The Reserve Financial institution of India (RBI) will conduct its largest-ever $10-billion greenback/rupee buy-sell swap public sale on February 28, aiming to handle the persistent liquidity deficit within the banking system.
Beneath the swap association, the central financial institution will buy {dollars} for speedy supply and promote them for supply after three years. The primary leg of the transaction will probably be settled on March 4, with the swap reversing on March 6, 2028.
This marks the second such public sale by the RBI in lower than a month, following a $5.1-billion swap on January 31 for a six-month tenure. The newest transfer indicators a continued effort to inject sturdy liquidity, with banking system deficits persisting since mid-December.
Market members will bid primarily based on the premium they’re keen to pay to the RBI, quoted in paisa phrases to 2 decimal locations. The public sale will run from 10:30 am to 11:30 am, with outcomes introduced the identical day. The minimal bid dimension is $10 million, and bids should be in multiples of $1 million.
The RBI’s earlier $5-billion public sale on January 31 is about to reverse on August 4. The central financial institution has additionally taken extra measures to spice up liquidity, together with reducing its key rate of interest for the primary time in practically 5 years earlier this month. Nonetheless, market members stress that sustained liquidity is important for efficient coverage transmission by lenders.
Past foreign exchange swaps, the RBI has infused over Rs 3.6 lakh crore ($41.56 billion) of sturdy liquidity via debt purchases, overseas trade interventions, and long-duration repos. As of February 20, India’s banking system confronted a liquidity shortfall of round Rs 1.7 lakh crore. The central financial institution has additional injected Rs 1.83 lakh crore by way of long-term repos set to mature in early April.
With the monetary system grappling with tight liquidity situations, the upcoming swap public sale is about to be a key check of market urge for food and the RBI’s ongoing liquidity administration technique.
(With inputs from companies)