Select NBFCs to now have internal ombudsman on lines of banks: Das

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With the objective of upping customer experience, the Reserve Bank on Friday announced an internal ombudsman scheme (IOS) to redress grievances at select non-banking finance companies (NBFCs).

The IOS will be on the lines of a similar system adopted at banks and will redress grievances related to deficiencies in service, Governor Shaktikanta Das said, announcing the new measure in the statement on regulatory policies along with the bi-monthly review of the monetary policy. “The increased significance, strength and reach of NBFCs across the country have necessitated having in place better customer experience including grievance redress practices,” he said.

Slew of measures

Das said over the last few years, the RBI has taken a slew of measures to improve consumer protection at NBFCs which include asking such lenders to appoint nodal officers to address grievances in 2013 and launch of the ombudsman scheme for NBFCs in 2018. “With a view to further strengthen the internal grievance redress mechanism of NBFCs, it has been decided to introduce the Internal Ombudsman Scheme (IOS) for certain categories of NBFCs which have higher customer interface,” he said.

There will be an internal ombudsman at the top of the NBFCs’ internal grievance redress mechanism to examine customer complaints which are in the nature of deficiency in service and are partly or wholly rejected by the NBFCs, he said, adding detailed instructions on the same will be issued separately.

Also read: FIDC seeks refinance mechanism for NBFCs

Meanwhile, Das also announced a six month extension in the facility which allows banks to on-lend through NBFCs and get the priority sector lending tag, till March 2022. He reminded that bank lending to registered NBFCs (other than micro-lenders) for on-lending to agriculture (investment credit), micro and small enterprises and housing (with an increased limit) was permitted to be classified as priority sector lending up to certain limits in August 2019.

Increased traction has been observed in delivering credit to the underserved/unserved segments of the economy through the scheme, which was last extended till September 30 in April, Das said.

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Reserve Bank of India – Tenders

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Reserve Bank of India, Kanpur invites E-Tender for Electrical Renovation of 12 Nos. of Class III Flats in KNSQ, Reserve Bank of India, Kanpur. The tendering would be done through the e-Tendering portal of MSTC Ltd. (http://mstcecommerce.com/eprochome/rbi). All Bank’s empaneled electrical contractors /agencies/firms enlisted for works more than 10 lakhs must register themselves with MSTC Ltd through the above-mentioned website to participate in the tendering process. The Schedule of e-Tender is as follows:

E-Tender No RBI/Kanpur/Estate/145/21-22/ET/199
Estimated cost Rs.15 Lakh
Mode of Tender e-Procurement System (Online Part I – Techno-Commercial Bid and Part II – Price Bid through www.mstcecommerce.com/eprochome/rbi
c. Date of NIT available to parties to download October 08, 2021
d. Pre-Bid meeting Offline at 11:30 AM on October 21, 2021
Venue: Reserve Bank of India, 2nd Floor Estate Department, Mall Road, Kanpur.
e. i) EMD through DD//NEFT or Bank Guarantee issued by a Scheduled Bank and intimate/forward the transaction details (UTR number OR scanned copies (in PDF) of DD to estatekanpur@rbi.org.in and upload www.mstcecommerce.com/eprochome/rbi Rs. 30,000/- by NEFT paid through NEFT/DD/Banker’s Cheque issued by a Scheduled Bank only to in our A/c No. 186003001, IFSC RBIS0KNPA01(where ‘0’ represents zero) to Reserve Bank of India Kanpur.
ii) Tender Fees NIL
f. Last date of submission of EMD. October 27, 2021 till 01:00 PM
g. Date of Starting of e-Tender for submission of online Techno-Commercial Bid and price Bid at RBI Kanpur www.mstcecommerce.com/eprochome/rbi October 08, 2021
h. Date of closing of online e-tender for submission of Techno-Commercial Bid & Price Bid. October 27, 2021 till 01:00 PM
i. Date & time of opening of Part-I (i.e. Techno-Commercial Bid) Part-II Price Bid: Date of opening of Part II i.e. price bid shall be informed separately October 27, 2021 at 03:00 PM
j. Transaction Fee (To be submitted separately by the vendors to MSTC vide MSTC E-Payment Gateway for participating in the E-Tender) Rs. 1,180/- inclusive of GST @ 18% Payment of Transaction fee through MSTC payment gateway /NEFT/RTGS in favour of MSTC LIMITED

Intending tenderers shall pay as earnest money a sum of Rs. 30,000/- by way of NEFT to Reserve Bank of India, Kanpur or by a Demand Draft in favour of Reserve Bank of India payable at Kanpur. Alternatively, the tenderer may also furnish an irrevocable Bank Guarantee from any scheduled bank for an equivalent amount towards EMD in the Proforma enclosed.

Applicants intending to apply will have to satisfy the Bank by furnishing documentary evidence in support of their possessing required eligibility and in the event of their failure to do so, the Bank reserves the right to reject their bids. Tenders without EMD will not be accepted under any circumstances.

The Bank is not bound to accept the lowest tender and reserves the right to accept either in full or in part any tender. The Bank also reserves the right to reject all the tenders without assigning any reason thereof.

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

Regional Director
Reserve Bank of India
Kanpur

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How To Apply For BoB Home Loan With An Interest Rate of 6.50%?

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Benefits of BoB Home loans

Potential homebuyers looking for a new house loan with a low-interest rate of 6.5 percent can apply with Bank of Baroda to take advantage of special features and perks. Both resident and non-resident Indians are eligible for the Bank of Baroda’s home loan plan, and they may use it to purchase a plot, acquire an apartment, build their own home, or even modify their current dwelling.

Customers applying for a home loan with BoB can take advantage of various benefits such as low-interest rates, low processing fees, higher loan amount, free credit card, free accidental insurance, longer tenures, and easy top-up loans. The home loan amount that can be issued differs depending on the individual’s residence and employment or income status. For example, the maximum home loan amount in semi-urban and rural regions is Rs. 1 crore, whereas the maximum home loan amount in metros ranges from Rs. 5 crores to Rs. 10 crores, according to the lender.

The interest rate is adjusted monthly and is tied to the bank’s Baroda Repo Linked Lending Rate (BRLLR). The term of our home loans fluctuates depending on the loan amount and income of the borrower, with a maximum term of 30 years. On BoB home loans, there is also a moratorium duration, which can last up to 36 months only after the loan has been approved. Even collateral for home loans is also approved by the bank.

On the announcement of a reduction in home loans, Mr H T Solanki, GM- Mortgages & Other retail assets, Bank of Baroda said, “Bank always tries to offer the most competitive rates of interest on home loan and other retail loan products while making the process seamless and hassle free through our digital platforms and our dedicated teams. Our customers will get benefited from this offering in this festive season. With this reduced rate of interest, Bank of Baroda home loans are now offering the most competitive rates across categories for a limited period till 31/12/2021 .”

Eligibility required to apply for a home loan with Bank of Baroda

Eligibility required to apply for a home loan with Bank of Baroda

The home loans are available to all Indians, including residents and non-residents, between the ages of 21 and 70. The home loan is available to eligible borrowers for the following purposes:

  • Acquisition of a new or used home.
  • For the construction of a new home
  • Acquisition of a plot of land for the purpose of constructing a new home.
  • Paying back a loan from some other Housing Finance Company or bank.
  • With the floating rate option, the repayment period can be extended up to 30 years.
  • Reimbursement of the price of the particular land if purchased within 24 months.
  • At the time of home loan application borrowers can specify a co-applicant that can be husband and wife, father and son, mother and son, and so on.
  • Based on the location where property is scheduled to be constructed/purchased, the maximum loan to any particular applicant will be Rs. 10 crores per unit. Under the housing loan scheme, the bank will offer a loan up to 90% of the cost of the property for new houses/flats.

How to apply for a home loan with Bank of Baroda?

How to apply for a home loan with Bank of Baroda?

Customers with the required or valid documents can apply for a home loan online at Bank of Baroda. The bank offers a range of home loan schemes based on the needs of a borrower. BoB provides Baroda Home Loan, Baroda Home Loan Advantage, Baroda Home Loan Takeover Scheme, Home Improvement Loan, Baroda Pre-Approved Home Loan, Baroda Top Up Loan (Resident/NRIs/PIOs), Pradhan Mantri Awas Yojana, Baroda Home Suvidha Personal Loan, Interest Subsidy Scheme for Housing the Urban Poor (ISHUP), and Credit Risk Guarantee Fund Scheme for Low Income Housing.

Customers can visit https://www.bankofbaroda.in/personal-banking/loans/home-loan and click on “Apply Online” where they need to select “Home Loans” under the loans section. Now they are required to sign up for the home loan by entering their full name, email ID, mobile number, in order to proceed further.



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Reserve Bank of India – Press Releases

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On the basis of an assessment of the current and evolving macroeconomic situation, the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) at its meeting today (October 8, 2021) decided to:

  • keep the policy repo rate under the liquidity adjustment facility (LAF) unchanged at 4.0 per cent.

The reverse repo rate under the LAF remains unchanged at 3.35 per cent and the marginal standing facility (MSF) rate and the Bank Rate at 4.25 per cent.

  • The MPC also decided to continue with the accommodative stance as long as necessary to revive and sustain growth on a durable basis and continue to mitigate the impact of COVID-19 on the economy, while ensuring that inflation remains within the target going forward.

These decisions are in consonance with the objective of achieving the medium-term target for consumer price index (CPI) inflation of 4 per cent within a band of +/- 2 per cent, while supporting growth.

The main considerations underlying the decision are set out in the statement below.

Assessment

Global Economy

2. Since the MPC’s meeting during August 4-6, 2021, the momentum of the global recovery has ebbed across geographies with the rapid spread of the delta variant of COVID-19, including in some countries with relatively high vaccination rates. After sliding to a seven-month low in August, the global purchasing managers’ index (PMI) rose marginally in September. World merchandise trade volumes remained resilient in Q2:2021, but more recently there has been a loss of momentum with the persistence of supply and logistics bottlenecks.

3. Commodity prices remain elevated, and consequently, inflationary pressures have accentuated in most advanced economies (AEs) and emerging market economies (EMEs), prompting monetary tightening by a few central banks in the former group and several in the latter. Change in monetary policy stances, in conjunction with a likely tapering of bond purchases in major advanced economies later this year, is beginning to strain the international financial markets with a sharp rise in bond yields in major AEs and EMEs after remaining range-bound in August. The US dollar has strengthened sharply, while the EME currencies have weakened since early-September with capital outflows in recent weeks.

Domestic Economy

4. On the domestic front, real gross domestic product (GDP) expanded by 20.1 per cent year-on-year (y-o-y) during Q1:2021-22 on a large favourable base; however, its momentum was dragged down by the second wave of the pandemic. The level of real GDP in Q1:2021-22 was 9.2 per cent below its pre-pandemic level two years ago. On the demand side, almost all the constituents of GDP posted robust y-o-y growth. On the supply side, real gross value added (GVA) increased by 18.8 per cent y-o-y during Q1:2021-22.

5. The rebound in economic activity gained traction in August-September, facilitated by the ebbing of infections, easing of restrictions and a sharp pick-up in the pace of vaccination. The south-west monsoon, after a lull in August, picked up in September, narrowing the deficit in the cumulative seasonal rainfall to 0.7 per cent below the long period average and kharif sowing exceeded the previous year’s level. Record kharif foodgrains production of 150.5 million tonnes as per the first advance estimates augurs well for the overall agricultural sector. By end-September, reservoir levels at 80 per cent of the full reservoir level were above the decadal average, which is expected to boost rabi production prospects.

6. After a prolonged slowdown, industrial production posted a high y-o-y growth for the fifth consecutive month in July. The manufacturing PMI at 53.7 in September remained in positive territory. Services activity gained ground with support from the pent-up demand for contact-intensive activities. The services PMI continued in expansion zone in September at 55.2, although some sub-components moderated. High-frequency indicators for August-September – railway freight traffic; cement production; electricity demand; port cargo; e-way bills; GST and toll collections – suggest progress in the normalisation of economic activity relative to pre-pandemic levels; however, indicators such as domestic air traffic, two-wheeler sales and steel consumption continue to lag. Non-oil export growth remained strong on buoyant external demand.

7. Headline CPI inflation at 5.3 per cent in August softened for the second consecutive month, declining by one percentage point from the recent peak in May-June 2021. This was primarily driven by an easing in food inflation. Fuel inflation edged up to a new high in August. Core inflation, i.e. inflation excluding food and fuel, remained elevated and sticky at 5.8 per cent in July-August 2021.

8. System liquidity remained in large surplus in August-September, with daily absorptions rising from an average of ₹7.7 lakh crore in July-August to ₹9.0 lakh crore during September and ₹9.5 lakh crore during October (up to October 6) through the fixed rate reverse repo, the 14-day variable rate reverse repo (VRRR) and fine-tuning operations under the liquidity adjustment facility (LAF). Auctions of ₹1.2 lakh crore under the secondary market government securities acquisition programme (G-SAP 2.0) during Q2:2021-22 provided liquidity across the term structure. As on October 1, 2021, reserve money (adjusted for the first-round impact of the change in the cash reserve ratio) expanded by 8.3 per cent (y-o-y); money supply (M3) and bank credit grew by 9.3 per cent and 6.7 per cent, respectively, as on September 24, 2021. India’s foreign exchange reserves increased by US$ 60.5 billion in 2021-22 (up to October 1) to US$ 637.5 billion, partly reflecting the allocation of special drawing rights (SDRs), and were close to 14 months of projected imports for 2021-22.

Outlook

9. Going forward, the inflation trajectory is set to edge down during Q3:2021-22, drawing comfort from the recent catch-up in kharif sowing and likely record production. Along with adequate buffer stock of foodgrains, these factors should help to keep cereal prices range bound. Vegetable prices, a major source of inflation volatility, have remained contained in the year so far and are likely to remain soft, assuming no disruption due to unseasonal rains. Supply side interventions by the Government in the case of pulses and edible oils are helping to bridge the demand supply gap; the situation is expected to improve with kharif harvest arrivals. The resurgence of edible oils prices in the recent period, however, is a cause of concern. On the other hand, pressures persist from crude oil prices which remain volatile over uncertainties on the global supply and demand conditions. Domestic pump prices remain at very high levels. Rising metals and energy prices, acute shortage of key industrial components and high logistics costs are adding to input cost pressures. Weak demand conditions, however, are tempering the pass-through to output prices. The CPI headline momentum is moderating with the easing of food prices which, combined with favourable base effects, could bring about a substantial softening in inflation in the near-term. Taking into consideration all these factors, CPI inflation is projected at 5.3 per cent for 2021-22; 5.1 per cent in Q2, 4.5 per cent in Q3; 5.8 per cent in Q4 of 2021-22, with risks broadly balanced. CPI inflation for Q1:2022-23 is projected at 5.2 per cent (Chart 1).

10. Domestic economic activity is gaining traction with the ebbing of the second wave. Going forward, rural demand is likely to maintain its buoyancy, given the above normal kharif sowing while rabi prospects are bright. The substantial acceleration in the pace of vaccination, the sustained lowering of new infections and the coming festival season should support a rebound in the pent-up demand for contact intensive services, strengthen the demand for non-contact intensive services, and bolster urban demand. Monetary and financial conditions remain easy and supportive of growth. Capacity utilisation is improving, while the business outlook and consumer confidence are reviving. The broad-based reforms by the government focusing on infrastructure development, asset monetisation, taxation, telecom sector and banking sector should boost investor confidence, enhance capacity expansion and facilitate crowding in of private investment. The production-linked incentive (PLI) scheme augurs well for domestic manufacturing and exports. Global semiconductor shortages, elevated commodity prices and input costs, and potential global financial market volatility are key downside risks to domestic growth prospects, along with uncertainty around the future COVID-19 trajectory. Taking all these factors into consideration, projection for real GDP growth is retained at 9.5 per cent in 2021-22 consisting of 7.9 per cent in Q2; 6.8 per cent in Q3; and 6.1 per cent in Q4 of 2021-22. Real GDP growth for Q1:2022-23 is projected at 17.2 per cent (Chart 2).

11. Inflation prints in July-August were lower than anticipated. With core inflation persisting at an elevated level, measures to further ameliorate supply side and cost pressures, including through calibrated cuts in indirect taxes on petrol and diesel by both Centre and States, would contribute to a more durable reduction in inflation and anchoring of inflation expectations. The outlook for aggregate demand is progressively improving but the slack is large: output is still below pre-COVID level and the recovery is uneven and critically dependent upon policy support. Compared to pre-pandemic levels, contact intensive services, which contribute around two-fifth of economic activity in India, still lag considerably. Capacity utilisation in the manufacturing sector is below its pre-pandemic levels and an early recovery to its long-run average is critical for a sustained rebound in investment demand. Even as the domestic economy is showing signs of mending, the external environment is turning more uncertain and challenging, with headwinds from slowing growth in some major Asian and advanced economies, steep jump in natural gas prices in the recent weeks and concerns emanating from normalisation of monetary policy in some major advanced economies. Against this backdrop, the ongoing domestic recovery needs to be nurtured assiduously through all policy channels. The MPC will remain watchful given the uncertainties surrounding the outlook for growth and inflation. Accordingly, keeping in mind the evolving situation, the MPC decided to keep the policy repo rate unchanged at 4 per cent and continue with an accommodative stance as long as necessary to revive and sustain growth on a durable basis and continue to mitigate the impact of COVID-19 on the economy, while ensuring that inflation remains within the target going forward.

12. All members of the MPC – Dr. Shashanka Bhide, Dr. Ashima Goyal, Prof. Jayanth R. Varma, Dr. Mridul K. Saggar, Dr. Michael Debabrata Patra and Shri Shaktikanta Das – unanimously voted to keep the policy repo rate unchanged at 4.0 per cent.

13. All members, namely, Dr. Shashanka Bhide, Dr. Ashima Goyal, Dr. Mridul K. Saggar, Dr. Michael Debabrata Patra and Shri Shaktikanta Das, except Prof. Jayanth R. Varma, voted to continue with the accommodative stance as long as necessary to revive and sustain growth on a durable basis and continue to mitigate the impact of COVID-19 on the economy, while ensuring that inflation remains within the target going forward. Prof. Jayanth R. Varma expressed reservations on this part of the resolution.

14. The minutes of the MPC’s meeting will be published on October 22, 2021.

15. The next meeting of the MPC is scheduled during December 6 to 8, 2021.

(Yogesh Dayal)     
Chief General Manager

Press Release: 2021-2022/1002

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IMPS Transaction Limit Increased To Rs 5 Lakh From Rs 2 Lakh

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Planning

oi-Sneha Kulkarni

|

In its meeting held, the Reserve Bank of India increased the IMPS transaction limit from Rs 2 lakh to Rs 5 lakh.

The NPCI (National Payment Corporation of India) facilitates the Immediate Payment Service (IMPS), which is an instant money transfer service. Inter-bank transfers, which have become a popular method of moving payments, are made easier by IMPS.

IMPS Transaction Limit Increased To Rs 5 Lakh From Rs 2 Lakh

IMPS makes use of mobile banking to its greatest potential. Both the sender and the receiver receive text messages from the bank as alerts from the app as soon as funds are sent to the receiver. Both sides are relieved because they now know the true state of the deal.

Individuals can now send up to Rs 5 lakh through IMPS, which was previously limited to Rs 2 lakh.

How to Register for IMPS?

You must first sign up for the bank’s mobile banking service. The bank’s Mobile Money Identifier (MMID) and MPIN will also be required. They are also required for the recipient or beneficiary. If your bank has SMS IMPS, you can use the SMS facility in your phone or download the mobile banking application from your bank.

The first four digits of the Mobile Money Identification Number (MMID) are the unique identification number of the bank that offers IMPS.

IMPS Charges

Customers who use IMPS transactions are charged by their banks. However, depending on the type of account held by the user or the use of IMPS via Internet banking, certain banks offer IMPS for free.



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Srei firms found ever-greening NPAs, in payment default

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Concerns over ever-greening of loans, negative Capital-to-Risk (Weighted) Assets Ratio (CRAR) and default in payments of over ₹10,000 crore to lenders had prompted the Reserve Bank of India to supersede the boards of Srei Infrastructure Finance and Srei Equipment Finance.

Documents seen by BusinessLine reveal that the RBI had conducted a special audit in December 2020 and January 2021 that revealed that funds disbursed by Srei Infrastructure Finance to certain borrowers were received back from the borrowers and their group companies the same date or dates close to disbursement, indicating ever-greening of loans.

Bombay HC dismisses petition by Srei promoters

All norms flouted

The statutory inspection of Srei Equipment by the central bank revealed “serious deterioration in its financial position” as on March 31, 2020. It revealed a negative CRAR of 3.4 per cent against the regulatory requirement of 15 per cent and non-adherence to Income Recognition, Asset Classification and Provisioning norms, which revealed huge divergences. The RBI listed out several other reasons too for superseding the boards of the two firms. It said that Srei Equipment had remained non-compliant with RBI regulations despite continuous engagement and follow up and had failed to take corrective action on governance, systems, control and compliance.

Srei Infra and Equipment Finance have debt obligations of over ₹29,000 crore

Srei Equipment had defaulted in repayment of bank and market borrowings, raising serious concerns. Its borrowings totalled ₹20,411 crore as on June 30, 2021 and it had defaulted with 13 lenders for ₹10,457 crore.

“The supervisory concerns (example, negative CRAR, high net NPA ratio, violation of IRACP norms, ever-greening of NPA accounts, connected lending, weak corporate governance standards, inadequate systems and control, poor compliance standards) observed during past inspections by the RBI were communicated through supervisory letters, DO letters and also reiterated in the meetings the Reserve Bank had with the management of the company,” the RBI noted in its internal report.

The central bank said that the companies gave effect to the slump exchange despite not getting a NOC (no objection certificate) from the majority of the lending institutions. “The board of directors of SEFL and SIFL had on July 4, 2019 approved the transfer of assets of SIFL by way of slump sale to SEFL with effect from October 1, 2019,” it said.

No fund diversion: Kanoria

When contacted, Hemant Kanoria, promoter and former chairman of Srei Infrastructure, said, “From our side, we have been very clear that there has been no diversion of funds and all the money has gone into projects, and assets have been created out of that. It is sad that these kinds of charges were levelled.”

The NBFC reported a sharp decline in CRAR and this was mainly due to all the provisions “we made in the last two quarters,” he said. On the appeal in the Bombay High Court, Kanoria said it was only to see if the RBI would give it time to seal a deal with two investors — US-based Arena Investors LP and Singapore-based Makara Capital Partners Pte Ltd, which had earlier evinced interest to pick equity stake in Srei.

“But then it was not accepted (by the court). With full faith, we have built this organization and we have full faith in the regulator, the bankers and the government to take necessary steps to do what is appropriate for the company,” he told BusinessLine.

When asked if he would consider moving the Supreme Court, he said, “We have to see what is the stand of the regulator…..this is a financial institution so we have to work as per the blessing of the regulator only.”

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Reserve Bank of India – Press Releases

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April 14, 2015




Dear All




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





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




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




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



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



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



Thank you for your continued support.




Department of Communication

Reserve Bank of India


Next

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Should You Invest In US Stocks: Dollar-Rupee Volatility Question

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Most of the Indian traders, who are engaged with the equity markets are interested in Indian company stocks, ETFs, or government bonds. Domestically, the NIFTY and SENSEX are at bullish positions now; both long-term and short-term investors are making profits. But why the question of US stock is getting attention now? The reason is especially the market volatility of stock exchanges, and diversifying the risks.



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RBI maintains status quo on rates

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Amidst uneven growth recovery and concerns over a spike in inflation, the Monetary Policy Committee of the Reserve Bank of India chose to maintain a status quo on key rates. It also continued with its accommodative stance to support growth.

“The MPC voted unanimously to maintain status-quo about policy repo rate and by a majority of 5:1 to maintain the accommodative stance,” said RBI Governor Shaktikanta Das, who chairs the MPC, adding that the stance remains accommodative to revive and maintain growth.

The repo rate stands at 4 per cent and the reverse repo rate at 3.35 per cent. MSF rate and bank rate remain unchanged at 4.25 per cent.

The six-member MPC held its bi-monthly monetary policy meeting between October 6 and October 8.

This was Das’s 12th statement since the onset of the pandemic, of which two were made outside of the monetary policy cycle. On two occasions- March and May, the MPC had to take pre-emptive action.

“The RBI has taken over 100 measures to proactively and decisively respond to the unprecedented crisis. We have not been a prisoner of any rule book,” Das said in his opening comments.

The Reserve Bank had last cut the repo rate by 40 basis points in May 2020 but has maintained the status quo on rates since then.

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RBI Keeps Policy Interest Rates On Hold for 8th Consecutive Time

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Investment

oi-Sunil Fernandes

|

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) in its third bi-monthly monetary policy for FY22 left policy interest rates or repo rates unchanged. With this, the repo rate remains at 4%, while the reverse repo rate remains unchanged at 3.35%.

This was largely in line with expectations from analysts and economists. The Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) also decided to keep the policy stance accomodative, by a 5:1 majority.

RBI Governor Shaktikanta Das in the previous MPC meet decided to keep the repo rate unchanged and continue with the accommodative stance as long as necessary to support growth. Since March 2020, RBI has slashed repo rates to a record low of 4 per cent through two rate cuts of 75 bps in March 2020 and 40 bps in May 2020.

According to Emkay Global, the the RBI has been contending with dilemmas on managing its liquidity stance since Covid first struck last year amid robust FX flows and elevated inflation pressure.

RBI Keeps Policy Interest Rates On Hold For 8th Consecutive Time

“Surplus liquidity has not necessarily percolated well across the curve or segments of the rates market amid asymmetric gains in credit markets and risks of rerouting of surplus liquidity and excessive risk-taking in other asset classes. It is arguably correct that, amid an imminent recovery, such high system liquidity may not be warranted,” the brokerage had said in a recent report.

Stock markets were largely expecting the policy decision and the sensex was up more than 360 points, crossing the 60,000 points mark.



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