Monday, February 8, 2010

RBI takes on liquidity

In a rather hawkish move, the RBI increased the cash reserve ratio by 75 basis points to 5.75% in order to address the ongoing liquidity overhang in the system. Other policy rates were left unchanged. The move is expected to drain Rs 360 billion from the system. In the last one month, the overall liquidity in the market has been around Rs 600 to Rs. 800 billion. So factoring in RBI’s rate action, there will still be around Rs 300 billion to Rs 500 billion left in the system.

The comforting factor here is that central government is done with its massive market borrowing programme for the current fiscal. Nevertheless, the move is expected to raise short-term rates and will impact banks negatively. Banks would lose out on account of the increased CRR outgo. Given the current credit demand and deposit growth scenario, it would be difficult for banks to even partially pass-through the same through either a hike in lending or a cut in deposit rates.

As the wholesale price inflation surged to 7.3% in Dec ’09 and the consumer price inflation remains in the teens, the RBI is now focusing more on managing inflationary expectations. The RBI, however, has pointed out that the recovery is yet to fully take hold and that it would require sequenced withdrawal of exit from the current extremely accommodative regime.

To sum up, the recent aggressive tightening in the CRR indicates that the RBI will not take any rate action until the next policy review on 20 April 2010.

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