The need for money among banks, especially for short-term funds, may turn more intense in the last month of the financial year to feed the demand for capital for tax payments and meet year-end targets.
Photograph: PTI Photo from the Rediff Archives
The mobilisation of funds via the certificate of deposits (CDs) has seen a threefold increase to over Rs 60,000 crore in the fortnight that ended February 23 from around Rs 20,000 crore in the fortnight of January 26, 2024, according to the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) data.
Soumyajit Niyogi, director, Core Analytical Group, India Ratings & Research said banks waited till January in the hope of improvement in liquidity.
However, after getting convinced that liquidity may not improve in any meaningful way, they scaled up fundraising through instruments like CDs in February.
This trend may continue for most of March as payments for advance tax, GST and year-end demand.
Given the unfolding scenario in March, the RBI is likely to change its approach from fine-tuning to providing substantial liquidity support, Niyogi added.
The fundraising through commercial paper, another short-term instrument, also grew from Rs 34,493 crore in the fortnight of January 15, 2024 to Rs 53,532 crore in the fortnight ended January 31, 2024 and further to Rs 57,900 crore in 15 days ended February 15, 2024, RBI data showed.
The interest rates have also inched up reflecting the surge in demand for money.
The interest rate range for CDs was 7.07-8.02 per cent for the fortnight ended January 26, 2024 which moved to 7.17-8.22 per cent in the fortnight of February 23, 2024.
Gopal Tripathi, head - Treasury and Capital Markets, Jana Small Finance Bank said banks will continue to scout opportunities to raise funds via instruments like CDs on a larger scale this month as liquidity is under pressure.
The economy is doing good, fuelling credit demand which lenders are cashing on with robust capital adequacy.
Bank of Baroda in review of bond market and liquidity over the weekend said the pressure on liquidity has remained.
The average system liquidity deficit moderated to Rs 1.9 trillion in February 2024 from Rs 2.1 trillion in January 2024.
RBI’s fine-tuning operations with the frequency of Varible Repo Rate (VRR) being higher than Varible Reverse Repo Rate (VRRR) kept liquidity range bound. The notified amount itself enumerated that liquidity conditions are still tight.
The system liquidity is likely to be in the range of 1.0-1.2 per cent of Net Demand and Time Liabilities (NDTL).
The current gap between incremental credit and deposit is at Rs 3.2 trillion. Thus, medium-term pressure on liquidity cannot be discounted, it added.