The nation's largest lender State Bank of India is also the largest player in the commercial paper (CP) market, with its exposure in this segment of the money market jumping by a whopping Rs 16,000 crore in the September quarter to Rs 23,000 crore.
"Our CP portfolio was only Rs 7,000 crore at the end of the June quarter. This rose to Rs 23,000 crore as of end-September," the bank's Deputy Managing Director and Chief Financial Officer Anshula Kant told PTI.
Similarly, she said the bank's corporate bond portfolio also grew by Rs 8,000 crore in the September quarter to Rs 35,000 crore.
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During first seven months of this fiscal, incremental loans of banks grew only by Rs 45,000 crore, while their investments in various non-SLR (statutory liquidity ratio) securities, such as commercial papers (CP), stocks and bonds jumped to about Rs 51,000 crore.
Banks, facing single-digit loan growth for the past many quarters, have been stepping up their non-SLR investments of late.
Kant said all these investments are in companies to which the bank already has loan exposure. They are also highly rated companies.
She further said the bank is doing this as it wants to keep the top-rated and good accounts in their books, as these borrowers are not coming to the bank for capex loans or even working capital funds.
Even after 125 bps cut since January in repo rate by the Reserve Bank of India, banks have not brought down their lending rates considerably.
Cumulatively, they have on an average reduced their base rates by 30 bps since the beginning of the fiscal.