Statement
by Dr. D. Subbarao, Governor, Reserve Bank
of India on the Mid-Term Review of Annual Policy
for the Year 2008-09 This Statement consists
of two parts: Part A. Mid-term Review of the Annual Statement on
Monetary Policy for the Year 2008-09; and Part B. Mid-term Review
of the Annual Statement on Developmental and Regulatory Policies for the Year
2008-09. An analytical review of macroeconomic
and monetary developments was issued a day in advance as a supplement to Part
A of this Statement, providing information and technical analysis with the help
of charts and tables. Part
A. Mid-term Review of the Annual Statement on Monetary Policy for the Year
2008-09 2. This part is divided
into three sections: I. Assessment of Macroeconomic and Monetary
Developments during the First Half of 2008-09; II. Stance
of Monetary Policy for the Second Half of 2008-09; and III.
Monetary Measures. I.
Assessment of Macroeconomic and Monetary Developments during the First
Half of 2008-09 Domestic Developments
3. During the first quarter of 2008-09, real GDP growth was 7.9 per cent
as against 9.2 per cent a year ago. The end-August 2008 release of national income
aggregates by the Central Statistical Organisation (CSO) placed the growth of
real GDP originating in agriculture, industry and services at 3.0 per cent, 5.2
per cent and 10.2 per cent, respectively, during April-June 2008 as against 4.4
per cent, 9.6 per cent and 10.6 per cent a year ago. 4. There are some
distinctive features in macroeconomic developments during the second quarter of
2008-09 (July-September) in relation to the preceding quarter. According to the
India Meteorological Department (IMD), cumulative south-west monsoon season rainfall
for the country as a whole was two per cent below the long period average
(LPA). Of the 36 meteorological sub-divisions, rainfall was excess/normal in as
many as 32 sub-divisions as against 30 sub-divisions in the 2007 season. The deficient
rainfall regions were Vidarbha, Kerala, West Madhya Pradesh, Nagaland, Manipur,
Mizoram and Tripura. As on October 15, 2008 live storage in 81 major reservoirs
was 73 per cent of the designated capacity which is seven per cent higher than
the last 10 years’ average but 10 per cent lower than the level a year ago.
5. By October 10, 2008 the area sown under kharif rice and
major oilseeds increased by 2.9 per cent and 3.6 per cent, respectively, over
the previous year’s sown area but acreage under coarse cereals, pulses,
cotton, sugarcane and jute was lower by 6.4 per cent, 15.5 per cent, 1.3
per cent, 16.6 per cent and 10.8 per cent, respectively, than in the
corresponding period a year ago. First advance estimates released by the Ministry
of Agriculture place kharif foodgrains production at 115.3 million tonnes,
below the target of 121.5 million tonnes and also lower than the production of
121.0 million tonnes recorded last year. According to these initial estimates,
rice production is estimated at 83.3 million tonnes which is above the preceding
year’s output of 82.8 million tonnes. Production of nine major oilseeds
during the kharif season was placed at 17.9 million tonnes which is lower
than the target of 20.0 million tonnes for the current year and also below
the output of 19.8 million tonnes in 2007-08. Production of sugarcane and cotton
is expected to decline in 2008-09 in relation to targets as well as output levels
a year ago. 6. The index of industrial production (IIP) rose by 4.9
per cent during April-August 2008 as compared with 10.0 per cent in the corresponding
period last year. Manufacturing output growth, electricity generation and mining
activity slowed to 5.2 per cent, 2.3 per cent and 4.1 per cent, respectively,
from 10.6 per cent, 8.3 per cent and 4.9 per cent in the corresponding period
last year. Manufacturing activity was led by chemicals and chemical products,
beverages, tobacco and related products, machinery and equipments including transport
equipment and parts, which together accounted for 89 per cent of the growth of
industrial production during April-August 2008, despite constituting only 30 per
cent of the index in terms of weight. On the other hand, production of food products,
jute textiles, wood and wood products, rubber, plastic, petroleum and coal products
declined and had a moderating effect on overall manufacturing sector growth. The
use-based classification indicates some moderation in investment demand with the
growth of capital goods production slowing to 9.2 per cent from 20.1 per cent
a year ago. Production of consumer non-durables rose by 8.6 per cent on top of
10.0 per cent in the corresponding period last year; consumer durables recorded
a turnaround, growing by 5.6 per cent as against a decline of 2.3 per cent a year
ago. Production of basic and intermediate goods rose by 3.8 per cent (9.9 per
cent a year ago) and 0.7 per cent (9.9 per cent), respectively. The six infrastructure
industries, which together comprise 27 per cent of the IIP, posted a growth
of 3.4 per cent during April-August 2008 as against 7.1 per cent a year ago. Except
for coal, other infrastructure sectors recorded deceleration in growth while the
production of crude petroleum declined. 7. For the private non-financial
corporate sector, sales increased by 30.0 per cent during April-June 2008, higher
than 19.2 per cent in the corresponding quarter a year ago. There was deceleration
in income from non-core activities, largely attributable to subdued conditions
in the capital market. Growth in expenditure at 34.5 per cent outpaced sales growth.
On a year-on-year basis, raw material expenses rose by 35.9 per cent and staff
cost increased by 23.2 per cent. Due to mark-to-market losses on foreign currency
borrowings resulting from exchange rate depreciation during the quarter, a sizeable
number of companies reported erosion in financial performance. Despite an increase
in interest outgo, the interest burden (interest to gross profits ratio) at 16.7
per cent remained distinctly lower when compared with 50.0 per cent in the 1990s
and 43.7 per cent in the first half of the current decade. Reflecting the pick-up
in expenditures, net profits growth decelerated to 8.2 per cent in the first quarter
of 2008-09 as compared with double-digit growth rates recorded in the previous
quarters and 33.9 per cent a year ago. At the sectoral level, manufacturing companies
recorded higher sales growth when compared with information technology (IT) and
non-IT service companies. 8. Early results for the second quarter of
2008-09 for a truncated sample of companies indicate continuing moderation in
profitability growth, especially for manufacturing companies. Sales growth was
driven by a combination of increased volumes and higher prices but was not able
to fully mitigate rising input cost and staff cost pressures. Financing costs
have increased due to rising interest payments as well as the impact of losses
on foreign liabilities. Income from non-core activities were lower reflecting
subdued treasury incomes. Consequently, corporates’ earnings growth appears
to have weakened further in the second quarter of 2008-09. 9. The 43rd
round of the Reserve Bank’s quarterly Industrial Outlook Survey conducted
during July-August 2008 and covering private manufacturing companies indicates
a moderation in business sentiment. The assessment for July-September 2008
reflects a lower level of optimism than in the previous round of the survey, with
the business expectations index for July-September 2008 down by 2.4 per cent from
the previous quarter. There was moderation in all major parameters such as the
overall business situation, the overall financial situation, production, order
books, cost of raw materials and profit margins. Demand conditions appear to have
weakened as reflected in the assessment of production, order books and export
demand. Higher input costs are expected to compress profit margins significantly
during the second and third quarters of 2008-09. For October-December 2008, working
capital finance requirements are expected to remain high; there are, however,
concerns about the availability of finance. Capacity utilisation is expected to
remain generally stable and production capacity is expected to be adequate to
meet demand. An increasing number of respondent firms expect price pressures to
rise on the back of higher raw material costs and expect to pass on higher prices
to end-consumers to protect profit margins. The business expectations index for
October-December 2008 was 2.6 per cent lower than in the preceding quarter.
10. Other business confidence surveys continue to reflect uncertainty on
the outlook, as also noted in the First Quarter Review of July 2008. Business
confidence has generally ebbed relative to its level in previous survey rounds
on increases in the cost of finance and raw materials and some concerns on moderation
in overall economic conditions and export demand. According to one survey, there
was a decline of 19 per cent in the indicator for the overall economic conditions
over the next six months in relation to its level polled in the previous quarter.
Another survey reported a 28.1 per cent decline in the composite business
optimism index for October–December 2008 across sales volumes, new orders
and net profits, reflecting subdued demand conditions. Seasonally adjusted purchasing
managers’ indices indicate that manufacturing sector activity has lost some
momentum due to deterioration in both local and export market conditions and increased
inflationary pressures. Forward looking indicators point towards some slowdown
and margin pressures. 11. Lead indicators of activity in the services
sector suggest that the pace of expansion has picked up in the communication sector
with an increase of 33.8 per cent in switching capacity in April-July 2008 as
against a decline of 53.1 per cent a year ago. There was a robust growth of 32.4
per cent in telephone connections (fixed plus cellular) with the addition
of 34.4 million connections as compared with 26.0 million connections provided
in the corresponding period last year. Railway revenue earnings from freight traffic
increased by 9.4 per cent, higher than the growth of 6.1 per cent in the corresponding
period last year due to higher traffic for carriage of petroleum, oil and lubricants
(POL), container services and cement. Growth in cargo handled at major ports increased
by 8.3 per cent as compared with 14.9 per cent a year ago. In the civil aviation
sector, handling of import cargo and export cargo increased by 6.6 per cent
and 8.1 per cent, respectively, as against 23.4 per cent and 3.6 per cent
in the corresponding period of 2007-08. Growth in passengers handled at domestic
and international terminals declined/decelerated to (-) 2.2 per cent and 7.9 per
cent, respectively, from 27.3 per cent and 11.8 per cent a year ago.
12. According to the CSO’s end-August 2008 release, real private final consumption
expenditure (PFCE) increased by 8.0 per cent during April-June 2008, which was
marginally higher than the growth of 7.6 per cent recorded in the corresponding
period a year ago. Real gross fixed capital formation (GFCF) rose by 9.0 per cent,
lower than the growth of 13.3 per cent recorded in April-June 2007. The share
of PFCE in GDP at 59.8 per cent during the first quarter of 2008-09 remained stable
whereas the share of GFCF increased to 32.3 per cent of GDP from 32.0 per cent
a year ago. 13. Credit extended by scheduled commercial banks (SCBs)
increased by 29.4 per cent (Rs.5,91,935 crore) on a year-on-year basis up to October
10, 2008 as compared with an increase of 23.1 per cent (Rs.3,77,628 crore) a year
ago. On a financial year basis, bank credit increased by 10.4 per cent (Rs.2,45,491
crore) up to October 10, 2008 as compared with the increase of 4.4 per cent
(Rs.84,280 crore) in the corresponding period last year. Food credit increased
by Rs.4,496 crore as against a decline of Rs.9,501 crore in the previous year.
Non-food credit recorded an increase of 10.4 per cent (Rs.2,40,995 crore)
as compared with an increase of 5.0 per cent (Rs.93,781 crore) in the corresponding
period of the previous year. 14. On a year-on-year basis, non-food credit
growth was higher at 29.3 per cent up to October 10, 2008 than 23.3 per cent a
year ago. Provisional information on the sectoral deployment of bank credit available
up to August 2008 indicates that on a year-on-year basis, credit to the services
sector recorded the highest growth (35.3 per cent), followed by industry (30.6
per cent), agriculture (18.5 per cent) and personal loans (17.4 per cent). Growth
in housing and real estate loans decelerated to 13.9 per cent (16.6 per cent)
and 46.3 per cent (52.9 per cent), respectively. Within the industrial sector,
there was a sizeable credit pick-up in respect of infrastructure (35.8 per cent
as against 32.0 per cent a year ago), petroleum (91.8 per cent as against 32.9
per cent), basic metals and metal products (32.2 per cent over 20.6 per cent),
cement and cement products (62.8 per cent over 18.1 per cent a year ago), chemicals
(27.1 per cent as against 15.3 per cent) and construction (48.3 per cent
as against 42.9 per cent). There was moderation in credit growth to food processing
(25.6 per cent over 29.0 per cent), textiles (23.1 per cent as against 28.7 per
cent) and vehicle, vehicle parts and transport equipments (27.5 per cent as against
34.2 per cent). Credit to industry constituted 44.6 per cent of the
total expansion in non-food bank credit up to August 2008, followed by services
(30.3 per cent), personal loans (16.7 per cent) and agriculture (8.4 per cent).
The share of infrastructure, petroleum, construction, cement and mining and quarrying
in total credit to industry increased to 22.5 per cent, 6.7 per cent, 3.3 per
cent, 1.6 per cent and 1.4 per cent, respectively from 21.6 per cent, 4.6 per
cent, 2.9 per cent, 1.3 per cent and 1.0 per cent. On the contrary, the share
of credit to textiles, chemicals, engineering, food processing, gems and jewellery
and fertiliser declined to 10.4 per cent, 7.5 per cent, 6.1 per cent, 5.4 per
cent, 2.9 per cent and 1.2 per cent respectively, from 11.0 per cent, 7.7 per
cent, 6.4 per cent, 5.6 per cent, 3.3 per cent and 1.3 per cent. Priority
sector advances grew by 20.8 per cent with a moderation in their share in outstanding
gross bank credit to 33.1 per cent in August 2008 from 34.7 per cent
a year ago. While there has been a sharp increase in credit off-take by petroleum
and fertliser companies in 2008-09, the annual growth rate of non-food credit,
even excluding credit to petroleum and fertiliser sectors, has been significantly
higher at 25.6 per cent in August 2008 as compared with 24.5 per cent
a year ago. 15. Commercial banks’ investments in shares, bonds/debentures
and commercial papers (CPs) increased by 17.5 per cent (Rs.13,600 crore) on a
year-on-year basis up to October 10, 2008 as against a decline of 5.4 per
cent (Rs.4,458 crore) a year ago. On a financial year basis, such investments
by banks fell by 4.6 per cent (Rs.4,386 crore) during 2008-09 so far
(up to October 10), as against a decline of 7.2 per cent (Rs.6,025 crore) in the
corresponding period of 2007-08. 16. The year-on-year growth in total resource
flow from SCBs to the commercial sector was 28.9 per cent up to October 10, 2008
over and above the growth of 21.9 per cent a year ago. During the current financial
year, banks’ investments in instruments issued by all-India financial institutions
and mutual funds declined by Rs.11,411 crore as against an increase of Rs.51,656
crore in the corresponding period of the previous year. Additional resources raised
by corporates in the form of external commercial borrowings (ECBs) was lower at
Rs.6,494 crore (US $ 1.6 billion) during April-June 2008 as compared with Rs.28,822
crore (US $ 7.0 billion) during the corresponding period last year. An amount
of Rs.4,652 crore (US $ 1.1 billion) was mobilised through issuance of American
Depository Receipts/Global Depository Receipts (ADRs/GDRs) during April-September
2008 as compared with Rs.11,284 crore (US $ 2.8 billion) raised during the corresponding
period last year. 17. Aggregate deposits of SCBs increased
by 21.6 per cent (Rs.6,15,263 crore) on a year-on-year basis up to October 10,
2008 as compared with 24.7 per cent (Rs.5,65,124 crore) a year ago. On a financial
year basis, aggregate deposits rose by 8.5 per cent (Rs.2,72,420 crore) as compared
with an increase of 9.3 per cent (Rs.2,42,163 crore) in the corresponding period
of the previous year. The share of savings deposits in total deposits has been
declining and there appears to be some migration from small savings instruments
to term deposits with banks where the rates of return are relatively more attractive.
The incremental annual credit-deposit ratio increased to 96.2 per cent on October
10, 2008 from 66.8 per cent a year ago. 18. SCBs’ incremental
investment in Government and other approved securities during 2008-09 up to October
10, 2008 was Rs.9,201 crore as against Rs.1,56,236 crore in the corresponding
period last year. The ratio of such investments to aggregate deposits on an incremental
basis was 3.4 per cent which was much lower than 64.5 per cent in the corresponding
period last year. Adjusting for collateral securities under the liquidity adjustment
facility (LAF) operations, however, statutory liquidity ratio (SLR) investments
increased by Rs.80,176 crore during 2008-09 so far as against the increase of
Rs.90,806 crore in the corresponding period last year. Inclusive of LAF collateral
securities on an outstanding basis, SCBs’ holdings of SLR securities amounted
to Rs.10,72,416 crore or 28.2 per cent of net demand and time liabilities
(NDTL) on October 10, 2008 implying an excess of Rs.1,20,870 crore or 3.2 per
cent of NDTL over the prescribed SLR of 25 per cent of NDTL. 19. Money supply
(M3) increased by 20.3 per cent on a year-on-year basis up to October 10, 2008,
lower than 21.9 per cent a year ago but above the indicative projection of
17.0 per cent set out in the Annual Policy Statement of April 2008. On a financial
year basis, M3 increased by 7.7 per cent (Rs.3,07,403 crore) up to October 10,
2008 as compared with the increase of 8.1 per cent (Rs.2,68,694 crore) in the
corresponding period of the previous year. 20. Reserve money increased
by 17.6 per cent on a year-on-year basis as on October 17, 2008 as compared with
24.4 per cent a year ago. On a financial year basis, reserve money declined
by 2.9 per cent (Rs.27,296 crore) up to October 17, 2008 as compared with the
increase of 8.1 per cent (Rs.57,189 crore) in the corresponding period of the
previous year. Among the components of reserve money, currency in circulation
registered a higher growth of 7.3 per cent (Rs.43,095 crore) as compared with
4.5 per cent (Rs.22,702 crore). Bankers’ deposits with the Reserve Bank
declined by 20.3 per cent (Rs.66,793 crore) against an increase of 18.7 per cent
(Rs.36,984 crore) in the corresponding period last year. Among the sources of
reserve money, the Reserve Bank’s net credit to the Central Government increased
by Rs.15,534 crore as against a decline of Rs.1,43,116 crore in the corresponding
period last year. Adjusted for transactions under the LAF, however, the Reserve
Bank’s credit to the Central Government showed an increase of Rs.57,244
crore, mainly on account of securities received under special market operations
(SMO) and reduction in cash balances of the Government of India with the Reserve
Bank. The Reserve Bank’s net foreign exchange assets (NFEA) increased by
Rs.93,402 crore as compared with an increase of Rs.1,71,080 crore during the corresponding
period of the previous year. Adjusted for revaluation of foreign currency assets,
however, NFEA declined by Rs.34,556 crore as compared with an increase of Rs.2,17,201
crore during the corresponding period of the previous year. The ratio of NFEA
to currency increased marginally from 209.2 per cent on March 31, 2008 to
209.7 per cent by October 17, 2008. 21. During the second quarter of
2008-09, liquidity conditions were generally tight and, except in the first week
of July, there were continuous injections of liquidity under the LAF. In addition,
an amount of Rs.26,000 crore (net) was mopped up through the issuances of 91-day,
182-day and 364-day Treasury Bills during July-September, 2008. Net injections
under the LAF increased from an average of Rs.8,622 crore in June 2008 to Rs.22,560
crore in August 2008. During September 2008, liquidity injections under the LAF
ranged between Rs.1,025-90,075 crore, reaching a level of Rs.90,075 crore on September
29, 2008 with adverse developments in international financial markets coinciding
with advance tax outflows and the half-yearly bank closing. To ease liquidity
pressures, the Reserve Bank unwound the market stabilisation scheme (MSS) to the
tune of Rs.3,105 crore during June 30-August 21, 2008. The Reserve Bank also cut
the cash reserve ratio (CRR) by 250 basis points in October 2008 and expanded
liquidity support to the market through additional facilities referred to later.
During October 2008, liquidity injections under the LAF rose to Rs.91,500 crore
on October 10, 2008, but there was a turnaround in liquidity conditions in the
subsequent period and the Reserve Bank absorbed Rs.27,745 crore under the LAF
on October 22, 2008. Banks’ dependence on export credit refinance (ECR)
rose from a daily average of Rs.2,208 crore in June 2008 to Rs.3,110 crore
in August 2008 and further to Rs.6,752 crore on September 29, 2008 before declining
to Rs.91 crore on October 22, 2008. The Central Government’s cash balances
declined from Rs.37,194 crore on June 30, 2008 to Rs.2,967 crore on August 2,
2008 and it took recourse to ways and means advances during August 4-6 and September
2-14, 2008 with a peak level of Rs.10,903 crore on September 5, 2008. In the subsequent
period, the Central Government’s cash balances increased to Rs.29,753 crore
on October 20, 2008. 22. On a net basis, average daily LAF absorption,
which stood at Rs.9,881 crore in the first quarter of 2008-09 changed to a net
injection of Rs.30,912 crore during the second quarter and Rs.53,259 crore in
October 2008 (up to October 22). The balances under the MSS increased marginally
from Rs.1,76,422 crore in June 30, 2008 to Rs.1,77,817 crore on September 25,
2008 before declining to Rs.1,71,317 crore on October 22, 2008. Cash balances
of the Central Government with the Reserve Bank fell from an average of Rs.30,587
crore in the first quarter of 2008-09 to Rs.17,821 crore in the second quarter
and Rs.36,599 crore in October 2008 (up to October 22). The total overhang of
liquidity as reflected in the balances under the LAF, the MSS and the Central
Government’s cash balances taken together declined from a daily average
of Rs.1,93,726 crore in June 2008 to Rs.1,53,863 crore in September 2008 and further
to Rs.1,22,182 crore on October 5, 2008. The total overhang of liquidity increased
to Rs.2,17,415 crore on October 20, 2008. 23. Inflation, measured by
variations in the wholesale price index (WPI) on a year-on-year basis, increased
to 11.4 per cent as on October 4, 2008 from 7.8 per cent as at end-March 2008
and 3.2 per cent a year ago. At a disaggregated level, prices of primary
articles and manufactured products rose by 12.7 per cent and 9.7 per cent,
respectively, as compared with the increase of 5.0 per cent and 4.5
per cent a year ago. During 2008-09 so far, inflation for primary articles has
been driven mainly by the rising prices of foodgrains, vegetables, fruits, cotton,
milk, condiment and spices and tea. Food articles prices, which had eased in June,
firmed up in subsequent months. Elevated prices of cotton and oilseeds kept non-food
articles inflation high. Manufacturing inflation was largely driven by three groups
- basic metal and alloys, food products and chemical and chemical products.
24. Prices of the fuel group increased by 14.6 per cent on a year-on-year
basis as against a decline of 1.8 per cent a year ago. The daily average price
of the Indian basket of crude oil increased fromUS $ 99.4 per barrel in March
2008 to US $ 129.8 in June 2008 and further to a peak of US $ 141.5 on July 3,
2008 before declining to US $ 96.8 in September, 2008 and to US $ 74.4 in October
so far up to October 22, 2008. Excluding the fuel group, year-on-year inflation
rose to 10.6 per cent from 4.7 per cent a year ago. Similarly, excluding fuel
and food articles, inflation rose to 10.8 per cent from 5.2 per cent a year ago.
On an average basis, annual WPI inflation at 8.0 per cent was higher than 5.4 per cent
a year ago. 25. Inflation, based on the consumer price index (CPI) for
industrial workers, showed a sharp increase to 9.0 per cent on a year-on-year
basis in August 2008 from 7.3 per cent a year ago. Year-on-year inflation based
on the CPI for agricultural labourers (AL) and rural labourers (RL) increased
to 11.0 per cent each in September 2008 from 7.9 per cent and 7.6 per cent, respectively,
a year ago. Inflation based on the CPI for urban non-manual employees (UNME) rose
to 8.5 per cent in August 2008 as compared with 6.4 per cent in the corresponding
period of the previous year. The divergence between the inflation rates based
on the WPI and CPIs is explained largely by the steep rise in prices of fuel items
and metals which have a much higher weight in the WPI than in the CPIs.
26. Revenue receipts of the Central Government amounted to 26.8 per cent
of the budget estimates (BE) during April-August 2008 as compared with 33.7 per
cent in the corresponding period a year ago. As a proportion to the BE, tax and
non-tax revenue receipts were 24.7 per cent and 37.7 per cent, respectively, as
compared with 24.6 per cent and 78.4 per cent a year ago. Total expenditure at
37.2 per cent of the BE was lower than 39.9 per cent a year ago. The gross
fiscal deficit (GFD) and revenue deficit increased to 87.7 per cent and 177.4
per cent of the BE, respectively, during April-August 2008 compared with 68.5
per cent and 74.9 per cent in the corresponding period last year. A notable feature
of deficit financing this year so far has been the turnaround in mobilisation
from small savings deposits and certificates after a decline in the previous year.
27. Gross market borrowings of the Central Government through dated securities
at Rs.1,06,000 crore (Rs.1,07,000 crore a year ago) during 2008-09 so far (up
to October 22, 2008) constituted 60.3 per cent of the BE. Net market borrowings
at Rs.61,972 crore (Rs.74,875 crore a year ago) constituted 67.6 per cent of the
BE. In addition, an amount of Rs.38,500 crore has been mobilised by the Central
Government through issuance of additional treasury bills to finance the expenditure
on the farm debt waiver scheme during the current year up to October 17, 2008.
The weighted average yield and weighted average maturity of Central Government
securities issued during 2008-09 so far (up to October 22, 2008) were higher at
8.81 per cent and 15.55 years, respectively, as compared with 8.12 per cent and
14.90 years for those issued during 2007-08 (full year). The borrowings were raised
in accordance with the indicative calendar for the first half of 2008-09 except
on two occasions. First, in the auction of July 24, 2008 a 10-year benchmark security
was issued in place of a higher maturity security in view of uncertain market
conditions. Second, after the Government of India completed the issuance of dated
securities for the first half of the current fiscal year as per the indicative
calendar covering the period April 1, 2008 to September 30, 2008, an unscheduled
auction of dated securities amounting to Rs.10,000 crore was held on September
26, 2008 keeping in view the emerging requirements of the Government, market conditions
and other relevant factors. On September 26, 2008 the issuance calendar for dated
securities for the second half of 2008-09 (October-March) was released in consultation
with the Government with planned issuances of Rs.39,000 crore. The announced auctions
of Rs.10,000 crore each scheduled on October 10 and 20, 2008 were, however, cancelled
by the Government of India in consultation with the Reserve Bank on a review of
liquidity conditions. No special securities were issued to oil companies, fertiliser
companies and the Food Corporation of India during the current year so far as
against Rs.38,050 crore issued in 2007-08 and Rs.40,321 crore issued in 2006-07.
On October 20, 2008 the Union Government sought Parliament approval for an additional
cash outgo of Rs.1,05,613 crore to meet expenditure including towards the increased
salaries of central government employees due to the implementation of the Sixth
Pay Commission award, the farm debt waiver scheme, enhanced allocation towards
rural employment schemes and the fertiliser subsidies among other. As against
the estimated gross borrowings of Rs.62,658 crore (net Rs.48,287 crore), the State
Governments raised a net amount of Rs.8,738 crore up to October 22, 2008.
28. Financial markets reflected the changes in liquidity conditions during
the second quarter of 2008-09. The overnight rates in the call, market repo (outside
the LAF) and collateralised borrowing and lending obligation (CBLO) hardened across
the spectrum on account of tighter liquidity consequent upon increases in the
CRR during April-August 2008 in six stages and in the LAF repo rate on June 12,
June 25 and July 30, 2008. The weighted average call rate rose from 7.37 per cent
in March 2008 to 9.10 per cent in August 2008 and moved up further to 10.52 per
cent in September 2008. The call rate increased to 13.07 per cent on September
16, 2008 on account of advance tax outflows and disruptions in international money
and stock markets. The average call rate touched a level of 14.70 per cent on
September 29, 2008 following the half-yearly bank closing. During October 2008
(up to October 22), the weighted average call rate was 9.9 per cent, rising to
a peak of 19.70 per cent on October 10, 2008, before declining to 6.09 per cent
on October 22, 2008. Interest rates in the CBLO and market repo segments moved
in tandem with call rates and increased from 6.37 per cent and 6.72 per cent,
respectively, in March 2008 to 8.74 per cent and 8.87 per cent in September 2008
and further to 11.44 per cent and 11.77 per cent, respectively, on October 1,
2008 before declining to 5.38 per cent and 6.04 per cent, respectively, on
October 22, 2008. The daily average volume (one leg) in the call money market,
market repo and the CBLO segments moved from Rs.11,182 crore, Rs.14,800 crore
and Rs.37,413 crore, respectively, in March 2008 to Rs.11,690 crore, Rs.10,659
crore and Rs.20,547 crore in September 2008 and increased to Rs.15,730 crore,
Rs.13,275 crore and Rs.23,719 crore on October 22, 2008. Thus, the inter-bank
money market has been working well throughout the period. 29. The primary
yield on 91-day Treasury Bills, which had increased from 7.23 per cent at end-March
2008 to 9.36 per cent at end-July 2008, moderated subsequently to 7.19 per cent
on October 22, 2008. Similarly, the primary yield on 364-day Treasury Bills increased
from 7.35 per cent at end-March to 9.56 per cent at end-July before declining
to 7.40 per cent on October 22, 2008. The weighted average discount
rate on CPs increased to 12.28 per cent at end-September from 10.38 per cent as
at end-March 2008 and the outstanding amount increased to Rs.52,038 crore from
Rs.32,592 crore over this period. In the market for certificates of deposit (CDs)
also, the weighted average discount rate increased from 10.00 per cent at the
end of March 2008 to 11.56 per cent by end-September 2008 accompanied by an increase
of 18.8 per cent in the outstanding amount from Rs.1,47,792 crore to Rs.1,75,522
crore. 30. The yields on Government securities with one-year, 10-year
and 20-year residual maturity increased from 7.49 per cent, 7.93 per cent
and 8.11 per cent, respectively, at end-March 2008 to a high of 9.25 per cent,
9.17 per cent and 9.72 per cent on July 14, 2008 and remained at elevated levels
up to September 2008. The yields recorded a steady decline from 8.74 per cent,
8.63 per cent and 9.30 per cent, respectively, on September 29, 2008 to 7.40
per cent, 7.58 per cent and 8.31 per cent on October 22, 2008. The yield
spread between 10-year and one-year Government security narrowed from 44 basis
points in March 2008 to 18 basis points on October 22, 2008. The yield spread
between 20-year and one-year Government securities declined from 82 basis points
to 71 basis points during this period. 31. Increased activity in the foreign
exchange market was reflected in a rise in the average daily turnover to US $
64.9 billion in September 2008 from a level of US $ 50.5 billion a year ago. While
the daily average turnover in the inter-bank segment increased from US $ 36.8
billion to US $ 46.4 billion, the merchant turnover increased from US $ 13.7 billion
to US $ 18.5 billion during this period. The six-month forward premia increased
from 2.5 per cent as at end-March 2008 to a high of 5.4 per cent by July 1,
2008 but eased subsequently to 2.5 per cent by September 12, 2008 and further
to 0.24 per cent by October 22, 2008. 32. During April-October 22, 2008
SCBs increased their deposit rates for various maturities by 50-175 basis points.
The range of interest rates offered by the public sector banks (PSBs) on deposits
of above one-year maturity increased from 8.00-9.25 per cent in April 2008 to
8.50-10.60 per cent by October 22, 2008. The deposit rates of private sector banks
on maturity of one to three years and above three years firmed up from the range
of 7.25-9.25 per cent and 7.25-9.75 per cent to the range of 9.00-11.00 per cent
and 8.25-11.00 per cent, respectively, during the same period. On the lending
side, the benchmark prime lending rates (BPLRs) of PSBs increased by 125-150 basis
points in April-October to a range of 13.75-14.75 per cent by October 22, 2008.
The private sector banks and foreign banks also increased their BPLR from the
range of 13.00-16.50 per cent and 10.00-15.50 per cent to the range of 13.75-17.75
per cent and to 10.00-17.00 per cent, respectively, during the same period.
33. Equity markets experienced a downturn in both the primary and secondary
segments during the current financial year so far. In the primary market, resource
mobilisation through public issues declined sharply to Rs.12,361 crore during
the first half of 2008-09 in comparison with issuances of Rs.31,851 crore in the
corresponding period last year. Resource mobilisation through private placement
and euro issues also declined considerably when compared with the amounts raised
a year ago. In the secondary market, the BSE Sensex (1978-79=100) was volatile
with large two-way movements in response largely to movements in global equity
markets. The Sensex continued its decline from the peak of 20,873 recorded on
January 8, 2008 to reach a level of 10,170 by October 22, 2008. Developments
in the External Sector
34. Balance of payments data for the first
quarter of 2008-09 released at end-September 2008 by the Reserve Bank indicate
a widening of the merchandise trade deficit, a sustained increase in invisibles,
some ebbing of net capital inflows and lower accretion to reserves. In US dollar
terms, merchandise export growth was 22.2 per cent during April-June 2008 as compared
with 20.7 per cent in the first quarter of the previous year. Commodity-wise
data available from the Directorate General of Commercial Intelligence and Statistics
(DGCI&S) for April-May 2008 indicate that engineering goods, agricultural
and allied products and petroleum products, which together contributed 54.7 per
cent of total exports, were the main drivers and contributed 66.5 per cent of
overall export growth. Exports of primary products increased by 69.8 per cent,
mainly due to the growth of 89.2 per cent in exports of agriculture and allied
products. Exports of manufactures recorded a growth of 29.9 per cent as against
17.6 per cent a year ago. While the growth of exports of engineering goods and
chemicals and related products was higher at 50.7 per cent and 26.0 per cent,
respectively, as compared with 29.8 per cent and 16.7 per cent a year ago, there
was a turnaround in the export of textiles and related products which increased
by 20.1 per cent as against a decline of 0.5 per cent a year ago.
Merchandise import payments recorded a higher growth of 33.3 per cent
during the first quarter of the 2008-09 as compared with 21.1 per cent a year
ago, due to higher payments for oil imports. Crude oil imports during April-June
2008 recorded a growth of 50.4 per cent as compared with 23.9 per cent a
year ago, reflecting the impact of the increase in the price of the Indian basket
of international crude which rose to US $ 118.8 per barrel in the first quarter
of 2008-09 from US $ 66.4 per barrel in the corresponding quarter of the previous
year. On the other hand, non-oil import payments rose by 20.9 per cent as compared
with 45.1 per cent a year ago, indicative of some moderation in domestic demand.
Capital goods were the main drivers of non-oil import growth during April-May
2008 along with import of fertiliser, chemicals, coal, coke and briquettes. Imports
of gold and silver, however, showed a decline of 15.7 per cent as against a growth
of 88.4 per cent a year ago. Imports of export-related items like pearls, precious
and semi-precious stones also showed a decline in April-May 2008. China remained
the single largest source of imports in April-May 2008, accounting for 11.1 per
cent of total imports and 17.7 per cent of non-oil imports. On a payments
basis, the merchandise trade deficit widened to US $ 31.6 billion during the first
quarter of 2008-09 from US $ 20.7 billion a year ago. 35. During the
first quarter of 2008-09, gross invisible receipts at US $ 37.7 billion amounted
to nearly 86 per cent of merchandise exports, recording a year-on-year increase
of 29.7 per cent. There was an increase in receipts under private transfers along
with the steady growth in exports of software services, travel and transportation.
On the other hand, invisible payments increased by 14.8 per cent as compared with
22.6 per cent a year ago. While transportation payments rose by 33.1 per cent
as compared with 24.8 per cent a year ago, reflecting the rising volume of imports
and the hardening of freight rates, payments relating to a number of business
and professional services moderated. On a net basis, the invisible account recorded
a surplus of US $ 20.9 billion during the first quarter of 2008-09, financing
nearly 66 per cent of the trade deficit. Reflecting the movements in merchandise
trade and invisible accounts, the current account deficit (CAD) amounted to US
$ 10.7 billion as compared with US $ 6.3 billion in the first quarter of 2007-08.
36. Net capital flows amounted to US $ 13.2 billion during the first quarter
of 2008-09 as compared with US $ 17.3 billion a year ago. Net ECB inflows at US
$ 1.6 billion accounted for only 11.8 per cent of total net capital
flows during April-June 2008 as compared with US $ 6.9 billion or 40.3 per cent
a year ago. Net inward foreign direct investment (FDI) remained buoyant at US $ 12.1
billion during April-June 2008 as compared with US $ 7.0 billion in the corresponding
period last year, reflecting the positive investment climate and continuing liberalisation
of the payments regime. Net outward FDI, however, moderated to US $ 2.0 billion
from US $ 4.3 billion a year ago with the slowdown in global business activities.
There were outflows under net portfolio investment by foreign institutional investors
(FIIs) of the order of US $ 5.2 billion during the first quarter of 2008-09 as
against a net inflow of US $ 7.1 billion during April-June 2007. Inflows
under American Depository Receipts/Global Depository Receipts (ADRs/GDRs) amounted
to US $ 1.0 billion in April-June 2008 as against US $ 0.3 billion a year ago.
Non-resident Indians (NRI) deposits recorded a net inflow of US $ 0.8
billion in the first quarter of 2008-09, a turnaround from net outflows of US
$ 0.5 billion in April-June 2007. 37. These developments in current
and capital accounts of the balance of payments resulted in an accretion to foreign
exchange reserves (excluding valuation) of US $ 2.2 billion during the first quarter
of 2008-09 as compared with US $ 11.2 billion a year ago. Taking into account
the valuation gain of US $ 0.2 billion, the level of foreign exchange reserves
amounted to US $ 312.1 billion at the end of June 2008. 38. India’s
external debt increased marginally by US $ 0.6 billion during April-June 2008
and amounted to US $ 221.3 billion at end-June 2008. While multilateral debt registered
a moderate increase of US $ 0.4 billion, there was a decline of US $ 0.9 billion
in bilateral debt. ECBs declined by US $ 0.6 billion; however, there was an increase
of US $ 2.2 billion under short-term trade credits. Valuation gains on account
of the appreciation of the US dollar vis-à-vis other major international
currencies and the Indian rupee resulted in a decline in external debt by US $
4.5 billion. The US dollar continued to have a dominant share of 52.3 per
cent in India’s external debt whereas rupee-denominated debt accounted for
another 14.1 per cent. The ratio of short-term debt to total debt increased to
20.8 per cent at end-June 2008 from 19.9 per cent at end-March 2008. The ratio
of foreign exchange reserves to external debt increased marginally to 141.0 per
cent at the end of June 2008 from 140.3 per cent at end-March 2008. 39.
These developments have extended into the second quarter of 2008-09. Information
released by the DGCI&S indicates that exports increased by 35.3 per cent in
US dollar terms during April-August 2008 as compared with 19.3 per cent in the
corresponding period of the previous year. Imports rose by 38.0 per cent
as compared with 34.2 per cent in the corresponding period of the previous year.
While non-POL imports decelerated to 28.3 per cent from 42.7 per cent a year ago,
the surge in international crude oil prices resulted in POL imports increasing
by 60.0 per cent as compared with 17.9 per cent in the corresponding period of
the previous year. As a result, the merchandise trade deficit widened to US $
49.3 billion during April-August 2008 from US $ 34.6 billion in the corresponding
period last year with the increase in the oil import bill alone amounting to US
$ 17.3 billion. 40. Available information on components of capital flows
presents a mixed picture. While inward FDI doubled over the corresponding flows
last year and there was a positive turnaround in NRI deposits, net ECBs were much
lower this year and there was a large outflow of FII investments. As a result,
the deceleration in capital flows witnessed in the first quarter of 2008-09 continued
during the second quarter. Portfolio investment by FIIs recorded net outflows
amounting to US $ 7.3 billion during the current financial year up to October
10, 2008 as compared with net inflows of US $ 18.9 billion in the corresponding
period last year. ADR/GDR issues by Indian companies were lower at US $ 1.1 billion
during April-August 2008 as compared with US $ 2.8 billion in the corresponding
period last year. On the other hand, gross FDI inflows during April-August 2008
were placed at US $ 16.7 billion as against US $ 8.5 billion a year ago. There
were net inflows of US $ 0.3 billion during April-August 2008 under NRI deposits
as against net outflows of US $ 0.2 billion a year ago. The foreign exchange reserves
declined by US $ 35.8 billion during the current financial year so far and stood
at US $ 273.9 billion on October 17, 2008. 41. The exchange rate of the
rupee against the US dollar, which was Rs.39.97 at end-March 2008, depreciated
sharply thereafter to Rs.49.29 per US dollar by October 22, 2008. During the current
financial year so far, the rupee depreciated by 18.9 per cent against the US dollar,
by 0.4 per cent against the euro, by 1.1 per cent against the pound sterling and
by 19.1 per cent against the Japanese yen. As on October 22, 2008 the exchange
rate of the rupee was Rs.49.29 per US dollar, Rs.63.35 per euro, Rs.80.40 per
pound sterling and Rs.49.53 per 100 Japanese yen. 42. The exchange rate
policy in recent years has been guided by the broad principles of careful monitoring
and management of exchange rates with flexibility, without a fixed target or a
pre-announced target or a band, coupled with the ability to intervene, if and
when necessary. The overall approach to the management of India’s foreign
exchange reserves takes into account the changing composition of the balance of
payments and endeavours to reflect the ‘liquidity risks’ associated
with different types of flows and other requirements. Developments
in the Global Economy
43. During the first nine months of 2008,
the slowdown in global growth spread across developed economies in an environment
of heightened uncertainty. Global economic prospects have been dampened by the
weakening of the US economy, the wider repercussions of the ongoing financial
market crisis and volatility in the energy, food and commodity prices. Concerns
about the emergence of protectionist pressures and the possibility of disorderly
adjustments to the financial turmoil also carry downside risks to the outlook.
According to the World Economic Outlook (WEO) of the IMF released in October 2008,
global real GDP growth on a purchasing power parity basis is expected to decelerate
from 5.0 per cent in 2007 to 3.9 per cent in 2008 (4.1 per cent in WEO Update,
July 2008) and further to 3.0 per cent in 2009 (3.9 per cent in WEO Update, July
2008). 44. In the US, real GDP growth slowed to 2.8 per cent in the
second quarter of 2008 from 3.8 per cent a year ago. In the third quarter, labour
markets weakened with the unemployment rate rising to 6.1 per cent in September
2008 - the highest in almost five years. Industrial production declined by 6.0 per cent
in the third quarter of 2008, mainly on account of hurricanes and production stoppages
in September. The rate of capacity utilisation for industry at 76.4 per cent in
September 2008 was 4.6 percentage points below the average for 1972-2007. The
index of leading indicators increased in September 2008 - the first increase in
the index in the last five months. US home prices posted a fall of 16.3 per cent
in July 2008 on a year-on-year basis. New home sales in the US decreased by 34.5
per cent in August 2008 from a year ago despite the sharp drop in home prices.
Housing starts fell 6.3 per cent in September – a 17-year low – as
home-builders sought to reduce the number of unsold homes. Single-family starts
fell by 12 per cent to the lowest level since August 1982. In September 2008,
US retail sales recorded a year-on-year decline of 1.0 per cent and consumer sentiment
dropped sharply in October. The October 2008 WEO of the IMF expects the US economy
to slow from 2.0 per cent in 2007 to 1.6 per cent in 2008 and further
to 0.1 per cent in 2009. 45. Real GDP in the euro area grew by 1.4 per
cent in the second quarter of 2008 on a year-on-year basis as compared with 2.5
per cent a year ago. The economic climate in the euro area has worsened further
in the third quarter of 2008. Unemployment in the euro area rose to 7.5 per cent
in August 2008 from 7.4 per cent a year ago. Industrial production and business
confidence continue to be subdued. While real disposable income is starting to
increase as inflation decelerates, weak labour markets are dampening private consumption
demand. The October 2008 WEO of the IMF has placed real GDP growth of the euro
area at 1.3 per cent in 2008 and 0.2 per cent in 2009 as against 2.6 per
cent in 2007. 46. In the Japanese economy, real GDP declined by 3.0
per cent in the second quarter of 2008 as compared with an increase of 2.3 per
cent a year ago due to the effects of earlier increases in energy and materials
prices and weaker growth in exports. In the third quarter, business fixed investment
has declined with corporate profits decreasing on account of deterioration in
the terms of trade. Private consumption has been relatively weak, mainly due to
slow growth in household income and the increase in prices of petroleum products
and food. The recovery in housing investment has been stalled. Public investment,
meanwhile, has been sluggish. The October 2008 WEO of the IMF has projected that
Japan’s economy will grow by 0.7 per cent in 2008 and 0.5 per cent in 2009
as compared with 2.1 per cent in 2007. 47. The Chinese economy grew by
9.9 per cent in the third quarter of 2008 - the slowest pace in more than five
years – as compared with 12.2 per cent a year ago as industrial production
and construction slowed because of weak exports and a sluggish real estate market.
China’s trade surplus narrowed by 2.6 per cent on a year-on-year basis to
US $ 180.9 billion in September on account of regulations to control the surplus
and rising energy costs. The total foreign exchange reserves, however, increased
to US $ 1.91 trillion in September 2008, recording an increase of US $ 377
billion in the first nine months of 2008 as against US $ 367 billion
in the corresponding period of 2007. The CSI 300 Index, which tracks yuan-denominated
A shares listed on China’s two exchanges, fell by 66.5 per cent over the
year to October 22, 2008. The October 2008 WEO of the IMF has projected that the
Chinese economy will grow by 9.7 per cent in 2008 and by 9.3 per cent in 2009
as compared with 11.9 per cent in 2007. 48. Elsewhere in Asia, the Korean
economy grew by 4.8 per cent in the second quarter of 2008 as against 4.9
per cent a year ago. In the third quarter, domestic economic activity in Korea
has slackened due to sluggish domestic demand although exports continue to post
robust growth. A high degree of uncertainty surrounds future economic developments,
largely due to the ongoing international financial market turmoil and the global
economic slowdown. In Thailand, economic activity grew by 5.3 per cent
in the second quarter of 2008 as against 4.3 per cent a year ago. 49.
Globally, inflation has softened in several countries in recent months. In the
US, consumer price inflation eased from 5.6 per cent in July 2008 to 4.9
per cent in September 2008. In the euro area, inflation decelerated to 3.6 per
cent in September 2008 from the peak of 4.1 per cent in July 2008. In Japan, inflation
decelerated to 2.1 per cent in August 2008 from the peak of 2.3 per cent in July
2008 on account of falling oil and food prices. In the UK, however, CPI inflation
accelerated to 5.2 per cent in September 2008 from 1.8 per cent a year ago. At
the retail level (in terms of retail prices index or RPI) too, inflation rose
to 5.0 per cent in September 2008 – the same level as in July 2008 –
after dipping to 4.8 per cent in August 2008. 50. Core CPI inflation
in the US increased to 2.5 per cent in July-September 2008 from 2.4 per cent in
June 2008. In the UK, core CPI inflation increased to 2.2 per cent in September
2008 from 2.0 per cent in August 2008. In the euro area, core CPI inflation
increased to 1.9 per cent in August-September 2008 from 1.7 per cent
in July 2008. Core inflation in Japan softened to zero in August 2008 as compared
with 0.2 per cent in July 2008. 51. The increase in producer price indices
(PPI) is beginning to moderate in several industrial economies. In the US, PPI
inflation decelerated to 8.7 per cent in September 2008 from the peak of 9.8 per
cent in July 2008. In the euro area, it moderated to 8.5 per cent in
August 2008 from 9.0 per cent in July 2008. In the UK, it decelerated to 8.5 per
cent in September 2008 from 10.0 per cent in July 2008. Wholesale price
inflation in Japan fell to 6.8 per cent in September 2008 from 7.2 per cent
in August 2008. 52. Inflationary pressures have also begun moderating
across emerging market economies (EMEs) in Asia, Latin America and Africa. In
China, inflation decelerated from a peak of 8.7 per cent in February 2008 to 4.6
per cent in September 2008. Consumer price inflation in Korea decelerated to 5.1
per cent in September 2008 from 5.9 per cent in July 2008. In Thailand, consumer
price inflation softened to 6.0 per cent in September 2008 from
9.2 per cent in July 2008. Inflation showed some signs of deceleration
from elevated levels in Brazil, Chile and Mexico. In some EMEs in Asia such as
Indonesia and Malaysia, however, inflation has accelerated, induced by high commodity
prices. Producer price inflation in EMEs – both in Asia and elsewhere –
has been substantial in the first three quarters of 2008 with marginal deceleration
in only a few EMEs in the recent months. 53. There has been an overall
decrease in prices of food, crude oil and metals since July 2008 which has contributed
to the easing in consumer price inflation. The Food and Agriculture Organisation
(FAO) Food Price Index, which had risen steadily since early
2006 to a record level of 219 in June 2008, has declined continuously to 188 in
September 2008 on encouraging indications of good harvests and rising stocks.
In the global foodgrains market, prices of major crops such as corn increased
by 5.0 per cent, whereas soyabean and wheat prices have declined by 11.6 per cent
and 37.3 per cent, respectively, by October 22, 2008 from their levels a
year ago. Food prices, which had risen to a peak in June 2008, eased to a nine-month
low in September 2008, reflecting the softening of international prices of all
major food and fodder commodities. There has also been a downturn in energy prices
in the recent months since the record levels reached in July 2008 with the prospect
of a general slowdown in global economic growth. The IMF’s metal price index
had increased to 201.1 in March 2008 before declining steadily to reach 164.1
by September 2008. 54. The FAO has placed its latest forecast for world
cereal production in 2008 at 2,232 million tonnes, 4.9 per cent up from last year
and a new record, on account of better than expected harvests throughout Europe,
for maize, in particular, in the US and also for coarse grains and rice in east
Asia. Cereal production is expected to exceed utilisation in 2008-09 for the first
time in four years. With stocks likely to increase, prices of most cereals have
started to come down in 2008. Given the outlook for a relatively strong recovery
in grain production in 2008 in major exporting countries, the ratio of their aggregate
grain supplies to normal market requirements is estimated at 123 per cent in 2008-09
from the relatively low levels in the preceding two years. 55. The cereal
production of Low-Income Food-Deficit Countries (LIFDCs) is forecast to increase
by 1.7 per cent in 2008. However, as a result of the limited growth in these countries’
production this year after the decline in the previous season, they will continue
to rely heavily on imports to cover their consumption needs in 2008-09. Global
food import expenditure is forecast to reach US $ 1,035 billion in 2008,
i.e., 26 per cent higher than the previous peak in 2007. 56. The global
wheat output in 2008 is now forecast at 677 million tonnes, a substantial increase
of 11 per cent from the previous year and well above the average of the previous
five years. In Europe, the latest estimates now point to an increase in production
by 25 per cent on above-average yields and a strong recovery in several countries
from drought in 2007. International wheat prices have fallen considerably in the
past two months after their peak in February 2008. Near-month wheat futures at
the Chicago Board of Trade (CBOT) declined from US $ 12.80 per bushel on February
27, 2008 to US $ 5.18 on October 22, 2008. On the same day, futures prices for
wheat were quoted higher at US $ 5.38 for March 2009, at US $ 5.64 for July 2009
and at US $ 5.81 for September 2009. 57. Global paddy output is forecast
at a record level of 672 million tonnes, which is about 2 per cent above the 2007
level. Favourable weather conditions as well as attractive market prices and fiscal
incentives are expected to boost planted areas and yields. International near-month
futures price of rice on the CBOT has declined to US $ 14.63 per hundredweight
on October 22, 2008 from a peak of US $ 24.50 on April 23, 2008. On October 22,
2008 futures prices were quoted higher at US $ 14.91 for January 2009, US $ 15.24
for March 2009 and US $ 15.16 for September 2009. 58. The FAO’s
latest forecast for world production of coarse grains in 2008 has been revised
upwards to 1, 106 million tonnes, 2.6 per cent higher than a year ago. The
increase is mostly attributed to improved yield prospects for the maize crop in
the US as well as better results from the coarse grain harvests throughout Europe.
Record high crops have already been gathered in South America. However, market
conditions for coarse grains are expected to remain tight with the anticipated
total utilisation remaining close to world production on account of the rising
use of maize for bio-fuels. The near-month futures prices of corn on CBOT rose
to US $ 3.85 on October 22, 2008. On the same day, futures prices for corn were
quoted higher at US $ 4.01 for March 2009, at US $ 4.22 for July 2009 and at US
$ 4.31 per bushel for September 2009. 59. Metal prices have fallen by
18.4 per cent up to September over the peak of March 2008 following the decline
of 8.1 per cent during 2007. Lead and copper prices have increased on supply concerns
and dwindling stocks. However, prices of other base metals have softened in the
recent period on concerns about global growth which might impact demand. Futures
price of copper on the New York Mercantile Exchange (Nymex) increased to a record
level of US $ 4.08 per pound on July 2, 2008 from US $ 3.54 a year ago.
As on October 22, 2008 the near-month futures price for copper stood at US $ 1.85
per pound, US $ 1.87 for December 2008, US $ 1.87 for March 2009 and US $
1.85 for September 2009. Spot gold declined from US $ 1,032.70 an ounce on March
17, 2008 - the highest since January 1980 - to US $ 757.50 an ounce on October
22, 2008 as the US dollar strengthened and oil prices declined. 60.
The spot price of West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude oil increased to a record
level of US $ 145 per barrel on July 3, 2008 on account of perceptions of tenuous
supply in several of the major exporting countries before declining to US $ 65.85
on October 22, 2008. Prices of crude oil, which have rebounded since July 2007,
declined by 24.8 per cent up to October 22, 2008 from their level a year ago.
According to the Energy Information Administration’s (EIA) forecasts as
on October 7, 2008 the average price of WTI crude oil is expected to be at US
$ 111.57 per barrel in 2008 and US $ 112.0 per barrel in 2009. Near-month futures
prices reached the level of US $ 66.8 per barrel on October 22, 2008 dipping from
US $ 146.5 recorded on July 3, 2008. On October 22, 2008 oil futures ruled marginally
higher at US $ 67.2 for January 2009, US $ 68.1 for March 2009 and US $ 71.2
for September 2009. The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries’
(OPEC) crude oil production is expected to rise to 32.7 million barrel per day
during the third quarter of 2008, increasing by 1.7 million barrel per day from
a year ago. The OPEC crude oil production may decline to 32.4 million barrel per
day in the fourth quarter of 2008 and fall through 2009 to an average of 31.6
million barrel per day. The non-OPEC crude supply is expected to decline by about
0.1 million barrel per day during the second half of 2008 from the level a year
earlier due to a series of supply disruptions and the impact of hurricanes in
the Gulf of Mexico. Consequently, non-OPEC supply in 2008 is now expected to decline
for the first time since 2005. 61. Strains in global financial
markets have increased significantly in the third quarter of 2008. Equity markets
have weakened significantly as valuations reflected disappointing earnings data
in the financial and other cyclical sectors. Pressures in inter-bank money markets,
which had persisted since May 2008, began to intensify further during the third
quarter of 2008. In response to the rapidly unfolding international financial
turmoil, there are continuing measures from monetary policy authorities for active
liquidity management, some of which are set out below. 62. For the resolution
of various issues thrown up by the financial turmoil, the US Treasury and the
Federal Reserve have adopted a multi-pronged approach of introducing and enhancing
the effectiveness of liquidity facilities, allowing financial support, mergers,
conversions and outright bankruptcies, affecting large investment and savings
banks, and even a major insurance firm. In early September, the two large US government-sponsored
mortgage banks were put into conservatorship by the government. In mid-September,
a major investment bank filed for bankruptcy as government support was not forthcoming
and a major insurance firm was given central bank assistance. To ameliorate the
strains in the money market consequent upon these developments, in addition to
the Term Auction Facility (TAF), Primary Dealer Credit Facility (PDCF) and Term
Securities Lending Facility (TSLF) instituted earlier and enhanced subsequently,
the Federal Reserve announced several initiatives to provide additional support
to financial markets. The initiatives introduced in early October included the
Asset-Backed Commercial Paper Money Market Mutual Fund Liquidity Facility which
provides finance to banks in their purchases of high-quality asset-backed commercial
paper (ABCP) from money market mutual funds with a view to assisting in meeting
redemptions demands and fostering liquidity in the ABCP market, and the Commercial
Paper Funding Facility (CPFF) which provides a liquidity backstop to the US issuers
of commercial paper to finance the purchase of highly-rated unsecured ABCP from
eligible issuers via eligible primary dealers. On October 21, 2008 the Federal
Reserve Board announced the creation of the Money Market Investor Funding Facility
(MMIFF), which will provide funding to purchase assets including US dollar-denominated
CDs and CPs issued by highly-rated financial institutions with 90-day maturities
or less from money market mutual funds to provide liquidity to US money market
investors. 63. Following the incidents of bailout and default in September,
the 3-month US Treasury bill rate fell to 0.0304 per cent on September 17, 2008
- the lowest since 1954 - indicating flight to quality assets such as Treasuries
and illiquid repo market conditions. Contagion from the faltering US markets prompted
co-ordinated emergency liquidity actions by major central banks on September 18,
2008 and the Bank of Canada, the Bank of England, the European Central Bank, the
Federal Reserve, the Bank of Japan and the Swiss National Bank announced
co-ordinated measures designed to address the continued elevated pressures in
US dollar short-term funding markets. These included the Federal Open Market Committee
(FOMC) authorising an expansion of its existing swap lines with the European Central
Bank and the Swiss National Bank and institution of new swap facilities with the
Bank of Japan, the Bank of England, and the Bank of Canada who could then provide
their respective commercial banks with short-term dollar funding. Similar
swap lines were established with the Reserve Bank of Australia, the Danmarks Nationalbank,
the Norges Bank and the Sveriges Riksbank on September 24, 2008. Later, the FOMC
authorised increases in the size of its temporary swap facilities with the Bank
of England, the European Central Bank and the Swiss National Bank till April 30,
2009 so that these central banks can provide US dollar funding in quantities sufficient
to meet the demand. Central banks also relaxed eligible collateral for liquidity
auctions, changed monetary policy operations procedure and varied the auction
maturities to enhance their effectiveness. On September 17, the US Securities
and Exchange Commission (SEC) banned naked short-selling in any stock, extending
the temporary ban adopted on July 16, 2008, to curtail excessive speculation.
In the UK, short selling of financial stocks was banned effective September 19,
2008 till January 16, 2009. 64. On September 21, with their share values
plummeting, two major US investment banks were allowed by regulators to become
Federal Reserve-regulated bank holding companies (BHCs). On September 25, money
markets ground to a virtual halt and interbank and repo rates rose to almost record
highs. This prompted the US Treasury to announce a plan for a federal fund
of US $ 700 billion to clear the bad debt overhang by (i) buying unviable paper
to restore liquidity in markets; (ii) allowing orderly restructuring over time
without distress sales; (iii) lessening foreclosures; and (iv) helping the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) in assisting troubled institutions, which
was authorised by Congress in early October under the Emergency Economic Stabilization
Act. On October 14, 2008 the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System,
the US Department of the Treasury and the FDIC made a joint statement to protect
the US economy, to strengthen public confidence in the financial institutions
and to foster the robust functioning of the credit markets through a voluntary
capital purchase programme and a temporary FDIC guarantee programme for a broad
array of financial institutions. A wave of banking contagion in Benelux, Germany,
UK, Spain, Ireland and Iceland required government intervention from late September
onwards and some banks were taken into temporary state ownership. The Government
in the UK has taken steps for recapitalisation of the UK banking system for stabilising
the financial system. The Reserve Bank of Australia and the Reserve Bank of New
Zealand have relaxed collateral norms for repo operations. The governments in
Australia and New Zealand have announced their decision to guarantee bank deposits.
65. Central banks have engaged in continuous close consultation and
have cooperated in unprecedented joint actions. In addition to the US dollar swap
lines, the Bank of Canada, the Bank of England, the European Central Bank, the
Federal Reserve, the Sveriges Riksbank and the Swiss National Bank reduced their
policy rates by 50 basis points on October 8, 2008. Also, the Bank of Japan expressed
its strong support of these policy actions. In order to provide broad access to
liquidity and funding to financial institutions, on October 13, 2008 the Bank
of England, the European Central Bank, Federal Reserve, the Bank of Japan and
the Swiss National Bank jointly announced measures to improve liquidity in short-term
US dollar funding markets. As a part of the G-7 action plan, on October 14, 2008
the Bank of Canada announced its intentions to provide exceptional liquidity to
the Canadian financial system as long as the situation warrants. The Bank of Japan
has increased the frequency and the size of CP repo operations and also broadened
the range of eligible collateral. 66. Since December 2007, the Federal
Reserve has conducted 21 Term Auction Facility (TAF) auctions amounting to US
$ 1,203.3 billion for 28 days maturity each, an auction of US $ 20 billion with
35 days maturity and two auctions of US $ 25 billion each with 84 days maturity
and one more auction for 85 days of US $ 138.1 billion up to October 20, 2008.
In a bid to ensure continuation of economic growth, the US Treasury has issued
fiscal stimulus payments to American households for an amount of about US $ 94
billion during April–September 2008. Also, on August 28, 2008 the Federal
Reserve Board announced the launch of an online resource to help consumers make
informed choices when refinancing a home loan. 67. Since December
2007, the European Central Bank has conducted 16 overnight US dollar TAF auctions
amounting to US $ 880 billion, three auctions of US $ 120 billion of
3 days maturity and one auction of US $ 100 billion of 4 days maturity, two
auctions of US $ 206 billion of 7 days maturity, 20 auctions amounting to US $
460 billion for 28 days maturity each, two auctions of US $ 10 billion
each of 84 days maturity and one auction of US $ 20 billion of
85 days maturity up to October 21, 2008. The Bank of Canada has conducted 13 auctions
amounting to US $ 35 billion for 28 days and two auctions of US $ 8
billion of 91 days maturity till October 21, 2008. The Swiss National Bank has
conducted 24 overnight auctions amounting to US $ 182 billion, three auctions
of US $ 15 billion of 7 day maturity, 15 auctions amounting to US $ 87 billion
for 28 days each, two 84 days auctions amounting to US 4 billion and an auction
of US $ 4 billion for 88 days maturity up to October 22, 2008. Between September
18 and October 22, 2008 the Bank of England has conducted 24 overnight US dollar
repo auctions amounting to US $ 312 billion, one 3 days auction for US $ 30 billion,
one 6 days auction for US $ 12.5 billion, seven one week auctions of US $ 242
billion and one 28 days auction of US $ 26 billion. 68. Emerging market
central banks have also responded in various ways to the events unfolding in the
advanced economies. They stepped into money markets in the second half of September
2008 to contain liquidity shocks from the US credit turmoil. Japan, Korea, Taiwan
and Australia injected liquidity into the banking systems to help Asian banks
which suffered credit losses due to exposure to the troubled US investment banks
via hedges and collaterals, and used open market operations to contain
declining bond yields and stock prices and stabilise financial market volatility.
Monetary policy actions such as reducing required reserves and interest rates
to boost liquidity have also been undertaken by some EMEs to stem the financial
crisis. The Bank of Korea has introduced a competitive auction swap facility from
October 20, 2008 to enhance the effectiveness of foreign currency supply and to
promote stability in the foreign currency funding market. 69. On September
30, 2008 the Hong Kong Monetary Authority expanded collateral accepted for accessing
the discount window to include US dollar assets of suitable credit quality and
waive limitations on using Hong Kong exchange fund paper as collateral. It will
extend the duration of funds available on a case-by-case basis and may conduct
US/HK dollar swaps with affected banks. All measures have been effective from
October 2 and will remain in place until March 2009. On October 14, 2008
the Hong Kong Monetary Authority has taken measures to provide assurance to depositors
to use the Exchange Fund to guarantee the repayment of all customer deposits held
in authorised institutions in Hong Kong. Secondly, Hong Kong Monetary
Authority has established a Contingent Bank Capital Facility for the purpose of
making available additional capital to local banks. Both the measures will remain
in force until the end of 2010. 70. The Singapore Government has decided
to guarantee all Singapore dollar and foreign currency deposits of individual
and non-bank customers in banks, finance companies and merchant banks licensed
by the Monetary Authority of Singapore until December 2010. Consistent with these
regional initiatives, the government of Malaysia and the Bank Negara Malaysia
have also guaranteed ringgit and foreign currency deposits with banks and regulated
development financial institutions until December 2010. The Bank Negara Malaysia
would also extend liquidity facility to non-banks such as insurance companies.
For maintaining liquidity in domestic and foreign currency markets on October
14, 2008 Bank Indonesia announced several measures including inter alia extension
of foreign exchange swap of tenors ranging from seven days to one month and selling
foreign currency reserves through banks for domestic companies. Several central
banks in Asia have cut their policy rates in tandem with the advanced economies
and have provided assurances of liquidity support to financial markets. 71.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average, Standard and Poor’s (S&P) 500 and
Nasdaq Composite exhibited considerable volatility and posted declines of 37.2
per cent, 40.5 per cent and 41.3 per cent, respectively, by October
22, 2008 over their levels a year ago. In the fixed income segment, Government
bond yields in the major economies, which had firmed up in the first half of 2007,
softened thereafter as demand for government debt increased with investors seeking
safe haven. The US 10-year bond yield increased from 4.70 per cent at end-December
2006 to 5.29 per cent on June 12, 2007 before falling to 3.60 per cent on October
22, 2008. The 10-year bond yield in the euro area increased from 3.95 per cent
at end-December 2006 to 4.67 per cent on July 6, 2007 before falling to 3.80 per
cent on October 22, 2008. The Japanese 10-year bond yield has increased from 1.68
per cent at end-December 2006 to 1.97 per cent on July 10, 2007 before falling
to 1.53 per cent on October 22, 2008. With the dimming of growth prospects, the
EMEs witnessed declines in equity prices and increase in spreads, in various degrees,
across countries. The equities sell-off in emerging markets triggered by the US
financial meltdown led to a sharp drop in the MSCI Emerging Markets (EM) Index
which declined by 52 per cent over the year, up to October 22, 2008 with almost
all emerging equity markets falling as higher borrowing costs and credit losses
led investors to shun risky assets and, on average, emerging market equities have
returned to 2006 levels. 72. On a trade-weighted basis, the US dollar
had been depreciating since 2006 with intermittent fluctuations. After the cuts
in the Fed funds rates since September 2007, the US dollar had weakened against
other currencies. it has, however, strengthened significantly in the recent weeks.
The pound sterling moved to the level of US $ 1.63 on October 22, 2008 from the
26-year high of US $ 2.11 reached on November 8, 2007. The euro, which had also
been strengthening against the US dollar since June 2007, rose to an intra-day
peak of US $ 1.60 on July 15, 2008 before declining to 1.28 on October 22, 2008.
73. Monetary easing in the leading developed countries
has increased global liquidity with attendant implications for monetary management
in the emerging economies. Some central banks have cut policy rates since the
third quarter of 2007 when the financial market turmoil surfaced. Between September
18, 2007 and October 8, 2008 the US Federal Reserve reduced its policy rate
by 375 basis points to 1.50 per cent after seventeen increases to 5.25 per
cent between June 2004 and June 2006. The Bank of England reduced its Bank Rate
to 4.50 per cent by 25 basis points each in February and April 2008 and 50 basis
points on October 8, 2008. The European Central Bank reduced its main refinancing
operations rate by 50 basis points to 3.75 per cent on October 8, 2008. The Bank
of Canada reduced its policy rate to 2.25 per cent by 25 basis points reductions
each in December 2007 and January 2008 and 50 basis points each in March and April
and by 75 basis points in two stages in October 2008. The Reserve Bank of Australia
raised its Cash Rate by 25 basis points each in February-March 2008 to 7.25
per cent before reducing it by 25 basis points to 7.00 per cent on September
3, 2008 and by 100 basis points to 6.00 per cent effective October 8, 2008.
The Reserve Bank of New Zealand reduced the Official Cash Rate from 8.00 per cent
to 7.50 per cent on September 11, 2008 and further to 6.50 per cent on October
23, 2008. The People’s Bank of China reduced its policy lending rate twice
by 27 basis points each time to 6.93 per cent on September 16 and October
9, 2008. It has also reduced the cash reserve ratio by 100 basis points to
16.5 per cent effective September 25, 2008 and further by 50 basis points effective
October 10, 2008 after increasing it in phases to 17.5 per cent by June 25, 2008.
The Bank of Korea reduced its Base Rate by 25 basis points to 5.00 per cent
on October 9, 2008. The Hong Kong Monetary authority changed the formula
for determination of its Base Rate, from October 9, 2008 which reduced the spread
of 150 basis points above the prevailing Federal Funds Target Rate by 50 basis
points. 74. Central banks of some countries such as Japan and Malaysia
have not changed their policy rates in 2008. 75. Some central banks
that have tightened their policy rates in recent months include Bank Indonesia
(BI rate by 150 basis points in April-October 2008); Bank of Thailand (1-day repurchase
rate by 25 basis points to 3.75 per cent on August 27, 2008); the Banco Central
de Chile (benchmark lending rate to 8.25 per cent by 25 basis points in January
and 50 basis points each in June-September 2008 from 6.00 per cent in December
2007), Banco Central do Brasil (overnight Selic rate by 75 basis points to 13.75
per cent on September 10, 2008) and Banco de Mexico (overnight funding rate by
25 basis points each in June-August 2008 to 8.25 per cent).
Overall Assessment
76. Aggregate supply conditions
in the Indian economy have shown resilience in the second quarter of 2008-09 in
the face of a deteriorating global macroeconomic and financial environment. There
are, however, growing indications that the underlying economic cycle is turning
in tune with global economic developments and that domestic economic activity
is straddling a point of inflexion. While the 2008 south-west monsoon season has
been near normal as anticipated, large temporal variations have resulted in some
production losses on account of floods in June in some north-eastern, eastern
and northern States and deficient rainfall in July over the north-east, central
India and Kerala. At the all-India level, the area sown under various crops is
close to the normal cropping coverage but lower by about 2.6 per cent in relation
to the high level a year ago. Acreage under key crops such as rice and oilseeds
has increased on a year-on-year basis but there are downside risks for the prospects
of crops such as sugarcane, coarse cereals, pulses and jute. First advance estimates
of the production of foodgrains in 2008-09 from the Ministry of Agriculture suggest
that some improvement in these key crops could occur as these early indications
firm up into a clearer picture on the final level of output for the year and the
overall outlook on agriculture. 77. Industrial activity in the second
quarter of 2008-09 has shown mixed developments with indications of a moderation
in pace diffusing across the sector. While the pick-up in industrial production
in July 2008 surprised consensus expectations, occurring as it did after an uneven
trough during November 2007-June 2008, base effects weighed heavily on the growth
rates observed in August and could continue to cast a shadow in some of the months
ahead, especially in October-December 2008. Slackening of momentum is essentially
located in the basic and intermediate goods sectors, weighed down by the decline
in production of fertilisers, steel, aluminum products, yarns and fibre, organic
pigments and the like. The rebound in capital goods production in July after a
sag in the preceding two months was not sustained in August, indicative of considerable
uncertainty in the evolving investment climate. On the other hand, the sustained
turnaround in consumer goods output, particularly durables, indicates that the
strength of consumption demand is inducing supply responses, aided by the return
of pricing power in an environment of high inflation. Manufacturing activity is
being driven by industries such as chemicals, machinery and transport equipment
and beverages and tobacco products. In fact, excluding items such as wood and
products, leather and paper products, textiles, rubber, plastic, petroleum and
coal products which have recorded a decline/negligible growth in production and
together have a weight of only 26 per cent in the IIP, the growth of industrial
output would be 6.5 per cent, somewhat above the observed headline growth of 4.9
per cent in April-August, 2008. Surveys of corporate finances are indicating a
worsening outlook with erosion of profitability due to rising expenditures relative
to sales, particularly in respect of raw materials and other inputs, staff costs
and exchange losses. Various surveys suggest that overall business confidence
is flagging. Service sector activity appears to be moderating in several sub-sectors
except in communication and freight movement in terms of lead indicators. Construction
activity may pick up in the coming months on the back of some improvement in cement
and steel production. 78. Widening gaps in the physical infrastructure,
markedly in power but elsewhere too except in coal production, could impose a
binding constraint on growth. Capacity addition in the power sector has remained
far short of tenth Plan targets, worsening the persisting large shortage in the
country. Electricity output appears to have been sharply affected by the downslide
in hydro power generation, with the energy content of reservoirs posting a shortfall
of 27 per cent of the full reservoir level (FRL) at the all-India level up to
mid-October 2008. While thermal power generation has provided support, delays
in commissioning/commercial operations, high moisture content in coal due to the
monsoon as well as the loss of 3.8 billion units of generation during April-August
due to shortages of coal reported by utilities across the country are debilitating
factors. Shortages of fuel have also resulted in a loss of 1.2 billion units in
the first five months of 2008-09 under nuclear power generation. 79.
Aggregate demand conditions continue to be mainly investment-driven, although
some slackening which set in during the first quarter of 2008-09 appears to have
become broad based. So far, however, investment intentions remain strong as indicated
by the memoranda/letters of intent/direct industrial licences posted with the
Department of Industrial Policy and Promotion. Private consumption, the mainstay
of aggregate domestic demand in India, appears to be firming up steadily since
the third quarter of 2007-08 and is expected to benefit from fiscal stimuli on
account of enhanced expenditures of subsidies, the farm loan waiver and salaries
consequent upon the Sixth Pay Commission award that could come into play during
the second half of the year. 80. Reflecting the aggregate demand pressures,
key monetary and banking aggregates – money supply, deposit and non-food
credit growth – have been expanding during the year so far at rates that
are significantly elevated relative to indicative trajectories given in the Annual
Policy Statement of April 2008. Money supply has continued to rise at the expansionary
rates of 2003-08, propelled by the sustained pace of credit growth. In the July
2008 Review, concerns relating to the significantly overdrawn state of the banking
system due to elevated credit growth were expressed in this context. Supervisory
review processes have been initiated with selected banks with a view to putting
in place appropriate adjustments in their operations. The unabated bank credit
growth relative to the sources of funds and the whittling down of excess SLR investments
warrants serious policy surveillance in the context of overall financial stability
and the efficiency of financial intermediation. 81. The developments in
monetary conditions resulted in a tightening of liquidity conditions in domestic
financial markets through the second quarter of 2008-09. The strains on market
liquidity were aggravated by sizeable fluctuations in the Central Government’s
cash balances, advance tax payments in mid-September, higher than anticipated
credit growth as well as the heightening of volatility in domestic equity and
foreign exchange markets in the wake of the sudden deterioration in international
financial markets. In the money market, overnight interest rates generally ruled
above the upper bound of the corridor albeit in a narrow range with a
peak in the second week of October 2008 as the international financial turbulence
intensified. While the measures announced by the Reserve Bank in September-October
2008 alleviated these pressures, considerable uncertainty surrounds the evolution
of liquidity conditions in the months ahead, given the fragile international environment.
In response to the measures announced by the Reserve Bank, interest rates have
moderated across the overnight market segments. 82. In the Government securities
market, high demand for SLR securities depressed yields across the spectrum from
mid-July with intermittent spurts on liquidity concerns. Yield curve inversion
became persistent through the quarter, with the yield on the benchmark 10-year
security ruling consistently below those on lower maturity securities in reflection
of the uncertain macroeconomic outlook and to some extent, the softening of international
crude prices. 83. In the foreign exchange market, activity picked up
mainly on rising import demand induced by volatile international crude prices,
portfolio outflows and uncertainties surrounding the global outlook. There was
considerable volatility in the spot segment with the exchange rate slipping to
multi-year lows as the extraordinary developments in international financial markets
unfolded. Forward premia rose sharply at end-June and remained at elevated levels
up to July 2008 after which the premia have tended to ease albeit unevenly
across all maturities. The forward premia went into discount due to dollar shortages
towards end-September 2008 but recovered modestly in October 2008. The equity
markets have weakened sporadically on cues from global markets, and particularly
those in Asia. These developments in domestic financial markets render the macroeconomic
outlook unsettled and uncertain. 84. Signs of deterioration in the fiscal
situation appear to be adding to aggregate demand pressures in the economy. The
revenue deficit of the Central Government has exceeded 177 per cent
of the budget estimates during April-August 2008 and overshooting is also observed
in the other deficit indicators. While tax revenues were buoyant and direct taxes
raised their contribution to gross tax collections to 45 per cent, current expenditures
on subsidies, social and other economic services eroded these gains and widened
the deficits at all levels. Impending expenditures on subsidies and salary revisions
could bring additional pressures to bear on the fisc and consequently, on aggregate
demand. The Government will need to address the issue of providing subsidies to
the public sector oil marketing and fertiliser companies directly in cash instead
of the current practice of issuance of oil and fertiliser bonds. 85.
Excess demand conditions are also reflected in the merchandise trade deficit which
has expanded by close to 43 per cent in April-August 2008 on a year-on-year
basis, though mainly in response to the increase of 77 per cent in the average
price of the Indian basket of crude. Although the outlook remains uncertain at
the current juncture, the softening of international crude prices in subsequent
months should have a salutary effect in terms of containing the merchandise trade
deficit over the rest of the year. Non-oil import growth has remained elevated,
albeit considerably moderated from the increase recorded a year ago.
While exports are regaining momentum and international commodity prices, including
crude, seem to be retreating, the widening of the trade deficit needs to be viewed
in the context of the turmoil in international financial institutions and markets
and the evolving environment for capital flows. The initial conduits of contagion
have been equity and currency markets with portfolio investors seeking to wind
down positions to meet capital requirements. There are growing concerns about
the risks of a more broad-based tightening of external credit conditions setting
in with implications for the access of Indian entities to ECBs and short-term
trade credits, although ECB norms have been liberalised recently. For the Indian
economy, the sizeable increase in foreign direct investment inflows in the first
half of 2008-09 provides a measure of comfort. Furthermore, the turnaround in
non-resident deposits and in Indian issuances in international stock markets,
coupled with the enduring strength of inward remittances are operating as built-in
stabilisers in the balance of payments. The level of foreign exchange reserves
is adequate in the context of prospective external payment obligations for over
a year. 86. At the time of the First Quarter Review in July 2008, headline
WPI inflation was close to 12 per cent and June CPI inflation in the range of
7-9 per cent. It was noted that the escalation in inflation has become a global
phenomenon, that the rise in inflation in India was not proportionately different
from elsewhere and that a noticeable decline in inflation could occur towards
the last quarter of 2008-09. While CPI inflation has climbed further in July-September,
there is some ebb since mid-August in the underlying momentum of WPI inflation,
mainly on account of free-priced petroleum products, edible oils and textiles.
more incoming information will be needed to identify a trend if it is forming.
Of the increase of 369 basis points in WPI inflation during 2008-09 up to early
October, about 55 per cent was due to the rise in prices of POL, food articles,
metals and oilseeds/edible oil/oil cakes all of which reflect the global demand-supply
balances. Global prices of these commodities had risen sizeably over the same
period, leading to sharp increases in inflation across the world, and more so
in producer (input and output) prices. Domestically, these imported inflation
pressures have been keeping headline inflation at elevated levels with considerable
uncertainty as to where it will peak and when. In the absence of further shocks,
however, these factors cannot sustain a generalised inflation, especially with
money supply contained at the average rate of 2003-08, a period when inflation
was low and stable. It needs to be noted, however, that just as the elevation
of international commodity prices were not fully passed on to domestic prices,
the effect of softening international commodity prices on inflation in India could
be similarly muted. The challenge for the setting of monetary policy is to balance
the costs of lowering inflation in terms of output volatility, particularly in
the context of the moderation in industrial and service sector activity, against
the risk of current levels of inflation persisting and getting embedded in inflation
expectations. While there are considerable uncertainties associated with this
judgment, it is important to remain focused on bringing inflation down to levels
that are compatible with a high but stable momentum of growth in the economy and
financial stability. 87. Since the First Quarter Review of July 2008,
global economic prospects have weakened further. The global economy is facing
the deflationary effects of the financial crisis. After the contraction of output
in major advanced economies, except the US, in the second quarter of 2008, global
growth prospects have worsened in consonance with financial conditions in the
third quarter. Retail sales have continued to fall in the third quarter along
with consumer confidence in the major economies and unemployment has gone up.
The sharp tightening of lending conditions since August could precipitate a dropping
away of demand by aggravating the pains of the adjustment underway in the residential
sector in several advanced economies. The corporate sector is also adjusting to
the pressures from weakening demand and high input costs, which in turn enhances
the downside risks to employment. In the US, the erosion of disposable incomes
and household wealth is reflecting the decline in real personal consumption. Housing
starts and permits plunged in August, weighed down by excess supply of housing
units, rise in fixed-rate mortgage rates and expectations of further declines
in house prices. 88. There is increasing evidence that the US slowdown
is spreading via the trade and financial channels. In the euro area,
retail sales are also pointing to weaker activity. The residential downturn appears
to have deepened in several economies although household financial conditions
remain strong. More recent manufacturing orders growth suggests that business
investment in the euro area is also turning down. For the Japanese economy, the
outlook has deteriorated sharply in recent months with the weakening of industrial
production and retail sales on top of large terms-of-trade losses. Business confidence
has declined in the third quarter of 2008, especially among small firms with employment
and nominal wage growth slowing in recent months. In the UK, economic activity
has slowed sharply and the near-term outlook has weakened sharply with the intensification
of financial distress. The deterioration of real incomes associated with higher
inflation in conjunction with the squeeze in money and credit conditions is restraining
spending. The depreciation of sterling also poses new inflation risks. In other
major advanced economies, economic activity has been weakening as well and for
the relatively open economies such as Canada, terms-of-trade shifts could dampen
otherwise resilient domestic demand. Consensus forecasts place growth in industrial
economies in 2008 at 1.5 per cent, still a moderate expansion but with significant
downside risks. 89. The outlook for the emerging economies remains positive,
but uncertainties about their resilience to the global shocks have increased.
Industrial production and export volumes have slowed, while equity markets have
fallen sharply in tandem with those in advanced economies and bond spreads have
widened. In Latin America, equity price declines have shadowed the softening of
commodity prices; in Asia, they have been driven down by portfolio investors switching
to safe havens. In some EMEs, banking sectors have witnessed some weakening. Domestic
demand, however, continues to be strong, supported by rising household incomes
and reflected in still rapidly expanding bank credit. The outlook for exports
from emerging economies is less robust, and terms-of-trade effects could dampen
domestic demand. Concerns about growth prospects and, more importantly, inflation
is impacting sentiment relating to these countries as regards the macroeconomic
outlook, capital flows and asset prices. While estimates of capital flows do not
indicate sharp reversals, there are indications of a sizeable drop from the second
quarter of 2008 onwards in relation to the preceding quarters. With the turmoil
in major financial centres, issuances of international equity and debt securities
have been constricted and spreads have widened to levels that impede access to
external financing. Banking flows have also been affected by the financial turbulence
with a drying up of commercial and trade credits and restrictions on rollovers.
Many emerging market currencies have depreciated against the US dollar. Investor
sentiment relating to emerging economies appears to have been dampened by inflation
concerns and expectations of contagion from the slowdown in advanced economies.
Among the vulnerable emerging economies are those with large current account deficits
and relatively greater reliance on short-term external debt, high fiscal deficits
and public sector indebtedness, volatile currencies, inverted yield curves and
high inflation. In the period ahead, the soundness and resilience of the financial
sector in these economies will have a crucial bearing on growth prospects.
90. Headline inflation still remains high worldwide. Consensus forecasts
for industrial economies consumer price inflation have risen from 2.2 per cent
in 2007 to 3.6 per cent in 2008 with an even larger increase for emerging economies,
driven by food and energy prices. For the latter, there are upward revisions to
inflation forecasts for 2008 and 2009 across all regions. Efforts to cushion the
impact on retail prices by preventing a full pass-through has weakened fiscal
positions in several of these economies. For emerging economy inflation targeters,
13 out of 15 are encountering inflation above the target for some time now and
informal targets in other regimes have also been breached persistently. Central
banks in these economies have generally responded by tightening monetary policy;
for several, however, the risks to growth have emerged as concerns. While some
emerging economies have engaged in exchange market interventions to curb inflationary
exchange rate depreciation, these efforts are more recently being scaled back.
In many emerging economies, strong real domestic bank credit growth has accompanied
the inflationary pressures. Upward price pressures are also feeding into core
inflation in the advanced economies. The sharp increase in commodity prices in
the first half of 2008 that showed up in surging producer price inflation is getting
transmitted through to retail levels. The pass-through of input prices to output
prices, however, has so far been limited. On the other hand, the recent easing
of crude and other commodity prices and indications from futures markets imply
that these prices could stabilise over the near term. Considerable uncertainty
surrounds both scenarios. If growth slows as the consensus forecasts suggest,
the decline in inflation could be more than currently predicted. So far, there
is little evidence of generalised increase in wages which would have a determining
influence on inflation persistence. Nominal wages are reported to be rising rapidly
in some emerging economies. While market-based inflation expectations have fallen
in some of the advanced economies, consumers’ inflation expectations have
remained elevated with implications for the formations of inflation expectations
in the period ahead. 91. The international financial system is
gripped by extreme risk aversion in the wake of spectacular failures among the
world’s largest financial institutions, including several credited with
history and tradition. Fears of further disclosure on write-downs/losses/foreclosures/buy-outs
and rising concerns about ‘toxic assets’ spilling over into a more
broad-based deterioration in credit quality have exacerbated investor pessimism.
Announcements of sizeable public policy bail-outs, guaranteeing of deposits with
banking systems and restructuring of weak institutions have not sufficiently assuaged
the sense of panic or returned markets to normalcy as yet. Financial markets have
experienced an intensification of pressures since May 2008, with the events of
September-October 2008 triggering a crisis of confidence that could fundamentally
alter the financial landscape in the advanced economies, and in particular, the
US. Funding pressures in money markets have been amplified by the unwinding of
long US dollar exposures of European banks to non-banks. Central banks and financial
regulators have responded with massive liquidity injections, coordinated operations
(including swaps and rate cuts) and the banning of certain financial transactions
such as short sales. Equity markets have been going through synchronised downturns
across the world alongside the weakening of the US dollar against major currencies.
92. As mortgage-related losses widen in their ambit, credit losses and
write-downs are spilling out of securitisation and capital market related segments
to the more traditional banking book. Across the financial system there is an
acute shortage of capital, provoking large rights issues by European banks which,
by diluting holdings of existing shareholders, could have actually dampened equity
market sentiment. The decline in banks’ share prices has reduced the market
capitalisation of global banks by close to US $ one trillion, with market value
of net assets below book value in a growing number of cases. Banks’ capacity
to raise capital has been severely circumscribed by these large share price declines.
In response, policy authorities in some industrial economies have stepped in to
recapitalise troubled financial entities. Sovereign wealth funds and official
institutions that provided most of the capital in 2007 have turned cautious. At
the same time, asset sales are encountering large losses and questions about the
incentive structure in regulatory systems to enable such distressed sales. Weaker
real sector activity and in particular, the housing sector and the residential
mortgage market, has generally added to the pressures on the financial system,
notwithstanding fiscal efforts to support US government-sponsored enterprises
(GSEs) whose share prices continue to be weak and credit default swap spreads
on subordinated debt have widened significantly in relation to the last quarter. 93.
In summary, conditions in global financial markets have worsened with the freezing
of inter-bank markets in US and Europe necessitating massive liquidity injection
facilities from central banks in these economies including dollar swap arrangements,
coordinated monetary policy actions in terms of both liquidity injections and
reduction of policy rates, recapitalisation of troubled private banks by governments,
coordinated action by European governments to bail out weak banks and guaranteeing
of all deposits in the banking system in many countries. These problems have been
compounded by falling prices in already weak housing markets and the unwinding
of complex derivatives with attendant mark-to-market losses impacting the health
of balance sheets, and falling equity prices. With the spread of contagion through
indirect effects due to financial integration to countries outside the epicenter
of the crisis, authorities in these economies, particularly in east Asia, have
taken steps to guarantee deposits and injected liquidity into banking systems,
besides undertaking monetary policy actions in the form of reducing required reserves
and interest rates. 94. In the overall assessment, global economic conditions
have worsened and the future path of their evolution has turned highly uncertain.
The broadening slowdown of economic activity in the advanced economies is beginning
to impact the macroeconomic prospects of emerging economies, with those reliant
on exports and on international financial markets for external financing needs
likely to be the most vulnerable. Inflation remains elevated and a key risk to
global economic prospects. While commodity prices have been coming off their recent
heights and are expected to soften further by the futures markets, the pass-through
of the recent prolonged escalation is still seeping into headline inflation and
may keep it firm at current levels in the near-term. At the current juncture,
the deepening of the financial crisis could impact the weakening macroeconomic
outlook in advanced economies with second round effects across the rest of the
world. Consequently, monetary policy action against inflation in advanced and
emerging economies alike appears to be getting increasingly circumscribed by the
more overarching concerns relating to the economy and the financial system. Domestically,
lowering inflation as soon as feasible to tolerable levels and anchoring inflation
expectations remains a key concern. The momentum in industrial and service sector
activity is somewhat moderated in relation to the recent high growth phase of
2005-08. The expected improvement in agricultural output should augment aggregate
supply and assuage the inflationary pressures. While the financial system in India
has so far been reasonably insulated from the carnage in international financial
markets, cataclysmic events including the sheer spread of the turmoil and the
type of financial institutions that have plunged under, regardless of reputation
or size, warrants an intensified watchfulness with a readiness to act swiftly
to cushion the economy and the domestic financial system from external shocks. II. Stance
of Monetary Policy for the Remaining Period of 2008-09
95. This Mid-Term Review is set in the context
of several complex and compelling policy challenges. The global financial system
is in a crisis of unprecedented dimensions. The problem that originated in delinquencies
in the US sub-prime mortgage market and the associated ballooning of the market
for complex derivatives in August 2007, snowballed into a financial sector turmoil
spanning the entire financial sector. What started off as a liquidity problem
quickly turned into a solvency problem triggering a crisis of confidence in the
financial markets. The crisis spread rapidly from the US to Europe and then partially
to the rest of the world with some spillover of the contagion from the financial
sector to the real sector. There have been severe disruptions in international
money markets, sharp declines in stock markets across the world and evidence of
extreme risk aversion among financial sector participants. Governments, central
banks and financial regulators around the world are responding to the crisis with
aggressive, radical and unconventional measures to restore calm and confidence
to the markets and bring them back to normalcy and stability.
96. India’s financial sector is stable and healthy. All indicators
of financial strength such as capital adequacy, ratios of non-performing assets
(NPA) and return on assets (RoA) for our commercial banks, which account for 88
per cent of banking assets, are robust. While many banks and quasi-banking financial
institutions in advanced countries suffered large losses and needed substantial
capital infusion and bail out packages, Indian banks have been affected only peripherally
as they do not have direct financial exposure to the US sub-prime assets. Mark-to-market
losses on the financial instruments held in the overseas portfolio of foreign
branches and foreign subsidiaries of Indian banks are due to the general widening
of credit spreads. The overall capital adequacy ratio of commercial banks in India
is 12.7 per cent, well above the regulatory minimum of 9 per cent and the Basel
Accord requirement of 8 per cent. In fact, all commercial banks in India have
a capital adequacy ratio above 10 per cent. Furthermore, the regulatory mandate
of keeping 25 per cent of net demand and time liabilities as SLR and 6.5 per cent
as CRR provides an inherent strength to the Indian banks. The most prominent symptom
of the problem in the financial sectors of advanced countries has been the freezing
up of inter-bank markets. On the contrary, the inter-bank market in India has
been functioning in an orderly manner and transaction volumes in recent weeks
have been comparable to, or oftentimes above, those in the previous six months.
97. Nevertheless, the global developments have had some indirect, knock-on
effects on domestic financial markets. Money markets have experienced unusual
tightening of liquidity in recent weeks as a result of global developments which
were amplified by transient local factors such as advance tax payments. The foreign
exchange market experienced some pressure on account of portfolio investment outflows
by FIIs and the enhanced foreign exchange requirements of oil and fertiliser companies
resulting from higher international prices and import volumes. Constraints in
access to external financing as also repricing of risks and higher spreads resulted
in additional demand for domestic bank credit with attendant hardening of interest
rates across the spectrum. The combined impact of these factors was a perception
of credit pressures despite a sizeable increase in the growth of bank credit during
the current financial year so far. Domestic equity markets were significantly
affected by the global de-leveraging of assets and the adverse sentiment from
overseas markets. 98. Liquidity conditions in the domestic markets tightened
abruptly in mid-September. The overnight call money rate jumped from around 9
per cent on September 8 to over 13 per cent on September 16. While this spurt
was partly triggered by the scheduled mid-September advance tax outflows, it was
soon clear that the tightness in liquidity was not solely due to local and seasonal
factors as the call rate climbed to close to 15 per cent on September 29. Volumes
in the LAF repo auctions, which had averaged around Rs.12,500 crore in the first
half of September, rose to above Rs.68,000 crore in the second half of the month.
99. During the last financial year, as against a current account deficit
of 1.5 per cent of GDP, India received net capital flows of the order of nearly
10 per cent of GDP. While these inflows were partially sterilised by the issuance
of MSS securities and successive increases in the CRR, they had an expansionary
effect on domestic liquidity conditions. As the global liquidity crisis deepened
over the last two months, capital inflows dried up and increased the demand for
credit from the domestic banking system, thereby aggravating liquidity pressures.
100. In the wake of the stress on our financial markets as a result
of the global financial crisis, the immediate challenge for the Reserve Bank was
to infuse confidence by augmenting both domestic and foreign exchange liquidity.
Accordingly, the Reserve Bank announced the following measures on September 16,
2008: - Reserve Bank assured financial market participants that it
would continue to sell foreign exchange to augment supply in the domestic foreign
exchange market or even intervene directly to meet any demand-supply gaps at the
prevailing market rates and as per market practice.
- A second
LAF was also re-introduced on a daily basis as an assurance to market participants
of liquidity in the event of market stress.
- The interest rate
ceilings on FCNR (B) deposits of all maturities and on deposits under the NR(E)RA
for one to three years maturity were increased by 50 basis points.
- As an ad hoc and temporary measure, banks were allowed to avail of
additional liquidity support under the LAF to the extent of up to one per cent
of their net demand and time liabilities and seek waiver of penal interest.
101. Liquidity conditions tightened even further
after October 7 as contagion from the US financial crisis spread to Europe and
Asia. Globally, money markets froze up and the stock markets turned highly volatile
as even coordinated policy actions by monetary authorities in America, Europe,
Asia and Australia failed to inspire the confidence of financial markets. In the
fortnight ending October 10, 2008 there was a sizeable expansion in bank credit
of the order of Rs.65,000 crore which was the highest for any fortnight during
2008-09 so far. Consequently, in the domestic money market, call money rates touched
a peak of 19.8 per cent on October 10 with LAF repo volumes crossing Rs.90,000
crore through the early part of October. In view of the persisting uncertainty
in the global financial situation and its impact on India, and continuing demand
for domestic market liquidity, the following measures were taken in October 2008:
- In view of the continuing uncertain global situation, these measures
were augmented by a cumulative reduction of 250 basis points in the CRR effective
from the fortnight beginning October 11.
- A special 14-day
repo facility for a notified amount of Rs.20,000 crore was instituted to alleviate
liquidity stress faced by mutual funds and banks were allowed temporary access
to SLR-eligible securities by an additional 0.5 per cent of NDTL exclusively for
this purpose.
- Commercial banks and All India term lending and
refinancing institutions were allowed to lend against and buy back CDs held by
mutual funds for a period of 15 days.
- At the request of
the Government, the Reserve Bank agreed to provide the sum of Rs.25,000 crore
as the first instalment under the Agricultural Debt Waiver and Debt Relief Scheme
to commercial banks, RRBs and co-operative credit institutions immediately.
- The interest rate ceilings on FCNR (B) deposits of all maturities and
on deposits under the NR(E)RA for one to three years maturity were further increased
by 50 basis points each.
- Banks were permitted to borrow funds
from their overseas branches and correspondent banks to the extent of 50 per cent
of their unimpaired Tier I capital or US $ 10 million, whichever is higher.
- The Reserve Bank also announced that it would institute special market
operations to meet the foreign exchange requirements of public sector oil market
companies against oil bonds when they become available.
102. On October 20, 2008 in order to alleviate the pressures on domestic credit
markets brought on by the indirect impact of the global liquidity constraint and,
in particular, to maintain financial stability, it was decided to reduce the repo
rate under the Liquidity Adjustment Facility (LAF) by 100 basis points to
8.0 per cent with immediate effect. 103. Taken together, the measures
taken since mid-September 2008 have substantially assuaged liquidity stress in
domestic financial markets arising from the contagion of adverse external developments.
The total liquidity support through reductions in the CRR, the temporary accommodation
under the SLR and the first instalment of the agricultural debt waiver and debt
relief scheme was of the order of Rs.1,85,000 crore. In the inter-bank call money
market, rates have eased from well above 10 per cent to a range near the LAF reverse
repo rate. There has been a steady improvement in call money turnover which constituted
a third of total volumes transacted in the overnight markets. The LAF window saw
a mode reversal from a net injection of Rs.91,720 crore on October 1, 2008 to
a net absorption through reverse repos of the order of Rs.27,745 crore on October
22, 2008. Yields in the Government securities market have reflected the improvement
in liquidity conditions with the benchmark 10 year yield easing from 8.30 per
cent on October 3, 2008 to 7.58 per cent on October 22, 2008. Furthermore, it
is expected that the cut in the repo rate effected on October 20, 2008 will ease
the constraints in money and credit markets, restore their orderly functioning
and sustain financial stability. 104. The task of monetary management
has always centred around managing a judicious balance between price stability,
sustaining the growth momentum and maintaining financial stability. The relative
emphasis between these objectives has varied from time to time depending on the
underlying macroeconomic conditions. Prudent regulatory surveillance and effective
supervision have ensured that our financial sector has been and continues to be
robust. The global financial turmoil, has, however, reinforced the importance
of putting special emphasis on preserving financial stability. At the same time,
inflation, which is still in double digits, and the moderation in growth continue
to be critical policy concerns. Consequently, the central task for the conduct
of monetary policy has become more complex than before, with increasing priority
being given to financial stability. The current challenge, accordingly, is to
strike an optimal balance between preserving financial stability, maintaining
price stability, anchoring inflation expectations, and sustaining the growth momentum.
To manage this challenge, the Reserve Bank has deployed and will continue to deploy
both conventional and unconventional tools. 105. The First Quarter Review
of July 2008 placed the projection of real GDP growth in 2008-09 at around 8.0
per cent for policy purposes. Since then, there have been significant global and
domestic developments which have rendered the outlook uncertain, and have increased
the downside risks associated with this projection. In particular, the global
downturn may be deeper and more protracted than expected earlier. Consequently,
the adverse implications through trade and financial channels for emerging economies,
including India, have amplified. If the recession is deeper and the recovery is
long drawn as is the current expectation, emerging economies have also to contend
with second round effects in the form of potential terms of trade losses, erosion
of export competitiveness and restricted external financing. These adverse developments
are overlaid on the moderation of growth in the industrial and services sectors
in the first half of 2008-09. The south-west monsoon conditions and water storage
levels support the prospects of maintaining the medium-term trend growth rate
in agriculture in 2008-09. Taking these developments and prospects into account,
the Reserve Bank has revised the projection of overall real GDP growth for 2008-09
to a range of 7.5-8.0 per cent.
106. Globally, pressures from commodity
prices, including crude, appear to be abating, though they continue to rule at
elevated levels. Domestically, prices of food articles are moderating and the
beneficial effects of the south-west monsoon should enable a further easing in
the coming months. There are also incipient signs of some softening in prices
of some manufactured goods. Consequently, WPI inflation, excluding food articles
and the fuel category, is showing some plateauing albeit at high levels.
Moreover, the decline in the price of the Indian basket of crude to around US $
70 in recent weeks has reduced the probability of upward revisions in administered
prices in the period ahead. The moderation in key global commodity prices, if
sustained, would contribute to reduction in inflationary pressures from the current
levels. On the other hand, consumer price inflation for agricultural and rural
labourers has risen to double digits in August and September for the first time
in nearly a decade. Within the wholesale price segment too, inflationary pressures
from non-food articles - mainly cotton, edible oils and metals – are as
yet unyielding; indeed there has been some firming up in recent weeks. It is possible
that these prices would also soften if the global slowdown is more severe than
expected. All in all, it is the Reserve Bank’s assessment that inflation
continues to be a concern and that we cannot afford to let the guard slip on our
inflation vigil.
107. The First Quarter Review of July 2008 noted that
this round of inflation emanated, in part, from global supply pressures, and that
inflation over the past year has not been proportionately different from elsewhere.
However, inflation in double digits is well beyond our tolerance levels and is
clearly unacceptable. As indicated in past policy reviews, it will be the Reserve
Bank’s endeavour to bring down inflation to a tolerable level of below 5 per cent
at the earliest, while aiming for convergence with the global average inflation
of around 3.0 per cent over the medium-term. Keeping in view the supply management
measures taken by the Government and the lagged demand response to the monetary
policy measures taken by the Reserve Bank over the last one year, the earlier
projection of inflation of 7.0 per cent by end-March 2009 appears to be valid.
It has, therefore, been decided to maintain this estimate for policy purposes.
108. Going forward, the Reserve Bank’s policy endeavour would be
to modulate the monetary overhang generated by the sustained expansion of money
supply since 2005-06. This is necessary in order to ensure that inflationary pressures
are not fuelled and that the current stance of monetary policy is not attenuated
by expansionary monetary conditions. Accordingly, as stated in the First Quarter
Review, it is necessary to moderate the rate of money supply to 17 per cent in
2008-09. This translates to a requirement of growth in aggregate deposits in 2008-09
to 17.5 per cent and the growth of non-food credit, including investments in bonds/debentures/shares
of public sector undertakings and private corporate sector and CP, to around 20
per cent. The enhanced borrowing requirement of the Central Government in the
second half of 2008-09, however, is an upside risk to the realisation of these
projections and will have implications for the conduct of monetary policy.
109. Non-food credit has posted a growth of 29 per cent on a year-on-year basis
as of October 10, 2008. This is well beyond the projection of 20 per cent for
2008-09. This higher rate of credit growth could possibly be due to the additional
demand on domestic credit because of constraints in excess to external credit
as noted earlier. Even so, such a rapid rate of credit growth is a cause for concern
and will warrant intensified monitoring and continued correction. While maintaining
credit quality has always been our central concern, the global financial crisis
has reinforced risks of allowing rapid and unbridled credit expansion and the
resultant systemic threat to financial stability. Banks should continue to lend
for productive purposes and, in particular, permit drawals of sanctioned limits
guided by their usual commercial judgment. Banks should also consider restructuring
the dues of small and medium enterprises on merits. At the same time, they should
pay attention to maintaining credit quality. In pursuit of this objective, banks
should focus on stricter credit appraisals on a sectoral basis, monitor loan to
value ratios and calibrate their credit portfolio in tune with their asset-liability
projections. The Reserve Bank will monitor the rate of credit growth and credit
quality closely and will, as necessary, engage with select banks which are outliers
on the norms.
110. India’s balance of payments continues to reflect
strength and resilience in a highly unsettled international environment. A resumption
in the vigour of export growth in the second quarter of 2008-09 is a comforting
factor. Moreover, the significant softening of international crude oil prices
in recent weeks can be expected to moderate the trade deficit in the second half
of the current fiscal year. However, the volatility in international crude oil
prices warrants continues monitoring. In the capital account, the sustained inflows
in the form of FDI and the turnaround in NRI flows have mitigated the impact of
the outflows under portfolio investment. Overall, the current account deficit
may be somewhat higher in 2008-09 than in the preceding year but it is expected
that net capital flows would meet the external financing requirement in 2008-09.
111. Given the uncertainty in the global financial situation, monitoring
and maintenance of domestic financial stability warrants continuous attention.
There are some positive aspects of our financial system. Corporate balance sheets
are healthy and leverage levels are within normal ranges. The interest burden
of corporates too is low by historical standards. On the negative side, pressures
on liquidity could emerge from anywhere in the deep chain of the financial system.
These could potentially be a source of vulnerability. The Reserve Bank will maintain
a close vigil on the entire financial system to prevent pressures building up
in the financial markets. This will include enhancing liquidity if pressures persist.
This could also mean curtailing liquidity if the recent liquidity easing measures
are seen to have injected excess liquidity, thereby stoking inflationary pressures.
112. The management of the global financial crisis has highlighted two
important aspects. First, that resolution of a crisis of this magnitude and complexity
demands going beyond the rule book to unconventional, unorthodox and swift policy
actions. Second, there is need for close coordination between the Government and
the regulatory agencies without at the same time eroding institutional integrity
and independence. These aspects are important and relevant for India too. India
has well functioning institutional arrangements, both formal and informal for
inter-regulatory agency coordination. These have stood the test of time. All the
same, there is need to constantly endeavour to build on these arrangements to
further refine and strengthen them.
113. The global financial situation,
described as the worst since the Great Depression, continues to be uncertain and
unsettled. There are continuing concerns about the nature and depth of the crisis,
the manner of and the time frame for its resolution and the response to the policy
measures announced so far. Furthermore, the deflationary impact of the financial
turmoil is intertwined with a distinct weakening of global growth. In what is
clear evidence of the depth and degree of financial integration, this uncertainty
is transmitting also to countries outside the epicenter of the crisis. India cannot
be immune to these global developments. These external pressures coming on top
of already existing domestic pressures pose complex challenges for monetary management.
This is uncharted territory with no standard or conventional solutions. The Reserve
Bank has endeavoured to be proactive, and has taken measures to manage the rapid
developments and ease pressures stemming from the global crisis. In conclusion,
the Reserve Bank reiterates that it is confident of managing the situation and
minimising the adverse impact of the global crisis on the Indian economy. Our
financial system is strong and healthy, and our economic fundamentals are strong.
Once the global situation is managed and calm and confidence are restored, we
will return to our higher growth trajectory. 114. Based on the above
overall assessment of the macroeconomic situation, the stance of monetary policy
for the rest of 2008-09 will be as follows : - Ensure a monetary and
interest rate environment that optimally balances the objectives of financial
stability, price stability and well-anchored inflation expectations, and growth;
- Continue with the policy of active demand management of liquidity through
appropriate use of all instruments including the CRR, open market operations (OMO),
the MSS and the LAF to maintain orderly conditions in financial markets;
- In the context of the uncertain and unsettled global situation and its
indirect impact on the domestic economy in general and the financial markets in
particular, closely and continuously monitor the situation and respond swiftly
and effectively to developments, employing both conventional and unconventional
measures;
- Emphasise credit quality and credit delivery, in
particular, for employment-intensive sectors, while pursuing financial inclusion.
III. Monetary
Measures (a) Bank Rate
115. The Bank Rate has been kept unchanged at 6.0 per cent. (b)
Repo Rate/Reverse Repo Rate 116. The repo rate under the
LAF has been kept unchanged at 8.0 per cent. 117. The reverse repo rate
under the LAF has been kept unchanged at 6.0 per cent. 118. The Reserve
Bank has the flexibility to conduct repo/reverse repo auctions at a fixed rate
or at variable rates as circumstances warrant. 119. The Reserve Bank
retains the option to conduct overnight or longer term repo/reverse repo under
the LAF depending on market conditions and other relevant factors. The Reserve
Bank will continue to use this flexibly including the right to accept or reject
tender(s) under the LAF, wholly or partially, if deemed fit, so as to make efficient
use of the LAF in daily liquidity management. (c)
Cash Reserve Ratio
120. The cash reserve ratio (CRR) of
scheduled banks is currently at 6.5 per cent of net demand and time liabilities
(NDTL). On a review of the current liquidity situation, it has been decided to
keep the CRR unchanged at 6.5 per cent of NDTL.
Third Quarter
Review
121. The Third Quarter Review of the Annual Policy
Statement on Monetary Policy will be undertaken on Tuesday, January 27, 2009. Part
B. Mid-Term Review of the Annual Statement on
Developmental and Regulatory Policies for the Year 2008-09
122. The Annual Policy Statement of April 2008
set developmental and regulatory policies for the year 2008-09 with a focus on
developing a sound, efficient and vibrant financial system that ensures the efficient
provision of financial services to the widest sections of society. Against the
backdrop of the international financial turmoil, the securing and maintenance
of financial stability was accorded priority from a policy perspective with a
readiness for swift responses, both conventional and unconventional, to any threats
to financial stability from adverse international developments. Credit quality,
credit delivery and financial inclusion alongside credible communication, adequate
and timely availability of information and a broad-based, participative and consultative
approach with involvement of all stakeholders were emphasised in the stance of
developmental and regulatory policies for the year. 123. As stated in
the Annual Policy Statement and reiterated in the First Quarter Review of July
2008, the recent global financial developments may carry profound implications
for the health of the financial sector, business strategies, capital requirements,
risk pricing and management tools, transparency, and starkly in the recent period,
the blurring of the boundaries between liquidity and solvency stress in situations
of generalised uncertainty and loss of confidence among financial entities. In
this environment, banks in India were enjoined to monitor their credit portfolios
closely in the context of the persisting high growth in bank credit at the systems
level and to take corrective action as appropriate in order to prevent undue asset-liability
mismatches or deterioration in the quality of credit, recognising the reality
of business cycles and counter-cyclical monetary policy responses. The Reserve
Bank’s response to global developments has also been swift, pre-emptive
and even unconventional, especially in the context of assuaging the liquidity
pressures impacting domestic financial markets, as demonstrated in the policy
measures taken in September and October 2008 and referred to in Part A of this
Review. 124. During 2008-09 so far, the Reserve Bank has put in place
several measures for the development of financial markets and instruments, credit
delivery mechanisms, in particular, for weaker sections, the priority sector and
potentially viable sick, small and medium enterprises (SME) units and financial
inclusion. Alongside, initiatives have been taken for strengthening of prudential
norms and entrenching the three-track approach for Basel II with due emphasis
on country-specific requirements in the convergence with international best practices.
125. In the period ahead, the developmental and regulatory policies
of the Reserve Bank would continue to adopt a holistic approach to the responsibility
for price and financial stability. The Reserve Bank is committed to deepening
and expanding reforms in the financial sector so that efficient and competitive
financial intermediation evolves in tune with real sector objectives so as to
secure sustained growth with stability. The process of participation of and consultation
with all stakeholders would be further intensified for the promotion of inclusive
growth through provision of prompt and accessible financial services and the spread
of financial education so as to develop a system that is attentive to the needs
of the common person. 126. The Mid-Term Review of Annual Statement on
Developmental and Regulatory Policies focuses on certain key areas: carrying forward
development of various segments of financial markets and strengthening the financial
market infrastructure; further liberalisation of foreign exchange transactions;
relaxation in the interest rate ceilings on non-resident Indian (NRI) deposits;
strengthening the supervisory framework in terms of cross-border supervision,
risk-based supervision and bank-led conglomerates; enhancement in the off-site
monitoring system and surveillance over banks’ credit portfolios; development
of instruments and infrastructure relating to payment and settlement systems in
response to financial innovations; strengthening urban cooperative banks (UCBs)
and regional rural banks (RRBs) for improved credit delivery mechanisms and financial
inclusion. 127. This part is divided into five sections: I. Interest
Rate Policy; II. Financial Markets; III. Credit Delivery Mechanisms and Other
Banking Services; IV. Prudential Measures; and V. Institutional Developments.
I. Interest Rate Policy
Interest Rates on FCNR(B) and
NR(E)RA Deposits 128. Recent global developments brought
some pressure to bear on the domestic money and foreign exchange markets in conjunction
with temporary local factors. In response, the Reserve Bank increased the interest
rate ceiling on FCNR(B) deposits by 50 basis points, i.e., to Libor/Swap
rates minus 25 basis points and the interest rate ceiling on NR(E)RA deposits
by 50 basis points, i.e., to Libor/Swap rates plus 50 basis points effective
from the close of business on September 16, 2008. These ceilings were increased
further by 50 basis point each, i.e., Libor/Swap rates plus 25 basis
points and Libor/Swap rates plus 100 basis points, respectively, with effect from
the close of business on October 15, 2008.
II. Financial
Markets Money Market
(a) Special Market Operations 129. The Reserve
Bank announced Special Market Operations (SMO) on May 30, 2008 on an ad hoc
and temporary basis to minimise potential adverse consequences for financial markets
and for overall financial stability in view of liquidity and other related issues
arising from the unprecedented escalation in international crude prices. Under
the SMO, the Reserve Bank conducted open market operations in the secondary market
through designated banks in oil bonds held by public sector oil marketing companies
in their own accounts subject to an overall ceiling of Rs.1,500 crore on any single
day and provided equivalent foreign exchange through designated banks at market
exchange rates to the oil companies. The SMO was terminated effective from August
8, 2008. Taking into account the continuing uncertain global situation and the
potentially adverse implications for domestic financial markets, the Reserve Bank
announced on October 15, 2008 that it has decided to reinstitute a similar facility
when oil bonds become available. (b) Second Liquidity Adjustment
Facility 130. The Reserve Bank operates a liquidity adjustment
facility (LAF) to inject/absorb liquidity through daily repo/reverse repo auctions.
These operations are conducted in the forenoon between 9.30 A.M. and 10.30 A.M.
In response to suggestions from market participants for fine-tuning the management
of bank reserves on the last day of the maintenance period, a second LAF (SLAF)
on reporting Fridays was introduced with effect from August 1, 2008 which is conducted
between 4.00 P.M. and 4.30 P.M. In view of the recent extraordinary global developments,
the SLAF is conducted on a daily basis beginning September 17, 2008.
131. Taking in to account the continuing uncertainty and its indirect impact on
our financial markets, the Reserve Bank decided to conduct a special 14-day repo
for a notified amount of Rs.20,000 crore on October 14, 2008 with a view to enabling
banks to meet the liquidity requirements of mutual funds. As only Rs.3,500 crore
was utilised on October 14, 2008, this 14-day repo facility was further extended
to be conducted every day up to the cumulative amount of Rs.20,000 crore. It was
further decided that purely as a temporary measure, banks may avail of additional
liquidity support exclusively for the purpose of meeting the liquidity requirements
of mutual funds to the extent of up to 0.5 per cent of their NDTL. This accommodation
was extended in addition to the temporary measures announced on September 16,
2008 permitting banks to avail of additional liquidity support to the extent of
up to 1 per cent of their NDTL. Furthermore, the Reserve Bank relaxed the restrictions
on lending and buy-back only in respect of the certificates of deposit (CDs) held
by mutual funds effective from October 14, 2008. Government
Securities Market (a) Central Government Securities
(i) Floating Rate Bonds: Development of NDS Auction Format
132. The Annual Policy Statement of April 2008 had indicated that
the Clearing Corporation of India Limited (CCIL) is developing a primary auction
module for dated Government securities which would cover all types of instruments,
including floating rate bonds (FRBs). Necessary software modifications are being
incorporated for issuance of FRBs. The new structure of issuance incorporated
in the Negotiated Dealing System (NDS) auction module (Version 2) is being
developed by the CCIL. The FRBs will be issued at an appropriate time taking into
account the prevailing market conditions. (ii) Auction Process
of Government of India Securities 133. As announced in
the Annual Policy Statement for the year 2008-09, the recommendations of the Internal
Working Group on the Auction Process (Chairman: Shri H. R. Khan) are in the process
of implementation. The major recommendations of the Working Group include reduction
in the time gap between bid submission and declaration of auction results, withdrawal
of the facility of bidding in physical form and submission of competitive bids
only through the NDS. In the first phase, the recommendations relating to the
reduction in the time gap and withdrawal of physical bids are being implemented.
Some of the recommendations like facilitating direct participation of non-NDS
members in auctions through a secured web-based system are under examination.
(iii) Collateral Facility Extended for Savings Bonds
134. On August 19, 2008 the Government of India amended the notifications
relating to the 7 per cent Savings Bonds, 2002, the 6.5 per cent Savings Bonds,
2003 (non-taxable), and the 8 per cent Savings Bonds, 2003 (taxable) schemes
and allowed for pledge or hypothecation or lien of these bonds as collateral
for obtaining loans from scheduled banks in accordance with the provisions of
Section 28 of the Government Securities Act, 2006 and Regulations 21 and 22 of
the Government Securities Regulations, 2007. These amendments would enable pledge
of these instruments for raising of loans by the holders, thereby imparting liquidity
to these instruments. (b) Debt Management for State Governments
Non-Competitive Bidding Scheme in the Auctions of the State
Development Loans 135. With a view to widening the investor base
and enhancing the liquidity of State Development Loans (SDLs), a scheme for Non-Competitive
Bidding Facility has been approved by the State Governments. Accordingly, the
General Notifications on issue of SDLs have been amended by the State Governments.
The NDS Auction Module (Version 2), which would facilitate introduction of the
scheme, is under development by the CCIL. The parallel run of the new Version
2 will commence shortly and the scheme will be operationalised by end-December
2008. (c) Development of Market Infrastructure
(i) Introduction of Interest Rate Futures 136. A Working
Group on Interest Rate Futures (Chairman: Shri V. K. Sharma) was constituted to
review the experience gained with interest rate futures since its introduction
in India in June 2003, with particular reference to product design issues. The
recommendations of the Group were placed before the Technical Advisory Committee
(TAC) for Money, Foreign Exchange and Government Securities Markets. Taking into
consideration the feedback and comments received from the public, experts, banks,
market participants and the Government of India, the report was finalised and
has been placed on the Reserve Bank’s website on August 8, 2008. The RBI-Securities
and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) Standing Technical Committee has been entrusted
with the work relating to the operationalisation of these recommendations.
Accordingly, the Committee has initiated work on various issues which broadly
fall into three categories: product design and specification issues; exchange
related issues and specifications like margins; and regulatory issues for
banks. On October 13, 2008 banks were permitted to take trading positions in interest
rate futures (IRFs), as recommended by the working group. This will add depth
and liquidity to the market. It is expected that IRF contracts as recommended
by the Working Group would be launched in early 2009 along with the supporting
changes in the regulatory regime. (ii) Multi-modal Settlement
137. The Annual Policy Statement of April 2008 proposed a new settlement
mechanism in Government securities through settlement banks in order to facilitate
direct access to NDS and NDS Order Matching (NDS-OM) by participants who do not
maintain current accounts but maintain Subsidiary General Ledger (SGL) accounts
with the Reserve Bank. Accordingly, guidelines were issued on June 2, 2008 to
operationalise the mechanism. Secondary market transactions in Government securities
are being settled only through the designated settlement banks (DSBs) with effect
from June 30, 2008. Arrangements for settlement of primary auction bidding under
the new mechanism are being worked out. (iii) Access to NDS-OM Through
CSGL Route 138. Access to the NDS-OM segment, which was launched
in August 2005, was initially allowed to commercial banks and primary dealers
(PDs) and later to other NDS members such as insurance companies, mutual funds
and large provident funds for their proprietary deals. To widen its reach, access
to NDS-OM was extended to certain entities maintaining gilt accounts with the
NDS members (i.e., banks and PDs) through the Constituent SGL (CSGL)
route in a phased manner and is now available to deposit-taking non-bank financial
companies (NBFCs), provident funds, pension funds, mutual funds, insurance companies,
cooperative banks, RRBs, trusts and systemically important non-deposit taking
NBFCs (NBFCs-ND-SI). As proposed in the Annual Policy Statement of April 2008,
access to NDS-OM through the CSGL route was further extended to investors such
as other non-deposit taking NBFCs, corporates and FIIs. These entities can place
orders on NDS-OM directly through NDS-OM members using the CSGL route. Such trades
will settle through the CSGL accounts and current accounts of the NDS-OM members.
(iv) Clearing and Settlement of OTC Rupee Interest Rate Derivatives
139. The CCIL has operationalised a trade reporting platform for
over-the-counter (OTC) rupee interest rate derivatives which has been functioning
satisfactorily. The average daily turnover is currently about Rs.14,000 crore.
It was announced in the Annual Policy of April 2008 that a clearing and settlement
arrangement for OTC rupee interest rate derivatives would be put in place. Accordingly,
permission has been given to the CCIL to operationalise a clearing and settlement
arrangement for OTC rupee interest rate derivatives on a non-guaranteed basis
and this is expected to commence within a month. Once the software systems are
in place and the issues relating to counter-party exposure and risk weights as
applicable to the CCIL are advised, the CCIL would operationalise settlement of
these products on a guaranteed basis within three months. Foreign
Exchange Market (a) Liberalisation of Foreign
Exchange Transactions 140. Measures taken during 2008-09
towards further liberalisation of foreign exchange transactions and improvement
of foreign exchange facilities are set out below: (i) Overseas Investment
- Registered trusts and societies engaged in manufacturing/ education/hospitals
were allowed to make investment in the same sector(s) in a joint venture (JV)
or wholly owned subsidiary (WOS) outside India with the prior approval of the
Reserve Bank, subject to compliance with the prescribed eligibility criteria.
- Indian entities were allowed to invest in overseas unincorporated entities
in the oil sector up to 400 per cent of their net worth as on the date of the
last audited balance sheet.
(ii) Overseas Borrowing
- Based on a review, the external commercial borrowings (ECBs) policy was modified
and accordingly, effective October 22, 2008 ECBs up to US $ 500 million per borrower
per financial year are permitted for rupee expenditure and/or foreign currency
expenditure for permissible end-uses under the automatic route.
- Payment for obtaining licence/permit for 3G Spectrum is considered an eligible
end-use for the purpose of ECBs.
- The ECBs borrowers have been
extended the flexibility to either keep the proceeds off-shore or to remit to
India for credit to their rupee accounts with AD Category I banks in India, pending
utilisation for permissible end-uses.
- In view of the tight liquidity
conditions in the international financial markets, all-in-cost ceilings were rationalised
and enhanced and accordingly, the ceiling for ECBs of average maturity period
of three years and up to five years was enhanced to 300 basis points and the ceiling
for ECBs over five years was enhanced to 500 basis points.
-
Keeping in view the risks associated with unhedged foreign exchange exposures
of SMEs, a system of monitoring such unhedged exposures by the banks on a regular
basis is being put in place.
- The definition of infrastructure
for the purpose of availing of ECBs has been expanded to include mining, exploration
and refining.
- Entities in the services sector, viz.,
hotels, hospitals and software companies were permitted to avail ECBs up to US
$ 100 million in a financial year under the approval route for the purpose of
import of capital goods.
- The Foreign Currency Exchangeable
Bonds (FCEB) Scheme, 2008 notified by the Government of India on February 15,
2008 was operationalised by the Reserve Bank.
- AD Category –
I banks were allowed to convey ‘no objection’ under the Foreign Exchange
Management Act (FEMA), 1999 for the creation of charge over immoveable assets
and financial securities and issue of corporate or personal guarantees on behalf
of the borrower in favour of the overseas lender to secure ECBs under automatic/approval
route, subject to certain conditions.
- Banks were allowed to
borrow funds from their overseas branches and correspondent banks up to a limit
of 50 per cent of their unimpaired Tier I capital as at the close of
the previous quarter or US $ 10 million, whichever is higher, as against the existing
limit of 25 per cent.
(iii) Trade-related
Measures
- The limit of US $ 100,000 was enhanced to US $ 300,000
for making remittances for imports where the import bills/documents were received
directly by the importer from the overseas supplier.
- The limit
for advance remittance for import of goods without bank guarantee/stand-by letter
of credit was increased from US $ 1 million or its equivalent to US $ 5 million
or its equivalent.
- The limit for advance remittance for import
of services without bank guarantee was enhanced from US $ 100,000 to US $ 500,000
or its equivalent.
- The usance period of letters of credit
opened for import of platinum, palladium, rhodium and silver has been limited
to 90 days from the date of shipment.
(b) Introduction of Currency Futures
141. The final report of the Internal Working Group on Introduction of Currency
Futures in India (Chairman: Shri Salim Gangadharan) was placed on the Reserve
Bank’s website on April 28, 2008. The report of the RBI-SEBI Standing
Technical Committee on Exchange Traded Currency Futures, constituted to suggest
a suitable framework to operationalise currency futures, was also placed on the
Reserve Bank’s website on June 13, 2008. The recommendations of the Working
Group were examined and accepted by the Reserve Bank. Directions were issued under
provisions of the Reserve Bank of India Act, 1934 and the necessary
Notification was issued under FEMA on August 5, 2008 for the introduction of exchange
traded currency futures. The directions permit scheduled commercial banks
(AD Category–I) to become trading/clearing members of the currency
derivatives segment set up by recognised stock exchanges, subject to their fulfilling
certain prudential requirements. Banks which do not meet the minimum prudential
requirements are permitted to participate in the currency futures market only
as clients, after obtaining approval from the Reserve Bank.
142. The
exchange traded currency futures started trading first on the National Stock Exchange
on August 29, 2008, followed by the Bombay Stock Exchange and the Multi Commodity
Exchange – Stock Exchange (MCX-SX) on October 1, 2008 and October 7, 2008,
respectively.
(c) Branch/Liaison
Offices in India by Foreign Entities
143. Under the current
provisions of the FEMA, a person resident outside India requires prior approval
of the Reserve Bank for establishing branch/liaison offices in India. The Reserve
Bank has placed on its website for public comments the draft circulars regarding
delegation of powers for extension of the validity period or closure of liaison
offices of foreign entities in India and the eligibility criteria and procedural
guidelines for branch/liaison offices of foreign entities in India with a view
to further liberalising the procedure and achieving greater transparency.
Final guidelines will be issued by end-December 2008.
(d)
Clearing and Settlement of Forex Forwards
144. The CCIL
provides a platform for guaranteed settlement of inter-bank foreign exchange trades
to banks in India. Settlement is on a multilateral net basis, with the CCIL becoming
the central counter-party to the trades through the process of novation. The guaranteed
settlement of foreign exchange trades mitigates risks and also allows banks to
use their capital in an optimal manner. Currently, 72 banks as members for foreign
exchange settlement operations settle, on an average, 8,500 deals daily with a
gross volume of US $ 17 billion. Forward trades are accepted for guaranteed
settlement only when they enter the spot window.
145. The Reserve Bank
has accorded its approval to the CCIL for commencement of guaranteed settlement
of inter-bank foreign exchange forward trades from the trade date. The CCIL has
notified to banks its readiness to start operations of the foreign exchange forward
segment and the software has been fully tested. The CCIL would operationalise
the settlement system within a month, once the issues relating to counter-party
exposure and risk weights are advised.
(e) Liberalisation
of Hedging Facilities
Expansion of Hedging Facilities
to Domestic Crude Oil Refining Companies
146. Major domestic
crude oil refining companies are permitted to hedge their commodity price risks
on overseas exchanges/markets. Major oil refining and shipping companies
have been representing to the Reserve Bank for extending the hedging facilities
further in view of the volatility of freight rates. With a view to facilitating
better management of freight risk, it is proposed:
to permit domestic
oil and shipping companies to hedge their freight risk with overseas exchanges/
OTC markets. In respect of other customers who are exposed to freight
risk, AD banks may approach the Reserve Bank for permission on
behalf of customers. (f) Trade Credit: Enhancement of All-in-cost
Ceilings 147. In view of the tight liquidity
conditions in the global credit markets, domestic importers are experiencing difficulties
in raising trade credits within the existing all-in-cost ceilings. Considering
the international developments, it is proposed: to enhance the all-in-cost
ceiling for trade credits less than 3 years to 6 months LIBOR plus 200
basis points.III. Credit Delivery Mechanisms
and Other Banking Services (a)
Priority Sector Lending (i) Weaker Sections’
Lending Targets: Status 148. As indicated in the Annual Policy Statement
of April 2008, domestic SCBs were advised that the shortfall in achievement of
the sub-target of lending to weaker sections will also be taken into account for
the purpose of allocating amounts for contribution to the Rural Infrastructure
Development Fund (RIDF) maintained with the National Bank for Agriculture and
Rural Development (NABARD) or funds with other financial institutions as specified
by the Reserve Bank, with effect from April 2009. (ii) General
Purpose Credit Cards and Overdrafts Against ‘No-frills’ Accounts
as Indirect Finance to Agriculture Under Priority Sector: Status
149. Consequent upon the announcement made in the Annual Policy Statement
of April 2008, banks were allowed to classify 100 per cent of the credit outstanding
under General Credit Cards (GCC) and overdrafts up to Rs.25,000 (per account)
granted against ‘no-frills’ accounts in rural and semi-urban areas
as indirect finance to agriculture under the priority sector. (iii)
Increasing Opportunities for RRBs for Lending to Priority Sector: Status
150. With a view to augmenting RRBs’ funds/resource base, commercial
banks/sponsor banks were allowed to classify in their books loans granted to RRBs
for on-lending to agriculture and allied activities as indirect finance to agriculture.
Furthermore, RRBs were permitted to sell loan assets held by them under priority
sector categories in excess of the prescribed priority sector lending target of
60 per cent. (b) Delivery of Credit to Agriculture
and Other Segments of the Priority Sector
151. Under the Special Agricultural Credit Plan (SACP), disbursements by
public and private sector banks to agriculture aggregated Rs.1,25,758 crore (provisional)
and Rs.47,862 crore, respectively, during 2007-08 as against the target of Rs.1,52,133
crore and Rs.41,427 crore. Under the kisan credit card (KCC) scheme, public sector
banks have issued 4.6 million KCCs covering limits aggregating Rs.59,582 crore
during 2007-08. Since the inception of the scheme, public sector banks have issued
31.22 million KCCs covering an amount of Rs.1,54,294 crore. 152.
The Union Budget for 2008-09 had announced establishment of the Rural Infrastructure
Development Fund (RIDF XIV) with the NABARD with a corpus of Rs.14,000 crore,
and a separate window under RIDF (XIV) for rural roads programme under the Bharat
Nirman Programme with a corpus of Rs.4,000 crore. The Union Finance Minister had
also announced setting up of specific funds with the NABARD/Small Industries Development
Bank of India (SIDBI)/National Housing Bank (NHB) with contributions by SCBs which
failed to achieve their obligations to lend to the priority sector.
153. Since the inception of the RIDF (I to XIV), including separate windows under
RIDF for rural roads under the Bharat Nirman Programme, the total allocation was
of the order of Rs.86,000 crore. While cumulative sanctions to State Governments
and the National Rural Roads Development Agency (NRRDA) under various tranches
of RIDF (I to XIV) stood at Rs.79,920 crore and Rs.12,000 crore, respectively,
as on August 31, 2008 the cumulative disbursements stood at Rs.48,615 crore and
Rs.4,889 crore, respectively. During 2008-09 (up to August 31), various State
Governments were sanctioned loans aggregating Rs.5,864 crore, which included Rs.522
crore sanctioned to the distressed districts of four States, viz., Andhra
Pradesh, Kerala, Karnataka and Maharashtra. The disbursements under various tranches
of RIDF during the year 2008-09 (up to August 31) amounted to Rs.3,021 crore.
(c) Interest Subvention Relief to Farmers
154. Pursuant to the announcement made in the Union Budget for 2006-07, commercial
banks were advised to grant interest relief of two percentage points in the interest
rate on the principal amount on each crop loan up to Rupees one lakh granted by
banks during Kharif and Rabi seasons of 2005-06. Furthermore,
consequent upon announcements made in the Union Budgets for the years 2007-08
and 2008-09, public sector banks, RRBs and rural co-operative banks were advised
to grant interest rate subvention of 2 per cent per annum to farmers in respect
of short-term production credit up to Rupees three lakh provided to them.
(d) Simplification of Lending Procedures for
Crop Loans 155. As announced in the Annual Policy
Statement of April 2008, banks were advised to accept affidavits submitted
by landless labourers, share croppers and oral lessees giving occupational status(i.e.,
details of land tilled/crops grown) for loans up to Rs.50,000, where there are
difficulties in getting certification from local administration/panchayati
raj institutions regarding the cultivation of crops. Furthermore, banks were
advised to select one rain-fed district for introduction of a cyclical credit
product for financing crop production on pilot basis, where 20 per cent of the
limit would be continuously available to farmers as a core component.
(e) Agricultural Debt Waiver and Debt
Relief Scheme, 2008 156. A scheme of agricultural debt
waiver and debt relief for farmers was announced in the Union Budget for 2008-09
for implementation by all SCBs, RRBs and cooperative credit institutions. The
modalities of the scheme were finalised and notified by the Government of India
on May 23, 2008. The scheme covers direct agricultural loans extended to marginal
and small farmers and other farmers by SCBs, RRBs, cooperative credit institutions
(including urban cooperative banks) and local area banks (LABs). Accordingly,
the Reserve Bank advised all SCBs, including LABs, to take necessary action towards
expeditious implementation of the scheme. The NABARD issued similar guidelines
to RRBs and cooperatives. The Reserve Bank also advised all SCBs, including LABs,
to utilise at their discretion the floating provisions held for advances portfolio
to the extent of meeting the interest/charges (i.e., interest in excess
of the principal amount, unapplied interest, penal interest, legal charges, inspection
charges, miscellaneous charges and the like). The floating provisions should not,
however, be utilised for meeting any other provisioning requirements without the
Reserve Bank’s prior approval, as hitherto. 157. Under the scheme,
the Government had agreed to provide to commercial banks, RRBs and co-operative
credit institutions a sum of Rs.25,000 crore as the first instalment. At the request
of the Government, the Reserve Bank has agreed to provide the sum to the lending
institutions immediately. This temporary liquidity support provided by the Reserve
Bank of India under Section 17(3-B) and Section 17(4-E) of the RBI Act to scheduled
banks and the NABARD, respectively, is available till November 3, 2008.
(f) Promotion of Livelihood in the Unorganised
Sector: Role of Financial System
158. As indicated in the Annual Policy Statement of April 2008, the report
of the Internal Working Group constituted within the Reserve Bank to study the
recommendations of the National Commission for Enterprises in the Unorganised
Sector (Chairman: Dr. Arjun K. Sengupta) in its report on ‘Conditions of
Work and Promotion of Livelihood in the Unorganised Sector’ was placed on
the Reserve Bank’s website for wider dissemination.
(g) Working Group on Rehabilitation/Nursing of Potentially
Viable Sick SME Units 159. As indicated in the Annual Policy
Statement of April 2007, the report of the Working Group (Chairman: Dr. K. C.
Chakraborty), constituted to look into the issues and suggest remedial measures
so that potentially viable sick units can be rehabilitated at the earliest, was
placed on the Reserve Bank’s website in April 2008. Based on the comments
received, it is proposed: to issue detailed guidelines to banks
on rehabilitation of potentially viable sick SME units by end-November 2008.
(h) SHG-Bank Linkage Programme 160. The self
help group (SHG)-Bank Linkage programme has emerged as the major micro-finance
programme in the country and is being implemented by commercial banks, RRBs and
cooperative banks. As on March 31, 2008, 3.48 million SHGs had outstanding bank
loans of Rs.22,227 crore. During 2007-08, banks financed 0.74 million
SHGs, including repeat loans to existing SHGs to the tune of Rs. 4,228 crore.
(i) Financial Inclusion Fund and Financial
Inclusion Technology Fund 161. In the Union
Budget for 2007-08, constitution of the Financial Inclusion Fund (FIF) and the
Financial Inclusion Technology Fund (FITF) were announced with an overall corpus
of Rs.500 crore each with the NABARD. The Government of India also advised that
for the year 2007-08, the initial contribution of Rs.25 crore each in these two
Funds would be shared by the Central Government, the Reserve Bank and the NABARD
in the ratio of 40:40:20. The Reserve Bank’s contribution to these funds
would accordingly be Rs.10 crore each. (j) Regional
Rural Banks (RRBs) (i) Branch Licensing: Further Liberalisation
162. In order to give further impetus to branch expansion programmes of RRBs,
existing branch licensing criteria have been further liberalised. Accordingly,
it is proposed:
to allow RRBs greater flexibility in opening new
branches as long as they are making operational profits and their financials are
improving. (ii) Technology Upgradation of RRBs
163. As indicated in the Annual Policy Statement of April 2008, the report
of the Working Group (Chairman: Shri G. Srinivasan), constituted for preparing
a road map for RRBs to adopt appropriate technology and migrate to core banking
solutions (CBS), was placed on the Reserve Bank’s website. The Report has
set September 2011 as the target for all RRBs to move towards CBS and all RRB
branches opened after September 2009 are to be CBS-compliant. The report has been
forwarded to all sponsor banks for necessary action. (iii) Assistance
to RRBs for Adoption of ICT solutions for Financial Inclusion: Status
164. The report of the Working Group (Chairman: Shri G. Padmanabhan), constituted
to examine provision of financial assistance to RRBs for defraying a part of their
initial cost in implementing information and communication technology (ICT)-based
solutions for financial inclusion, was placed on the Reserve Bank’s website
in August 2008. The Group has inter alia recommended that the funding
of ICT solutions for financial inclusion may be done through interest-free loans
to be routed through the Institute for Development and Research in Banking Technology
(IDRBT). The recommendations are under examination. (k)
Financial Inclusion (i) Pilot Project of State
Level Bankers’ Committee (SLBCs) for 100 per cent Financial Inclusion
165. So far, 342 districts were identified by SLBCs for 100 per cent
financial inclusion. Of these, 155 districts have reported having achieved the
target of 100 per cent financial inclusion. The Reserve Bank had undertaken evaluation
studies of the progress made in achieving this target in 26 districts through
external agencies to draw lessons for further action in this regard. Based on
the findings of the studies, it is proposed to: provide feedback
to banks to make the process of financial inclusion more effective.
(ii) Special Task Force in North-Eastern Region 166. Consequent
to the meeting that the former Governor of the Reserve Bank had with the Chief
Ministers of a few States in the North-Eastern Region in May 2008, a Special Task
Force (Chairperson: Smt. Usha Thorat) was constituted in order to give a fresh
impetus for setting up of banking facilities at additional centres in the region
perceived as essential for public policy. A scheme of providing financial support
to banks by the Reserve Bank for setting up banking facilities (currency chests,
extension of foreign exchange and Government business facilities) at such centres,
provided that the State Governments make available necessary premises and other
infrastructural support, has been formulated. The Government of Meghalaya has
agreed to the proposal of providing premises and necessary security arrangements
for the new branches. Similar mechanisms for other States in the North-Eastern
region where requests have been received are under consideration.
(iii) Setting up of Credit Counseling Centres on Pilot Basis
167. A concept paper on Financial Literacy and Counselling Centres was prepared
and placed on the Reserve Bank’s website on April 3, 2008 for public feedback
in order to take this initiative forward. Based on the feedback, it is proposed:
to notify a Model Scheme for Financial Literacy and Credit Counselling
Centres. (l) High Level Committee on Lead Bank Scheme
168. As announced in the Mid-Term Review of October 2007, a High Level Committee
(Chairperson: Smt. Usha Thorat) was constituted to review the Lead Bank Scheme
and improve its effectiveness in the light of the recent developments in the banking
sector. The Committee had several rounds of discussions with different State Governments,
banks and other stakeholders, including academicians, micro-finance institutions
and NGOs, and is in the process of consolidating its findings and crystallising
its recommendations. The broad view that is emerging is that while greater banking
and credit penetration by the formal financial institutions for facilitating inclusive
growth should be the primary objective of the scheme, it would also be necessary
to strengthen the institution and processes through which the scheme is implemented.
The Committee is expected to submit its report by December 2008.
(m) Relief Measures by Banks in Flood affected areas
in Assam, Bihar and Orissa 169. The Reserve Bank has issued
comprehensive standing instructions to banks for ensuring continuity of banking
operations and providing relief and rehabilitation to persons affected by natural
calamities. Consequent to the unprecedented rains and floods resulting in heavy
losses of life and property in the States of Assam, Bihar and Orissa, special
committees/meetings of banks and State Governments at district/State level, as
appropriate, were held to trigger the implementation of these standing instructions
which include re-scheduling of existing loans, grant of fresh credit and consumption
loans, making available currency in adequate measures and ensuring continuance
of normal banking services. (n) Study on Courier/Postage
Charges of Banks 170. The Annual Policy Statement of April
2008 indicated that the Reserve Bank is in the process of collecting details of
various charges levied by banks for public dissemination with a view to bringing
about greater transparency in banks’ services to the common person. Accordingly,
information in respect of courier/postage charges levied for collection of outstation
cheques and for sending statements/cheque books to the customer was collected,
compiled and placed on the Reserve Bank’s website. The Reserve Bank would
conduct such studies from time to time in respect of other charges and will place
the results on its website. IV. Prudential
Measures (a) Cross-border Supervision
171. An Internal Working Group (Chairman: Shri S. Karuppasamy) was constituted
to lay down the roadmap for adoption of a suitable framework for cross-border
supervision and supervisory cooperation with overseas regulators, consistent with
the framework envisaged by the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision (BCBS).
The Working Group consulted both Indian banks with overseas branches and foreign
banks with Indian operations to elicit the practices followed relating to cross-border
activities, inspection methodology and frequency adopted by overseas supervisors,
systems followed for securing of supervisory rating and progress made in implementation
of Basel II. The Group sought information from various overseas regulators/supervisors
on the practices adopted by them on information sharing/policies on cross-border
supervisory cooperation and the existing legal framework in those jurisdictions.
The Group examined the legal position on cross-border supervision arrangements
and also explored the feasibility of executing memoranda of understanding (MoUs)
with overseas supervisors. The Group is expected to submit its report by mid-November
2008. (b) Consolidated Supervision and Financial
Conglomerates 172. The Annual Policy Statement
of April 2008 had proposed realignment of various internal supervisory processes
for implementing an improved consolidated supervision process in order to enhance
the effectiveness of the banking supervisory system for bank-led conglomerates.
Accordingly, an ‘approach paper’ on the supervision of financial conglomerates
is expected to be finalised by end-November 2008. (c) Supervisory
Review Process on Activities of the Trusts/SPVs
Set up by Banks 173. Special purpose vehicles (SPVs) and
trusts set up by banks are generally unregulated and are subject to inadequate
independent board oversight. As the activities of these entities could be a potential
risk to the parent bank and could also pose systemic risk, the Annual Policy Statement
of April 2008 proposed to study and recommend a suitable supervisory framework
for activities of SPVs/trusts set up by banks. Accordingly, a Working Group (Chairman:
Shri S. Sen) has been constituted in October 2008 with representatives from the
Reserve Bank, banks and credit rating agencies which is expected to submit its
report within three months. The Group would study various types of trusts/SPVs
set up by banks, management control by parent banks, related regulatory/supervisory
issues and recommend a suitable supervisory framework. (d)
New Model of Risk-Based Supervision: Evolution 174. With
a view to evolving an appropriate model of risk-based supervision (RBS), a departmental
Group was set up to study international practices on such systems. The Group studied
the RBS mechanism adopted by various supervisory authorities across certain jurisdictions
(the US, the UK, Australia, France, Hong Kong, Singapore, Thailand and Malaysia)
with a view to evolving a suitable RBS framework without diluting the intensity
of the existing supervisory framework. An approach paper in this regard is under
preparation and is expected to be finalised by mid-December 2008.
(e) Overseas Operations of Indian Banks: Review of Existing
Off-Site Monitoring Framework 175. The Inter-departmental
Group constituted to review the existing regulatory and supervisory framework
for overseas operations of Indian banks held consultations with Indian banks having
large overseas presence. An appropriate supervisory framework, including a revised
off-site surveillance system for overseas operations of Indian banks, is expected
to be finalised by end-November 2008. (f) Supervisory Review
Process Related to Banks’ Credit Portfolio
176. The First Quarter Review of July 2008 had indicated that
the Reserve Bank would consider undertaking a supervisory review of select banks
which are over-extended in terms of their credit portfolios relative to their
sources of funds. Accordingly, banks were identified based on their off-site returns
and detailed information from these banks was sought regarding the sources and
deployment of their funds. Detailed discussions with the top management of banks
were held and concerns were conveyed to them for taking appropriate action.
(g) Review of Banks’ Exposures to Agricultural
Commodities 177. In view of the current public policy
concerns in regard to trading in food items, the Annual Policy Statement of April
2008 had urged banks to review their advances to traders of agricultural commodities
including rice, wheat, oilseeds and pulses as also advances against warehouse
receipts. Banks were advised to forward the first such review to the Reserve Bank
for carrying out supervisory review of banks’ exposures to the commodity
sector. A supervisory review of banks’ exposures to agricultural commodities
as on March 31, 2008 was carried out on the basis of data submitted by banks.
The review revealed that banks’ advances to traders in agricultural commodities
and advances against warehouse receipts constituted less than one per cent of
their gross advances. Banks also confirmed that they are exercising due caution
while extending advances to agricultural commodities so as to ensure that bank
finance is not used for hoarding. A further review of the position as on June
30, 2008 was also made and no significant change was observed in such exposure
of banks. (h) Implementation of Basel II Framework
in India: Status 178. Indian banks with overseas
presence and branches of foreign banks functioning in India have migrated to Basel
II Framework with effect from March 31, 2008. Considering the level of sophistication
of risk management techniques and availability of data, these banks have been
advised to follow the Standardised Approach for credit risk and the Basic Indicator
Approach for operational risk. All banks in India follow the Standardised Measurement
method for computation of capital charge for market risk since June 2004. With
the issuance of guidelines on Pillar II in March 2008, banks are also required
to have an Internal Capital Adequacy Assessment Process (ICAAP) to ensure that
they have adequate capital to support all risks in their business and are encouraged
to develop and use better risk management techniques in monitoring and managing
risks. The evaluation of the ICAAP of individual banks is being taken up by the
Reserve Bank in conjunction with the annual financial inspection of banks. As
planned, the remaining banks are required to migrate to the Basel II framework
with effect from March 31, 2009. (i) Introduction of Credit
Derivatives in India: Review of Status
179. The Reserve Bank had issued draft guidelines on credit default
swaps (CDS) in May 2007, followed by a revised version in October 2007 for another
round of consultation. However, in view of certain adverse developments in international
financial markets, particularly credit markets, resulting in considerable volatility,
it was not considered opportune to introduce the credit derivatives. Accordingly,
the issuance of final guidelines on the introduction of credit derivatives was
kept in abeyance. This decision was taken so as to be able to draw upon the experience
of the financial sector of some of the developed countries, particularly in the
current circumstances in which the entire dimensions of the credit market crisis
have not yet been gauged. The Reserve Bank would draw from lessons from the recent
turmoil and review the proposal to introduce the CDS at an appropriate time.
(j) Strengthening of Risk Management in Banks:
Liquidity Risk 180. The on-going turmoil
in international financial markets has brought the management of liquidity risk
in banks to the fore front. It is clear that even the most sophisticated banks
had not considered the amount of liquidity they might need to satisfy contingent
obligations, either contractual or non-contractual, as they viewed funding of
these obligations to be highly unlikely or regarded the availability of resources
to meet such funding requirements as stable over future periods. Many international
banks had envisaged severe and prolonged liquidity disruptions as highly unlikely
and did not conduct stress tests that factored in the possibility of market-wide
strain or the severity and duration of disruption. The Reserve Bank had issued
guidelines on asset-liability management in February 1999 which created a sound
framework for liquidity risk and interest rate risk management in banks. These
guidelines were modified in October 2007 to bring about granularity of time buckets
and recognised the impact of cumulative outflows on liquidity across time buckets.
The Reserve Bank is in the process of significantly revising these guidelines,
especially in the light of a paper entitled ‘Principles for Sound Liquidity
Risk Management and Supervision’ published by the Basel Committee on
Banking Supervision in September 2008, to ensure that banks’ liquidity risk
measurement and management capabilities are in tune with the level of complexity
of their operations. (k) Stress Testing
181. Stress testing has evolved as a practical risk management tool and its
applications are expanding. As observed in the Committee on Global Financial System
(CGFS) Report, 2005 stress testing works as a complement rather than as a supplement
to major risk management tools such as value-at-risk. It is, therefore, becoming
an integral part of the risk management frameworks of banks and securities firms.
In an increasingly complex financial environment where banks are facing new risks
and markets are becoming more global, stress testing benefits from its flexibility,
comprehensibility and the responsibility that it puts on managements to evaluate
the risks that a bank is currently running. The stress tests are increasingly
being integrated into risk management frameworks of financial institutions.
182. The Reserve Bank had issued guidelines to banks on stress testing in
June 2007 which require banks to have a sound stress testing policy which will
determine the liquidity risk, interest rate risk, credit risk and foreign exchange
risk under stressed scenarios. It is proposed to upgrade these guidelines appropriately
to provide further guidance to banks in the matter. Banks are also encouraged
to improve their management information systems (MIS) and risk management skills
for conducting stress tests and make full use of the insights gained from such
tests. (l) Financial Stability Forum Report: Status
183. The Annual Policy Statement of April 2008, while presenting the status
on the implementation of the proposals of Financial Stability Forum (FSF), indicated
that the Reserve Bank has put in place regulatory guidelines covering many of
these proposals and in other cases, actions are being initiated. In the ensuing
period, the Reserve Bank has issued guidelines on prudential norms for off-balance
sheet exposures of banks which are set out below: (i) Exposure
Norms: Method of Computation 184. Banks shall compute their credit
exposures arising on account of their interest rate and foreign exchange derivative
transactions and gold using the ‘Current Exposure Method’. Banks may
exclude ‘sold options’ provided that the entire premium/fee
or any other form of income is received/realised while computing the credit exposure.
(ii) Capital Adequacy: Computation of the Credit
Equivalent Amount 185. For the purpose of capital adequacy, all
banks, both under Basel I and under Basel II frameworks, shall use the ‘Current
Exposure Method’ to compute the credit equivalent amount of the interest
rate and foreign exchange derivative transactions and gold. (iii)
Provisioning Requirements for Derivative Exposures
186. Credit exposures
computed as per the current marked-to-market value of the contract arising on
account of the interest rate and foreign exchange derivative transactions and
gold shall also attract provisioning requirements as applicable to the loan assets
in the ‘standard’ category of the counterparties concerned. All conditions
applicable for treatment of provisions for standard assets would also apply to
the provisions for derivatives and gold exposures.
(iv) Asset Classification
of the Receivables Under the Derivatives Transactions
187. In respect of derivative transactions, any amount due to the bank which remains
unpaid in cash for a period of 90 days from the specified due date for payment
will be classified as non-performing assets as per the prudential norms on income
recognition, asset classification and provisioning pertaining to the advances
portfolio.
188. These modifications would come into effect from the financial
year 2008-09. Banks would, however, have the option of complying with the additional
capital and provisioning requirements arising from these modifications in a phased
manner over a period of four quarters ending March 31, 2009.
V. Institutional
Developments
Payment and Settlement Systems
(a) Payment and Settlement Systems Act, 2007
189. The Payment and Settlement Systems Act, 2007 (51 of 2007) and the Payment
and Settlement Systems Regulations, 2008 were notified and have come into effect
from August 12, 2008. The Payment and Settlement Systems Act stipulates that no
person other than the Reserve Bank shall commence or operate a payment system
except under and in accordance with an authorisation issued by the Reserve Bank
under the provisions of the Act. Accordingly, all persons currently operating
a payment system or desirous of setting up a payment system as defined in the
Act need to apply for authorisation to the Reserve Bank unless specifically exempted
in terms of the Act. All existing payment systems will cease to have the right
to carry on their operations unless they obtain an authorisation within six months
from the commencement of the Act (i.e., August 12, 2008). The Payment and Settlement
Systems Regulations, 2008 detail the form and manner in which the application
is to be made to the Reserve Bank for grant of authorisation.
(b) Regulatory Guidelines: Mobile Payments 190. As indicated
in the Annual Policy Statement of April 2008, the Reserve Bank had placed on its
website ‘Draft Operating Guidelines for Mobile Payments in India’
in consultation with banks and a few industry bodies for public comments. Following
a wide-ranging consultative process, operative guidelines were issued for adoption
by banks under Section 18 of the Payment and Settlement Systems Act, 2007 (Act
51 of 2007) with effect from October 8, 2008. Urban Cooperative
Banks
(a) Creation of Umbrella Organisation and
Revival Fund for Urban Cooperative Banks
191. As indicated in the Annual Policy of April 2008, the Reserve Bank
constituted a Working Group (Chairman: Shri V.S Das) to suggest measures, including
the appropriate regulatory and supervisory framework, to facilitate emergence
of umbrella organisation(s) for the UCB sector. The Group would also look into
the issues concerning creation of a Revival Fund for the sector. The Group’s
report is expected to be submitted by end-December 2008.
(b) Information Technology Support to UCBs 192.
As indicated in the Annual Policy of April 2008, the report of the Working Group
(Chairman: Shri R. Gandhi), constituted to examine various areas where IT support
could be provided to UCBs by the Reserve Bank, was submitted on April 17, 2008.
The report has been placed on the Reserve Bank’s website on August 13, 2008
for comments. Appropriate action would be initiated on the recommendations of
the Group based on the comments received. (c) Investment
in Government Securities for SLR Purposes by Non-scheduled
UCBs 193.Non-scheduled UCBs in Tier I
were exempted from maintaining SLR in Government and other approved securities
up to 15 per cent of their NDTL provided the amount is held in interest-bearing
deposits with the State Bank of India and its subsidiary banks and the public
sector banks, including Industrial Development Bank of India Ltd. It has been
decided: - to continue the exemption provided that with effect from
October 1, 2009 such exemption shall not exceed 7.5 per cent of NDTL. The exemption
will stand withdrawn effective from April 1, 2010.
In view of the
exemption, it has also been decided that: - Non-scheduled UCBs in
Tier I shall maintain SLR in the form of Government and other approved securities
not less than 7.5 per cent of their NDTL by September 30, 2009 and 15 per cent
of their NDTL by March 31, 2010.
- The current prescription
of holding SLR in Government and other approved securities not less than 15 per
cent of their NDTL in respect of non-scheduled UCBs in Tier-II shall continue
up to March 31, 2010.
- From March 31, 2011 onwards all UCBs (non-scheduled
and scheduled) shall be required to maintain SLR in Government and other approved
securities up to 25 per cent of their NDTL.
Non-Banking Financial
Companies Financial Regulation of Systemically
Important NBFCs: Review of Prudential Regulations
194. In 2006, regulatory guidelines covering the prudential norms for
systemically important NBFCs and banks’ relationship with them were put
in place. The Reserve Bank has been monitoring the functioning of systemically
important NBFCs and banks’ exposure to them. In the light of international
developments and increasing bank exposure to these systemically important NBFCs,
the Annual Policy Statement of April 2008 proposed to review the regulations in
respect of capital adequacy, liquidity and disclosure norms of these entities.
Accordingly, draft guidelines on systemically important non-deposit taking non-banking
financial companies (NBFCs-ND-SI) regarding prudential norms have been placed
on the Reserve Bank’s website for public comments. Taking into consideration
the comments received from the public, the final guidelines dated August 1, 2008
were issued. Committee on Financial Sector Assessment:
Developments 195. The Annual Policy Statement of April
2008 had outlined the progress made by the Committee on Financial Sector Assessment
(CFSA), constituted by the Government of India, in consultation with the Reserve
Bank, to undertake a comprehensive assessment of the financial sector. Since then,
the reports of four Advisory Panels constituted by the Committee covering assessment
of Financial Stability Assessment and Stress Testing, assessment of relevant international
standards and codes as applicable to Financial Regulation and Supervision, Institutions
and Market Structure and Transparency Standards were peer-reviewed by external
experts in each relevant area identified for the purpose. The CFSA also held a
two-day seminar in June and a one-day conference in July 2008 with the peer reviewers
and Advisory Panel members to discuss the major issues/recommendations of the
various Panel reports. The Panels have finalised their reports by appropriately
incorporating the comments of the peer reviewers. Simultaneously, the overview
report of the CFSA is also under preparation. It is expected that the four Advisory
Panel Reports and the overview report of the CFSA will be released by December
2008. Mumbai October 24, 2008 |