Friday, July 29, 2011

Well-crafted monetary policy - S. S. Tarapore


Unswerving in their anti-inflationary stance…
The RBI Governor, Dr Subbarao, with his team
Expectations that inflation would taper off have been belied. Therefore, the RBI has rightly prioritised inflation control over other objectives. Both, industry and banks are unlikely to be hurt by the rate hike.

The RBI Governor, Dr D. Subbarao's Monetary Policy announcement on July 26, is one of the very best policy statements from the Reserve Bank of India in recent years. The policy is unswerving in its anti-inflationary stance and the guidance is unequivocal. The policy does not look for kudos but is focused on RBI's dharma of inflation control. Expectations that inflation would taper off have been belied and, therefore, the RBI has prioritised inflation control, overriding all other objectives. The GDP growth in 2010-11 is estimated at 8.5 per cent and, in all probability, this estimate would undergo an upward revision. Thus, growth is exploring its limits.

HIKE NOT EXCESSIVE

The current inflation rate is, however, a great worry and embarrassment to the RBI, with a year-on-year increase at the end of June 2011 of 9.4 per cent. The revised number could well end up in double digits.  As against the earlier projection of inflation at the end of March 2012 of 6.0 per cent, the RBI has now had to raise this to 7.0 per cent, and there are fears that if domestic and international conditions turn unfavourable, the inflation rate at the end of March 2012 could be much higher.  The current inflation rate is way above the RBI's comfort zone of 4.0-4.5 per cent. Furthermore, the inexorable integration with the world economy would require that in the medium-term, the RBI would need to work towards a much lower inflation rate of 3.0 per cent. The RBI has taken a bold step to raise the repo rate from 7.5 per cent to 8.0 per cent and the Marginal Standing Facility rate from 8.5 per cent to 9.0 per cent.  This measure would not go down well with India Inc. as well as banks. But while any borrower would like to get credit as cheaply as possible, it needs to be recognised that the 0.50 per cent increase in the repo rate would not be disruptive. The average interest cost in industry is around 10 per cent of total costs and an increase of 0.50 per cent in interest cost would raise overall costs by 0.05 per cent. In the case of interest-sensitive sectors, let us assume that interest cost is 20 per cent of total costs; a 0.50 per cent rise in interest cost would raise the overall cost by 0.10 per cent. Thus, the overall impact on total costs would be insignificant. As a general rule, banks are more comfortably placed when interest rates are rising than when they are falling. This is essentially because the increase in interest cost impacts faster on average effective lending rates than on average effective deposit rates; the reverse applies when policy rates fall. It is paradoxical that banks moan when policy rates rise and make merry when policy rates fall!

ENTRENCHED INFLATION

Many policy observers have pointed out that when deposit rates are higher than the RBI policy rate, the RBI becomes the lender of first resort rather than the lender of last resort, as it should be. Thus, in the current Indian context there was an obvious case for a rise in the policy rate. The RBI has indicated that it would review policies if the growth rate and the inflation rate fall precipitously. There is, however, only a remote possibility of the growth rate falling below 7.5 per cent in 2011-12 and the inflation rate falling below 5.0 per cent. The fear, if any, is that the inflation rate would be uncomfortably high as reflected in the RBI's projection for March 2012 of 7 per cent.  Market players need to appreciate that the present repo rate of 8.0 per cent cannot be the end of the policy rate increases.  Global uncertainties, the monsoon and other domestic uncertainties point to the fact that the policy interest rate would need further increases in September and October 2011, particularly as inflation is getting wedged in strongly, and the longer one waits the more difficult it is to eradicate inflation from the system. The policy statement makes an important point that in the last decade, the average inflation rate had moderated to around 5.5 per cent. Given the present unacceptable inflation rate, the RBI has reiterated its strong view that controlling inflation is imperative both for sustaining growth as also increasing the potential for growth in the medium-term.  While the policy measures and their articulation are par excellence, we need to give some thought to the use of a measure which would render the monetary policy more effective.  The RBI could have considered a moderate increase in the cash reserve ratio (CRR) which would then have eased the pressure on the interest rate instrument.  It is important for market participants to understand and appreciate the thrust of the July 26, 2011 policy, as it would be a watershed in the emergence of monetary policy as an effective tool of overall economic policy.
HBL

iCreate Software announces RBI guidelines-compliant automated data flow solution for banks

Bangalore: The RBI with a vision of ensuring accuracy and integrity of data flowing from the banking system to the regulator recently released an approach paper on Automated Data Flow (ADF-a straight through process) from various transactional systems of the banks to RBI. Bangalore-based, iCreate Software announced reporting solution BizScoreto enable banks comply with RBI's Automated Data Flow guidelines. A packaged BI/analytics solution built specifically for banks, Biz$corefeatures an Extraction Transaction Loading (ETL) layer integrates with core and transactional banking systems, and extracts data from these systems and loads into a Consolidated Data Repository (CDR) which is engineered for automated generation of RBI returns through pre-built reporting templates. Vivek Subramanyam, CEO, iCreate said, "We are extremely happy about the release of Biz$core's RBI ADF solution that in addition to helping banks become ADF compliant will provide a robust platform to build and deploy industry leading prebuilt Banking Business Intelligence & Analytics solutions to benefit their business stakeholders. At iCreate, given that we are India based, we are delighted to partner with Indian banks on our award winning Banking BI solutions while we continue to see significant traction globally as well." Banks accelerate their RBI's Automated Data Flow solution implementation, iCreate held a webinar on 5 July that focused on topics like 'highlights of RBI's Automated Data Flow requirements and the implications for banks', 'Complexity and intricacies around ensuring compliance', 'Solution options based on each bank's context',' Highlights of Biz$core RBI ADF solution'. 
Siliconindia News

Financial inclusion crucial to counter terrorist financing

.....Financial inclusion is so important to countering the financing of terrorism and it brings those who normally use cash or the black market into the formal financial system at an affordable cost......

CIMP meet calls for financial inclusion of rural poor

PATNA: An international conference on 'Financial Inclusion and Economic Growth - Theory and Evidences' here on Thursday stressed on ensuring timely and adequate credit through microfinancing to the rural poor and low-income group people at affordable rate.  The conference was held under the aegis of Chandragupta Institute of Management (CIMP). The participants included the representatives of RBI, Nabard, microfinance institutions, NGOs, acamedicians, technology providers, government departments and universities, including those from the University of Central Lancashire, UK. Inaugurating the conference, development commissioner K C Saha said that most of the rural poor do not have accounts in banks. A large number of them are still in the clutches of moneylenders. He said that they should be linked to microfinance institutions through self-help groups (SHGs) for providing finance to them, so that they become productive and wriggle out of the clutches of moneylenders. He said that in Darbhanga and some other North Bihar districts, many SHG members had utilized the money received through microfinancing for paying back their loans to moneylenders. In his keynote address, professor, development finance and public policy, UCLAN, Lancashire, UK, T G Arun, mentioned the highlights of his research work 'Determinant of Access to Finance: An Intervention into the Mzansi Intervention in South Africa". He said that Mzansi accountholders viewed the account mainly as a vehicle for receiving payments. Even after becoming financially literate, they did not have the aspiration to move up the financial ladder.  The chief executive officer of Bihar Livelihoods Promotion Society, Arvind Chaudhary, stressed on the need for adequate and timely credit for the rural poor at affordable interest rate. He added that financial counselling to the beneficiaries was vital. He invited CIMP and other groups for their involvement in livelihood programmes.  CIMP director V Mukunda Das said that in Bihar, high financial inclusion was needed. He said that 62.5 lakh rural people have 'no-frill account' (account opened with zero balance) through microfinance in Bihar. He expressed hope that this success in financial inclusion would continue. DGM, Nabard, Pradip Kumar, stressed on harnessing microservice finance institutions for inclusive growth in the state.
TOI

Banker's Trust

Free market not good for small borrowers - K.C.Chakrabarty

RBI cautions RRBs on dealing with overseas entities

The Reserve Bank on Thursday asked all Regional Rural Banks to follow due diligence while dealing with transactions from persons and entities in eight countriers — Bolivia, Cuba, Ethiopia, Kenya, Myanmar, Sri Lanka, Syria and Turkey. The bank cited a 2011 statement from the Financial Action Task Force — the inter-governmental body working to develop national and international policies to combat money laundering and terrorist financing — which cautioned countries regarding the risks associated with these nations. “All RRBs are accordingly advised to take into account risks arising from the deficiencies in anti-money laundering /combating the financing of terrorism regime of these countries, while entering into business relationships and transactions with persons (including legal persons and other financial institutions) from or in these countries/ jurisdictions,” the RBI said in a notification. According to it, FATF has these eight countries as having not made sufficient progress in addressing the deficiencies associated with AML/CFT and they have not committed to an action plan developed with the FATF to address the issues. “The FATF calls on its members to consider the risks arising from the deficiencies associated with each jurisdiction as described in the statement: Bolivia, Cuba, Ethiopia, Kenya, Myanmar, Sri Lanka, Syria and Turkey,” it said. The FATF had also identified Iran and North Korea with regard to deficiencies in AML/CFT regime and the RBI had earlier cautioned RRBs in this regard.
HBL

Using third-party ATMs? Find out how customer-friendly they are!

Over the last couple of years, the way you carry out your banking transactions has changed a lot, particularly via the new-age, technology-enabled platforms. Be it making payments online, swiping your cards at shopping outlets or withdrawing cash from ATMs (automated teller machines) - all routine transactions have become more user-friendly and secure, if not foolproof.  This is thanks largely to the Reserve Bank of India's regulations to strengthen the safety infrastructure for such transactions and the steps taken by banks to encourage the use of such alternative channels instead of bank branches.

Islamic banks draw attention

THIRVANANTHAPURAM: The aggressive revision of interest rates by Reserve Bank of India, its eleventh upward hike since March 2010, could give an unintended boost to a fledgling business the central bank has never been enthusiastic about; Islamic banking. With interest rates threatening to go beyond the reach of the common man, the interest-free Islamic banks in the state are attempting to position themselves as an alternative source of finance. “Under the existing system, a customer is forced to bear a cost for which he is not responsible,’’ says Tanvir Mohidheen, the Chief Operating Officer of Alternative Investments and Credit Limited (AICL), a Shariat-compliant entity. Islamic banks, according to Tanvir, insulates the consumer from the frequent shocks administered by the RBI. Islamic banks primarily have two ways of providing home and auto loans. One is the ‘cost + margin model’, ‘murahaba’ in Shariat parlance. Here, the Islamic bank purchases the house or car for a costand then fixes a ‘negotiated’ margin. The customer will then have to pay the cost and the margin as monthly instalments. The margin never changes unlike in the case of the mainstream banking system where there are floating or market-sensitive interest rates. The second is the ‘musharaka’ model. The bank will provide 70 per cent of the finance to purchase a car or a home. This means, to purchase a car worth Rs. 6 lakh, the bank will provide Rs. 4.2 lakh. So, for a repayment period of five years, the consumer will have to pay a monthly instalment of `7,000. This is not all. The bank will fix a monthly rent, which will be half the existing market rent. “The best part of this model is that the liability comes down with every monthly payment,’’ Tanvir said. In contrast, for car loans in the mainstream banking sector the current interest rates hover between 12 and 13 per cent. So, for a `6-lakh loan for five years, the customer has to pay an EMI of over Rs 13,000 a month at 12 per cent. And now this is all set to shoot up with banks forced to revise their prime lending rate following the RBI’s higher-than-expected hike in repo rates. Economic experts predict a 16-18 per cent rise in interest rates. Former Finance Minister and economist T M Thomas Isaac, who was instrumental in starting the debate about Islamic banks in the state, says that in periods of rising interest rates, Islamic banks emerge as a cheaper alternative. “The finance is not market-driven and the repayment is fixed in moral terms,”Isaac said. However, economists such as Pulapre Balakrishnan and D Narayana are highly skeptical. Narayana says Islamic banking is just a drop in the ocean. “It cannot be of any purpose as long as it is just a miniscule part of our financial system,’’ he says. CDS director Pulapre Balakrishnan is even dismissive. ‘’Interest-free banking offers no solution whatsoever. It is simply not acceptable that certain banks, just because they don’t charge interest rates, are not amenable to RBI’s monetary actions which are generally carried out for public good,’’ Balakrishnan said.
IBN Live

Inflation and RBI’s role

This refers to the edit “No pain, no gain” (July 27). Your call for the central bank and the government to put their heads together to contain inflation is timely. The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has been very active in changing monetary policy, but the government’s dormant role is quite regrettable. RBI has, for the first time, warned the central government about the absence of complementary measures — supplyside management and corrective fiscal policy. Considering that the monetary authority was forced to revise its inflation target to seven per cent (from six per cent announced in May) by March 2012, the central bank should persuade the government to revisit the issue of its responsibility to contain inflation. There is no point in continuing to use monetary tools to curb a trend that has more to do with fiscal and supply issues.
KV Rao, Bangalore (BS)
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) seems bent on a single-point formula to beat inflation — which is to increase lending rates. For the past several months, RBI has been increasing the lending rates and this has had no effect on inflation. The manufacturing sector, which borrows from the market, is increasing prices to cover the financial cost. And traders will do the same thing leading to a vicious cycle that will ultimately affect the common man. RBI and the government seem to have run out of ideas. Can eminent economists in India suggest some useful and effective ideas?
V.Vedagiri, Chennai (BS)

RBI’s policy will affect the common man

This refers to the steep & more than expected increase in the policy rates by 0.5 bps by the RBI. RBI’s 11th Repo & Reverse Repo hike, since last 16 months is sure to suffocate the economy. The policy rates have been revised from 3.25 % to 8 % during the last 16 months. The upward revision will have cascading effect on the prices of food, fuel & products under the manufacturing sector. Still worse will be the immediate impact of the policy rates on the rate of interest on Housing Loans, Auto & Personal loans. RBI is repeating its mistakes without addressing the real issues on the supply chain & the lag effect of the data itself.  The knee jerk approach of the RBI will adversely impact the GDP at the macro level & the misery of the common man at the grass root level.
S Narendra, Bangalore (Deccan Herald)

Andhra Bank expects pressure on NIM after RBI rates hike

Hyderabad : City-based public sector lender Andhra Bank today said there could be some pressure on its Net Interest Margin (NIM) and credit off take in the short- term range, following a hike in key policy rates by RBI. The bank reported a net profit of Rs 386 crore for the quarter ended June 30 in FY 12, up 20.63 per cent over the same period last fiscal. The pressure on NIM could be in the range of 15-20 basis points for the present quarter, the bank's Chairman and Managing Director R Ramachandran said. "I presume that there will be an impact of 15 to 20 basis points during this quarter. Beyond that what will happen in the remaining quarters depend on how things will happen," Ramachandran told mediapersons here after announcing the first quarter results. The NIM stood at 3.77 per cent for the first quarter as against 3.72 during the Q1 of the previous fiscal. To a query, Ramachandran said the bank will take a call on increasing interest rates after a meeting with officials of assets and liability teams. On the demand for credit, he said there will be some slow down in the credit off take due to interest rate hike. "I anticipate a little bit slow down going forward and there is possibility that the credit growth in the remaining one or two quarters will be slower. Generally, the industry shows slow down in the credit growth," the banker said. The bank's total income stood at Rs 2,851 crore in the quarter, up 37.53 per cent over last year, while operating profits are at Rs 700 crore as against Rs 510 crore during the corresponding quarter in the last year.
IBN Live

2G: Yashwant Sinha wants to summon Chidambaram for probe

With A. Raja dragging Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and P. Chidambaram in the 2G case, BJP leader Yashwant Sinha has asked Joint Parliamentary Committee (JPC) Chairman P.C. Chacko to summon the Home Minister as a witness before the committee. Several other members of the Joint Parliamentary Committee have written to Mr. Chacko with requests to make various former Finance Ministers as witness before the panel looking into the 2G scam. Besides former Finance Ministers, at least four members have suggested that RBI Governor and former Finance Secretary D. Subbarao be made a witness. Mr. Sinha wrote to Mr. Chacko on Wednesday requesting him to include the name of Mr. Chidambaram as a witness. “I am collecting all the letters and the Committee will take a decision by consensus on whom to be called...the politicians which include former Telecom Ministers and former Finance Ministers will appear before the Committee at the end,” Mr. Chacko told reporters after the JPC meeting.
HBL

Govt must heed warning by RBI

The message from Tuesday’s monetary policy announcement by the Reserve Bank is that we will have to live with inflation and moderating growth for some more time due to a combination of domestic and global factors. The RBI has in fact revised its wholesale price index up to seven per cent for March 2012, against the six per cent it projected in May. This is due to rising crude prices, domestic demand-supply factors and the likely demand scenario in the months ahead. The fuel price hike in May/June this year will add 70 basis points to WPI inflation as a direct impact, and much more indirectly. There are also hidden inflationary factors like higher coal prices in future, which can lead to higher power tariffs. Commodity prices are unstable globally, and a constant source of inflationary pressures. But the nagging question that remains is whether the RBI’s monetary policy is the only weapon available to control inflation. It has been noted that since March 2010, the repo rate (that at which the RBI lends to banks) has been hiked by 2.25 per cent, while inflation has declined in this period by less than one per cent — from 10.3 per cent to 9.4 per cent. Inflation remains stubbornly high, but growth is decelerating. The RBI has said there is no evidence yet of a sharp or broad-based slowdown, but there are signs that growth is moderating, particularly in interest-sensitive sectors. The RBI’s controlled exasperation over the government’s ineffectiveness in controlling inflation is spelt out clearly in the monetary policy document. It makes it clear that the RBI was forced to take harsher measures in “the absence of complementary policy responses on both the demand and supply sides”. This is a reference to the absence of appropriate government action to deal with supply bottlenecks, specially in food and infrastructure, as a result of which inflation is going up.  Sound policies are needed to keep the supply of various products — particularly essential items — in pace with demand. We have only been hearing from the government about demand rising due to increased wages and earnings in rural India, but very little on what is being done to boost supply. The RBI, for instance, has warned that if the rains are not even in different parts of the country, and crops like coarse grains and pulses and protein-rich items are affected, food inflation will rise further.  One hopes the government is listening, and will arrange for imports if there is a shortfall in the production of these items. The agriculture and food and civil supplies ministers cannot say they have not been warned.  India has huge foreign exchange reserves, and such imports, done in time, can prevent spiralling food inflation. The government must act on several fronts — taking both fiscal and administrative decisions swiftly — if inflation is to be controlled. The other critical issue is the fiscal deficit, which could overshoot the government’s 4.6 per cent target.  Fiscal consolidation is critical to managing inflation, the RBI noted, but the government is yet to cut down on frivolous and unproductive spending, which are inflationary, and invest in badly-needed infrastructure. 
Deccan Chronicle

Multi-pronged strategy

This is with reference to “Record output, stubborn prices” (Business Line, July 28). It is pertinent to note that prices of perishable items, such as vegetables, are steadily increasing. The rate increase of RBI has had no effect on this. An acceptable argument is that a healthy GDP growth, together with benefits of socially-inclusive government schemes, is putting more money into the hands of the common man and thus consumers are migrating from low-income to middle-income groups and hence, the fast growing demand is outstripping the supply response.  Right at the time when the global economy is showing a nascent recovery, which could assist manufacturers, we are increasing the cost of capital to this sector. The RBI rate increase at this critical juncture could be a two-edged sword. No one step will be able to bring inflation under control. The government must adopt a multi-pronged strategy to contain inflation. Agricultural reform must go hand-in-hand with tuning up fiscal and monetary policies.
R. Narayanan, Ghaziabad (HB)

Anti-inflationary stance

A hike in the key policy rates by 50 basis points has certainly taken the markets by surprise. The central bank has retained the economic growth estimate at 8 per cent for the current fiscal but has raised its March-end inflation projection to 7 per cent from 6 per cent. The current level of inflation, at 9.44 per cent, is well above the RBI's comfort zone of 4 per cent. The monetary policy stance, therefore, continues to be anti-inflationary and it is clear that the RBI is prepared to sacrifice growth in the near-to-medium term for the sake of moderating inflation.  True, the frequent rate hikes aren't good for the country, as it will slowdown economic activities, but if the past is any indication, let's understand that the central bank is in the right position to judge things and make policy initiatives to take the economy forward.
S. Umashankar, Nagpur (HBL)

RBI bolt to elevate pain? Motilal AMC sees market slump

"The market is likely to fall and test the lower end again, as reforms from the government’s side would be incapable in offsetting the losses caused from RBI’s steeper-than-expected policy rate tightening,"

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Policymaking marred by incorrect data

....Dr. Subbarao has included in his critique not only the index of industrial production (IIP) numbers (which, he said, showed “counter-intuitive trends”), but also the data on unemployment and wages, growth and inflation – all of which, he regretted, “do not inspire confidence (and) on some instances led to off-the-mark estimates on the economy…(and) policy miscalculations”! .....

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RBI Extends Credit Relaxations in J&K by One Year

To encourage trade and industry in Jammu and Kashmir, the Reserve Bank today extended concessions to bank customers in the state till March 31, 2012......

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