The Reserve Bank of India may allow banks to float subordinated debt with the floating interest rate option in its annual monetary policy announcement for 2004-05. |
Also on the cards are upping of the existing limit on interbank investment in Tier-II capital to 25 per cent for all banks/ financial institutions and guidelines for banks to raise long term bonds from the market. |
The floating rate subordinated debt issues could prove to be a boon for both investors' as well as to the banks that find it difficult to get their issues subscribed. |
As the situation obtains now, a bank can raise subordinated debt or supplementary capital only at a fixed coupon rate. It then hedges this liability by entering into an interest rate swap with a counterparty. |
The bank pays floating rate and receives fixed interest rate payment from the counterparty. |
The existing limit on interbank investment in Tier-II capital is 10 per cent for all banks/ financial institutions. By raising the limit to 25 per cent, the financial intermediaries will have more headroom for investing in sub-debt issues. |
A bank's capital fund consists of Tier-I and Tier-II capital. Tier-II should not exceed Tier-I component. |
Tier-I or the core capital comprises (1) paid-up capital less equity investment in subsidiaries (net of provisions made), (2) intangible assets and losses of current and earlier period, (3) reserves & surplus (statutory reserves, capital reserves representing share premium or profit from sale proceeds of assets, special reserves & other disclosed free reserves). |
Government equity in PSU banks contributed in the form of recapitalisation bond is included in Tier-I capital. |