from the regulator on issuing new credit cards on the Mastercard network or till the technical integration with Visa is complete,” RBL Bank said in a regulatory filing.
Technology integration
The bank expects to start issuance of credit cards on the Visa payment network post the technology integration which is expected to take 8-10 weeks. It said the company awaits further information from Mastercard on RBI’s supervisory action. “The debit and prepaid cards issued by the bank are already enabled on other payment networks in addition to the Mastercard network,” RBL Bank said.
It said, as of date, it has approximately 3 million credit card customers and is the fifth largest credit card issuer in the country with approximately 5 per cent market share.
Reserve Bank of India (RBI) imposed restrictions on Wednesday on Mastercard Asia/Pacific (Mastercard) from on-boarding new domestic customers (debit, credit or prepaid) onto its card network from July 22, 2021. The supervisory action will not impact existing customers of Mastercard.
Mastercard said it is disappointed by the action by the Reserve Bank of India but said it will continue to work with them to provide any additional details required to resolve their concerns.
“Mastercard is fully committed to our legal and regulatory obligations in the markets we operate in. Since the issuance of the RBI directive requiring on-soil storage of domestic payment transaction data in 2018, we have provided consistent updates and reports regarding our activities and compliance with the required stipulations,” it said in a statement.
It also re-iterated its commitment to working with customers and partners in advancing on the government’s Digital India vision.
The RBI on July 14 took supervisory action against Mastercard and barred it from acquiring new customers (debit, credit or prepaid) from July 22 for not complying with data localisation requirements.
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has barred MasterCard from acquiring new customers (debit, credit or prepaid) from July 22 for not complying with data localisation requirements.
In a statement, the central bank said that MasterCard is required to advise all card-issuing banks and non-banks to conform to these directions.
“Notwithstanding lapse of considerable time and adequate opportunities being given, the entity has been found to be non-compliant with the directions on Storage of Payment System Data. This order will not impact existing customers of MasterCard,” the RBI statement said.
The RBI, through an April 23 order, had imposed similar restrictions on American Express Banking Corp and Diners Club International Ltd from on-boarding new domestic customers onto their card networks from May 1.
Mandatory data storage
The central bank had made it mandatory for banks to store all the data relating to payment systems in India. For the foreign leg of the transaction, if any, the data could also be stored abroad, if required. The data includes end-to-end transaction details, information collected, carried and processed as part of the message/payment instruction.
Further, they were also required to report compliance to the RBI and submit a Board-approved System Audit Report conducted by a CERT-In empanelled auditor within a set timeline.
MasterCard did not comment on the RBI action.
The RBI action may benefit homegrown payment gateways especially those running on the UPI platform. Market experts said that there won’t be any impact on consumers as banks can switch to Visa or RuPay for issuing cards. Existing MasterCard users can continue to use their cards.