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Banks tumble on RBI's status quo on CRR

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Capital Market Mumbai
Last Updated : Apr 24 2013 | 1:41 PM IST

Union Bank of India (down 5.63%), Bank of Baroda (down 5.30%), Axis Bank (down 5.05%), ICICI Bank (down 4.02%), Canara Bank (down 4%), Punjab National Bank (down 3.79%), State Bank of India (down 3.50%), Bank of India (down 3.44%), IndusInd Bank (down 3.27%), Federal Bank (down 3.26%), Kotak Mahindra Bank (down 2.30%), Yes Bank (down 2.08%), HDFC Bank (down 1.89%) and IDBI Bank (down 1.28%), edged lower.

The BSE Bankex was down 3.32% at 9,108.05. It underperformed the Sensex, which was down 1.69% at 15,229.24.

The BSE Bankex had underperformed the market over the past one month until 16 December 2011, falling 9.44% compared with the Sensex's 7.66% decline. The index had also underperformed the market in past one quarter, sliding 15.34% as against 8.52% fall in the Sensex.

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At its mid-quarterly monetary policy review meet on Friday, 16 December 2011, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) left its main lending rate unchanged in order to support faltering economic growth as inflation shows signs of cooling. The central bank also refrained from cutting the cash reserve ratio (CRR) despite tight liquidity in the system. The repo rate was left steady at 8.5% after increasing it 13 times since March 2010. The bank rate also remains static at 6%. The central bank kept its end-March 2012 inflation forecast unchanged at 7%.

While inflation remains on its projected trajectory, downside risks to growth have clearly increased, RBI said in a statement. The guidance given in the second quarter review of the monetary policy was that, based on the projected inflation trajectory, further rate hikes might not be warranted. In view of the moderating growth momentum and higher downside risks to growth, this guidance is being reiterated, RBI said. From this point on, monetary policy actions are likely to reverse the cycle, responding to the risks to growth, RBI said.

However, it must be emphasised that inflation risks remain high and inflation could quickly recur as a result of both supply and demand forces, the central bank said in statement. Also, the rupee remains under stress, RBI said. The timing and magnitude of further actions will depend on a continuing assessment of how these factors shape up in the months ahead, RBI said. The RBI has raised rates 13 times since March 2010.

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First Published: Dec 19 2012 | 8:32 AM IST

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