The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) is planning to do away with the prudential limits on bank borrowings in the call market. |
This will help the banking regulator to assess the market effectively and conduct liquidity management operations aimed at correcting the market mis-matches. It would also enable closer monitoring of the movements in call money rates (short-term lending rates). |
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The inter-bank call rates have been trading volatile, with the overnight rates crashing below the one per cent mark on Thursday. The rates hit an intra-day low of 00.50 per cent and ended the day in a band of 00.50 per cent to 00.75 per cent. |
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The inflow of Rs 20,000 crore into the banking system after a bond maturity pushed the call rates down. The dollar sterilisation in the forex market is also adding to the liquidity. |
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Direct regulations in the form of prudential limits on borrowings and lendings would need to eventually graduate to a system where such limits are taken care of by the bank's own internal systems of asset liability management framework, said the RBI in its report on currency and finance. |
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The central bank had stated in March that a bank's inter-bank liability (IBL) should not exceed 200 per cent of its net worth as on March 31 last year. However, it had given freedom to the individual banks to fix a lower limit for their inter-bank liabilities, keeping in view their business models and with approval of the board of directors. |
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The banks whose capital adequacy ratio was at least 11.25 per cent, or 25 per cent more than the minimum capital-to-risk-weighted assets ratio (CRAR) of nine per cent as on March 31 of the previous year, are allowed to have a higher limit of up to 300 per cent of the net worth for IBL. The existing limit on the call money borrowings prescribed by RBI would operate as a sub-limit within the above limits. |
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