Skip to main content

RBI relaxes maturity tenure for banks under forex swap facility

(Reuters) - The Reserve Bank of India on Wednesday relaxed the minimum maturity tenure for banks' foreign currency borrowings' to one year from three years, in order to use the central bank's swap facility which was set up to support the ailing rupee.

The RBI, however, said the relaxation is only applicable while the swap window remains open until November 30. After that, banks' overseas borrowings above 50 percent of their Tier I capital will have to be of minimum maturity of three years, it said.

The RBI set up the swap window for banks earlier this month saying they can borrow overseas up to 100 percent of their Tier 1 capital level, although any loan over 50 percent of that level must be for at least three years.
Under the plan, the central bank will offer to exchange foreign currency for rupees at a rate below market rates for banks who raise these funds through overseas borrowings.
(Reporting by Neha Dasgupta; Editing by Susan Fenton)

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Fundamentals April 30, 2013

Nik's Diary The Indian markets opened in the green following strong start to SGX Nifty and major Asian indices after better-than-expected reading on US housing sales and amid speculation that central banks will continue the stimulation measures. The US markets ended on a positive note on Monday with S&P 500 closing at a record high as traders reacted positively to the latest batch of economic news. The strength on Wall Street reflected a positive reaction to a report from the National Association of Realtors showing a bigger than expected rebound in pending home sales in the month of March. The pending home sales index rose by 1.5% in March 2013 after falling by 1% in February 2013. A separate report from the Commerce Department showed that personal spending climbed 0.2% in March 2013 following a 0.7% increase in February 2013. Meanwhile in India, renewed hopes of an interest rate cut at the RBI's monetary policy meet that is scheduled on May 3 helped stocks close high...

Trade deficit for November at USD9.2bn led by lower imports

According to provisional data released by the commerce ministry, the trade deficit for November 2013 has narrowed to USD9.2bn as against USD10.6bn in the previous month and USD17.2bn in November 2012 mainly on account of a sharp decline in imports. Imports reported a contraction of 16.4% during November 2013 as against 14.5% in the previous month and growth of 3.5% in November 2012. However, the momentum of strong export performance witnessed over the past four months slowed in November 2013, with export growth at 5.9% as compared to 13.5% in October 2013. The decline in imports for the sixth consecutive month can be attributed to the steep contraction in non-oil imports due to restrictions on gold imports as well as the impact of weak domestic demand in the economy. Non oil imports reported de-growth of 23.7% as compared to 22.8% in the previous month and oil imports came in lower by 1.1% as compared to growth of 1.7% in the ...

You are still helping by fearing and staying away from equity investing !!!

Yes it is true. Retail investors help markets and its participants more by staying out than by investing in equities itself. Hence optimists like me, do not mind retail investors doing everything else other than investing in equity markets.  Let me tell you how it helps us. 1. Keeping your money in low interest bearing savings accounts will help banks raise cheap funds. In such a way you earn taxable 9% per year in fixed deposits and 4 % in saving accounts, whereas we  continue accumulating multi lac crore banks like HDFCBank, AxisBank, ICICIBank, SBI and like, which are up by any multiple between 3.5 times to 11 times since December 2008. Also, by paying all your EMI installments on time would help private banks stay out of trouble and we shall continue investing in banking sector with of course proper investment plans and goals. This is something retail investors lack and often end up burning their fingers. 2. Retail investors are more or less out of the mark...