After tightening interest rates on repatriable non-resident external rupee (NRE) deposits and dollar deposits (FCNR-B) to kill arbitrage opportunities between the international and domestic markets, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) may now tighten the norms for non-resident Indians' investments in mutual funds. |
According to banking industry sources, the central bank is seriously looking into the issue. |
"This is the only avenue left where arbitrage opportunities still exist. The RBI is planning to plug any loopholes that exist," a banking industry source said. The RBI is comfortable with trade inflows but wants to restrict the capital flows. |
At present, NRIs as well as foreign institutional investors (FIIs) are allowed to invest in mutual funds both on a repatriable as well as on a non-repatriable basis. NRIs are required to use money in their NRE and FCNR(B) accounts to invest on a repatriable basis. |
They can also take the inward remittance route to invest in mutual funds. |
"It is clearly known that the RBI wants to put a cap on NRI money flows into the mutual funds sector. The central bank may put some restrictions for a limited period and watch their impact," said a banking source. |
Mutual fund industry sources, however, said there had not been a huge NRI money flow into the sector. |
The RBI has continuously been putting restrictions on NRI remittances so as to push up the quality of foreign exchange assets and check the flow of hot money. |
In September this year, the RBI capped the interest rates on repatriable NRE deposits at 100 basis points above the London Inter-Bank Offered Rate (Libor)/Swap rates for the dollar of corresponding maturity. |
The move has put NRE and FCNR-B deposits on a par and killed arbitrage opportunities. |
Earlier in July, the RBI had imposed a ceiling on interest rates on repatriable NRE deposits. Then the central bank said banks could not pay more than 250 basis points above the Libor/Swap rates for dollar of corresponding maturity. |
It had also brought down the interest rates on FCNR(B) deposits. |
Capital curb
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