Friday, August 26, 2011

Comparing RBI’s monetary policy with Fed, Bank of England and ECB..

This is a wow speech from Deepak Mohanty of RBI. It is worth a Phd theses by itself.. The speech compares the operating framework of monetary policy of three top central banks with RBI. We usually look at monetary policy as a policy which changes rates to manage inflation. That is surely the purpose but mechanics of implementing the policy differ vastly across central banks. This mechanics is called the operating framework which includes liquidity facilities, bank reserves, ways to change policy rates etc.

RBI: Inflation remains high, could hurt growth

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) warned on Thursday against accepting high inflation as the "new normal," adding that the outlook for the country's industrial sector remained uncertain amid high input costs and weak global conditions. In its annual report for 2010/11, the RBI added that despite the recent correction in global oil and commodity prices, inflation remained high and could hurt growth. The RBI, which has raised interest rates 11 times since March 2010 but still faces inflation above 9 percent, said becoming resigned to high inflation could push up inflationary expectations in the long term and ultimately lead to a hard landing for Asia's third-largest economy. The RBI expects inflation to remain high in the near term but start easing in the October-December period, although its inflation forecasts have consistently proven to be optimistic over the past year. "As inflation starts going down and remains within a negative trajectory, which is what we are anticipating post-November-December, that changes the overall perspective on the growth-inflation balance," Subir Gokarn, the bank's deputy governor, said, commenting on the report.  While a U.S. credit rating downgrade this month has raised global growth worries, RBI Governor Duvvuri Subbarao has warned that upside risks to India's inflation were more pressing concerns for the short term, and it was too soon to change the central bank's anti-inflationary policy stance. Still, the RBI report said a further slowdown in global growth could put downward pressure on India's growth projection, which the RBI estimates at 8 percent for the fiscal year that ends in March. "The outlook for the industrial sector in 2011/12 remains uncertain, with the downside risks outweighing the upside risks," the RBI said. The Reserve Bank also said India needed to raise fuel prices further, to contain the burden of subsidies if global oil prices stay at current levels. India raised subsidised fuel prices in June for the first time in a year. The RBI also said that though India had adequate foreign exchange reserves to handle external pressures, its current account deficit could be under pressure if the global economy weakens. India's current account deficit improved to 2.6 percent in 2010/11 from 2.8 percent the previous year and is expected to be within 3 percent in the current fiscal year of 2011/12.
Reuters

JV inked to indigenize banknotes production

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has started a joint venture (JV) with a banknote security printing agency in Mysore to indigenize currency note production even as there is a significant increase in detection of counterfeit notes in banks. RBI is also conducting a pilot project to introduce plastic notes of Rs.10 in select locations even as a study on the possible environmental impact of such a move is being done. The JV between Bharatiya Reserve Bank Note Mudran Pvt. Ltd and Security Printing and Minting Corp. of India Ltd will seek indigenization of paper, ink and other raw materials for production of banknotes.  The facility will have an annual capacity of 6,000 tonnes to start with, RBI said in its annual report, released on Thursday. India imports the raw materials for its currency notes. In 2010-11, the security printing charges for banknotes decreased by 13.7%, or Rs.378 crore, mainly on account of a decrease in the supply of banknotes in certain denominations, RBI said. The cost of security printing in 2010-11 stood at Rs.2,376 crore compared with Rs.2,754 crore a year earlier, RBI data showed. According to the annual report, the number of fake notes detected in the system has increased significantly in fiscal 2011 over previous years.  In 2010-11, 435,607 fake notes were detected, compared with 401,476 in 2009-10 and 398,111 a year before that. About 90% of these notes were detected at banks and the rest in RBI. “Counterfeit banknotes detected during the year were higher in magnitude on account of heightened awareness among banks and increased use of note-sorting machines,” RBI said. All currency chest branches of banks have such machines and banks are required to issue notes in the denomination of Rs.100 and above after checking them through such machines. Till April, banks had installed 4,091 sorting machines and also arranged to issue machine-processed notes for another 1,823 branches. Notes in the denomination of Rs.100 and above are required to be sorted through machines in branches before reissue to the public. Apart from adopting other steps to check “the menace of counterfeit banknotes”, RBI also launched a campaign to educate the public about the security features of banknotes. The advertisement campaign is run on Doordarshan channel. “Future plans include campaigns through various media (such as) other TV channels, radio, newspapers, etc.,” the annual report said. However, a 9 August Mint story, quoting a confidential government report, found flaw in RBI estimates of counterfeit currencies. A white paper on the status of fake Indian currency notes, prepared jointly by the Intelligence Bureau, Research and Analysis Wing, Directorate of Revenue Intelligence and the Central Bureau of Investigation​, had found that four in every 1,000 currency notes in circulation in India are fake, amounting to as much as Rs.3,200 crore in 2010. The report is confidential and is a first-ever attempt to estimate the quantum of counterfeit notes in India. Mint has reviewed a copy of the report that was submitted to the government in June. Fake currency comprises 0.0004-0.0012% of banknotes in circulation, it cites RBI as saying, which is four in every one million, much lower than the white paper estimate.
Mint

Two banks select FRSGlobal to meet the Reserve Bank of India’s automated reporting obligation

Regulatory reporting solution chosen to enable automated dataflow directly from the banks to the regulator in time for the August deadline.  FRSGlobal, part of Wolters Kluwer Financial Services, a leading worldwide provider of compliance and risk management solutions for the financial services industry, today announced that the Indian arms of two major global banks’ have opted for its regulatory reporting solution in order to help them meet the Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI) requirements for automated reporting.  The RBI announced its proposal to ensure accuracy and integrity of dataflow across the Indian banking system with the publication of its approach paper in November 2010. The first stage of this process requires banks to automate five returns by 31st August 2011.  “The RBI has clearly outlined the steps banks in India need to follow in order to submit accurate and timely data without manual intervention,” said Prabhat Gupta, country manager at Wolters Kluwer Financial Services in India. “In order to fully automate the process for submission of returns, firms need an end-to-end solution in place that acquires, integrates, converts and submits the relevant data directly to the regulator. Our solution addresses all of these points, which is a key reason why two multinational banking groups have selected it to support them in meeting the impending requirements.”  “With the first set of deadlines fast approaching, we are inevitably seeing an increase in the number of vendors entering the marketplace with their various offerings,” commented Steve Thurley, vice president of Asia Pacific and Japan, Wolters Kluwer Financial Services. “What sets us apart is that our established solution set is easily configured to address the points outlined by the RBI. We view this - twinned with the fact that two prestigious banking groups have chosen our solution – as further confirmation behind our business logic.” 
http://www.bobsguide.com/guide/news/2011/Aug/25/two-banks-select-frsglobal-to-meet-the-reserve-bank-of-indias-automated-reporting-obligation.html

Tackling fiscal deficit

The recommendation of the author in “Right time for RBI to sell gold” (Business Line, August 24) is a pretty ordinary reaction of a bystander. Imagine, if you say that your land has gained 500 per cent in value in the last five years, any ordinary person will ask you to sell it and make a profit. They can give you 100 ways of investing the profits.  The author also has done that. He has made simple calculations of book profit and tried to show his intelligence in proposing how the profits can be used. He forgets to understand that once used to contribute to reduce fiscal deficit in any particular year, it will give relief to that year only, while the gold is gone permanently. The theory is also against our traditional, conventional Indian rationale that we don't buy gold to make profit but to provide stability.  Gold in the Reserve Bank of India's coffers is better than dollars or any relief for fiscal deficit.
Altaf Rahman (BS)

IIFT 6th National Finance Symposium 2011

Reviewing the rules governing Employees Provident Fund, Public Provident Fund and National Savings Certificates is pointless

The government's decision to ask the Financial Sector Legislative Reforms Commission (FSLRC) to review the rules governing schemes like the Employees Provident Fund, the Public Provident Fund and National Savings Certificates is a classic case of putting the cart before the horse. Doubtless, many of the rules relating to these schemes have become outdated and need overhaul. But the basic problem is not with the rules per se as with the schemes themselves. These schemes were framed in an altogether different milieu, well before reform and financial liberalisation, and are an anachronism today.  For instance, the rate of interest paid under the EPF and small savings schemes is unrelated to market rates. The Central Board of Trustees decides the rate of interest on PF balances while that on small savings is fixed by the government. The net result is when interest rates in the economy are falling, there is an implicit subsidy involved since the administered rate exceeds the market rate.  And when rates are rising, as at present, those with money in small savings instruments end up getting less than the market rate. Administered interest rates interfere with the transmission of monetary signals, weakening the efficacy of monetary signals. It is more important to revamp the schemes and then frame new rules for the revamped schemes rather than expend time and energy framing new rules for schemes that need overhaul in the first place.

Several expert committees, starting with the R V Gupta committee back in the 1990s, the Y V Reddy committee, the Rakesh Mohan committee and most recently, one headed by Shyamala Gopinath, former deputy governor of the RBI, have looked at the small savings schemes and made their recommendations. They want to link the interest rate to market-determined rates. So, there's a blueprint in place. We need to translate it into action. However, since the beneficiaries of these schemes belong to the vocal middle class, governments have baulked at action, preferring to buy time instead. The decision to rope in the FSLRC seems to be yet another instance of that.
ET

Bankers trash Subbarao's proposal on splitting CMD post

Central Bank of India organises All India Rajbhasha meet

R K Dubey, Executive Director, Central Bank of India addressed the ' All India Rajbhasha Meet' organised by the bank as a part of its centenary year celebration, at Bhopal. Sanchalak Mantri, M P Rastrabhasha Prachar Samittee, Dr. Kailash Chandra Pant was honored at the occasion. Also present were GM, Rajbhasha, and Atul Agrawal. The function marked the launching of the official website of Tolic Bhopal. Speakers at the occasion included Sanjay Dwedi, Harish Singh Chouhan, Vijay Dutt Sridhar, U P Singh and Rakesh Khare. Also present at the occasion were S K Gupta; AGM, RBI, Rani Durve; Kavya Gosthi; Usha Jaiswal; Chandraprakash Jaiswal; Dinesh Prabhat and General Manager, Central Bank of India, Bhopal, Kumkum Gupta.
FPJ

Is it time to buy India? - Akash Prakash

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has been the most aggressive central bank in the world in normalising rates.....

Committee to re-examine the existing classification and suggest revised guidelines with regard to priority sector lending classification and related issues

The Reserve Bank of India has set up a Committee to re-examine the existing classification and suggest revised guidelines with regard to priority sector lending classification and related issues.
Shri M. V. Nair, CMD, Union Bank of India will chair the Committee. Other members of the Committee include,
  1. Dr.P.K.Mishra, IAS (Retd.), Former Secretary, Ministry of Agriculture and Co-operation, Government of India
  2. Smt. Nupur Mitra, ED, Indian Overseas Bank
  3. Smt. Sreya Guha, Director, Ministry of Finance, Department of Financial Services
  4. Shri Rajiv Sabharwal, Executive Director, ICICI Bank Ltd.
  5. Shri V. Ramakrishna Rao, Executive Director, NABARD
  6. Shri N.K.Maini, Deputy Managing Director, SIDBI
  7. Shri J K Sinha, Chief General Manager, State Bank of India
  8. Shri N C Khulbe, General Manager, Bank of India
  9. Shri Pranab.K.Roy, General Manager, United Bank of India
Dr. Deepali Pant Joshi, CGM-in -Charge, RBI, Rural Planning and Credit Department will be the Member Secretary. The Committee will submit its report in four months from the date of its first meeting.

An account for all, courtesy financial inclusion!

...When you consider that access to finance by the poor and vulnerable groups is a prerequisite for poverty reduction and social cohesion, it’s clear as to why the country's apex bank, the Reserve Bank of India, has charted out guidelines for all banks to bring in more people into the banking network. The RBI also pulled them up for the tardy job done so far, saying that they should not indulge in mere ‘lip service’ of financial inclusion. Also, for this initiative to work, the government needs to play a facilitating role in the process. ....

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Difficult year ahead for economy, cautions RBI

....“Should global recovery weaken, global commodity prices may decline further, which may have a positive effect on domestic inflation. But till that starts happening we should not anticipate and draw comfort from it,” said Dr Subir Gokarn, Deputy Governor, RBI......

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Household savings hit 13-year low; dip to 9.7% of GDP

MUMBAI: India's household savings, which have fuelled growth over the last few years, have dropped to below 10% of gross domestic product, or national income, for the first time in 13 years, as soaring inflation ate into disposable incomes.  Net financial savings by Indians, which include deposits with banks and non-banking finance companies, cash, investment in stocks, debentures and small savings instruments besides life insurance, provident fund and pension funds, dipped to 9.7% of GDP in FY11 compared with 12.1% a year ago, as per data released by the Reserve Bank of India on Thursday. "This is because household financial liabilities have risen," according to Deepak Mohanty, Executive Director, RBI.  The central bank has attributed the decline to slower growth in bank deposits and life insurance funds as well as an absolute decline in investment in equities, mainly driven by redemption of mutual fund units.  The last time net financial savings as a percentage of GDP dipped below 10% was in 1997-98 when it fell to 9.6%.  What has really impacted savings by individuals and small businesses is rising prices.  Higher prices have forced them to spend more on daily expenses and also on loan repayments.  Headline inflation was over 8% in FY11, which forced the RBI to raise rates aggressively, but the latest data confirms that rising prices have hurt households, with a higher share of disposable incomes being marked for spending rather than salting it away as has been the trend during the past few years. With negative returns on deposits in real terms because of high inflation and sharp slide in stocks, there could have been reallocation of financial savings to non-productive assets such as gold.  Powered by an annual average growth of over 8% between 2004 and 2008-09, India's savings rate surged to over 30% of GDP, including both physical and financial assets. This fuelled investments in the economy, thus helping reduce dependence on foreign capital.  India, along with China, had seen a secular trend in savings growth over the last decade with consumers saving more as incomes rose in keeping pace with economic growth. However, rising inflation has impacted this with the burden of higher loan repayments after several bouts of rate increases.  The RBI, in its annual report released on Thursday, said households' financial liabilities have risen reflecting higher borrowings from commercial banks. Besides, persistently high inflation, relatively slower adjustment of bank deposit rates, and volatility in Indian equity markets - impacted by global macroeconomic uncertainties - affected the level and composition of net financial savings of the household sector, it said.
ET

RBI spikes finmin demand to ease infra funding rules

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has rejected a government proposal to relax single and group exposure norms on bank lending to infrastructure companies. The central bank has communicated to the finance ministry that current exposure norms on infrastructure financing in India are liberal enough. ...........

Reserve Bank's forecast for inflation

RBI Deputy Governor Subir Gokarn talks about the Reserve Bank's forecast for inflation in the coming months.....

CBS implementation: RRBs could get extension, says RBI

Reserve Bank Deputy Governor H.R.Khan today said Regional Rural Banks (RRBs) which are investing in Core Banking Solutions (CBS) can get an extension if there is a need to provide it. "If there is a need, we will look at that. If you tell from now that we we will give extension, the momentum would be lost. So, if there is a need, we shall look at an extension (of the September deadline)," he told reporters on the sidelines of a Ficci-IBA event here.  An RBI committee had suggested that all RRBs move to the core banking platform by September 2011, a move that would help these banks undertake 90% of their business on this platform. The committee noted that difference in computerisation level among different RRBs would have to be taken into account for any technology upgrade. The panel had suggested an application service provider model for the CBS platform. The sponsor banks were given the option to choose their own service provider for their RRBs. Yesterday, during the same summit, National Bank for Agriculture & Rural Development (Nabard) chairman Prakash Bakshi had said he expected RRBs to miss the September deadline for implementing the CBS platform by three months. Bakshi had added that Nabard was providing an assistance of 40% from the Financial Inclusion Technology Fund to the RRBs to adopt the CBS platform.
HT

RBI to promote use of cashless payment system

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has taken measures to promote the use of cashless payment instruments in the country, a senior official said Thursday. “The RBI has been in the forefront both as operator and facilitator for promoting the use of cashless payment instruments in the country,” RBI Deputy Governor H.R. Khan said at a conference organised by the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FICCI) and the Indian Banks' Association here. “The technology implementation in banks which have shaped the payment system in turn is largely driven by the recommendations of the various committees set up by RBI,” he said.  Khan said the development of payment system in the country depends on various issues including the adoption of technology, introduction of new payment instruments and the confidence of the public in using these payment instruments. In India cash still continues to be the predominant payment mode. This can be gauged from the fact that value of bank notes and coins in circulation as a percentage of narrow money is very high at 60.07 percent for the year 2009-10 as compared to 18.51 percent in South Africa, 18.83 percent in China and 39.14 percent in Mexico.  Narrow money includes all physical money like coins and currency along with demand deposits.  “This is a pointer that we have been relatively slow in embracing cashless payment modes and using them as cash substitute,” Khan said.  “The pre-dominant use of cash could also be attributed to the fact that the process for adoption of non-cash mode of payments started relatively late in the country,” he added.
Prokerala News

Rising wage bill pushes RBI expenses 16%

Rising wage bill pushed up the establishment expenditure of the Reserve Bank by about 16 per cent to Rs 2,300.71 crore during 2010-11 (July-June). The establishment expenditure during the financial year increased by Rs 313.89 crore mainly "due to the revision of wages of all categories of staff with retrospective effect", said the RBI's annual report released today. In 2009-10, the expenses were Rs 1,986.82 crore.
Expressindia

Growth prospects for 2011-12 subdued: RBI

... “Downside risks to growth have increased since our assessment in July. The decline in global commodity prices has not been significant, and despite all the financial market turbulence, oil prices are back to earlier levels,” RBI Deputy Governor Subir Gokarn said, while releasing the report.....

High inflation, low deposit rates force people to hold on to cash

High inflation coupled with low bank deposit rates saw currency holding in financial savings of the household sector rise significantly in 2010-11, according to the Reserve Bank of India's Annual Report 2010-11. The gross financial savings increased to Rs 10,43,977 crore from Rs 9,91,582 crore in 2009-10. Of this, the share of currency increased substantially to Rs 1,39,344 crore, from Rs 96,940 crore, an increase of Rs 42,404 crore. As against this, the share of deposits increased to Rs 4,93,237 crore (Rs 4,67,575 crore), a rise of Rs 25,662 crore. According to the report, several factors could explain the growth in currency demand in India in 2010-11. Inflation remained high, often in double digits, in respect of commodities such as foodgrains, pulses, fruits and milk during 2009-10 and 2010-11 where transactions are expected to be cash-intensive. Second, there was a step-up in real economic activity from 6.8 per cent in 2008-09 to 8.5 per cent in 2010-11. Third, the interest rate on bank deposits was generally lower than inflation during 2010-11 implying a negative real rate of return on deposits.  In the years when inflation was relatively high, currency demand shot up significantly.  However, the situation has reversed in 2011-12. Currency demand has come down because deposit rates have gone up, said Mr Deepak Mohanty, Executive Director, RBI. The share of households' financial assets to GDP fell to 9.7 per cent in 2010-11, from 12.1 per cent in 2009-10. This is the first time in 15 years that the share of households' financial assets to GDP fell below 10 per cent.  Due to high inflation people dipped into savings for consumption. This was evident from redemptions in mutual funds, Dr Gokarn explained.
HBL

Downside Risks to Growth Rising, No Hard-Landing: RBI

The Reserve Bank today warned against accepting high inflation as the 'new normal', and said more downside risks to growth are emerging even as inflation remains very high, but ruled out any possibility of hard-landing of the domestic economy.

"The outlook for the domestic industrial sector for this fiscal remains uncertain, with the downside risks outweighing the upside risks," RBI Deputy Governor Subir Gokarn told reporters this afternoon here while releasing the central bank's Annual Report for the year ended June 2011. "However, we are not seeing any hard-landing, which will be a possibility if the economy falls behind the trend growth of 8 percent," the Deputy Governor said adding accepting the sticky inflation as the new normal would not help serve the economy in the long term. Growth prospects for this fiscal are "relatively subdued" compared with the previous year because of the increased global uncertainties, persistent inflationary pressures and higher borrowing costs, the report said and noted that "the economy needs to brace up for a difficult year from a macroeconomic perspective. With weak supply response, inflation remains an important macroeconomic challenge." Stating that growth is likely to remain at 8 percent this fiscal, with a downward bias and lower than 8.5 percent clocked in FY11, the report warns that if the global financial condition deteriorates, it could further lower the growth projections in the current fiscal. "Growth prospects for FY12 seem to be relatively subdued compared to the previous year due to a number of unfavourable developments. Global uncertainties have increased," the report said. "While the immediate challenge to sustaining growth lies in bringing down inflation, growth sustainability over the medium-term depends on addressing the structural bottlenecks facing the economy," Gokarn said. Inflation, which still remains high despite near average monsoon, the Deputy Governor said, "our anti-inflationary stance as presented in the July 26 policy remains the same, while on the growth outlook front there have emerged more downside risks since then and now."  However he added, "as inflation starts going down (in view of the softening global commodity prices following the worsening debt crisis in the US and the Eurozone) and which is what we are anticipating post-November-December, that changes the overall perspective on the growth-inflation balance." The RBI, which has raised interest rates 11 times since March 2010 by increasing the repo rate by a whopping 475 basis points, out of which 350 bps hike have been in FY11 alone, but still faces inflation above 9 percent, said becoming resigned to high inflation can push up inflationary expectations in the long term and ultimately lead to a hard landing for Asia's third-largest economy. Core or wholesale-price inflation rate has stayed over 9 percent since December last and stood at 9.22 percent in July, while weekly food inflation numbers have been seeing lots of volatility of late after softening in the first quarter of this fiscal. Food price numbers inched closer to double-digit mark for the week ended August 13 and rose to 9.80 percent on the back of dearer vegetables, up from 9.03 percent in the previous week. However, this is much lower that the number for the corresponding week of last August when it stood at 14.56 percent. "On a year-on-year basis, inflation may remain stubborn in the near-term and start falling sometime in the third quarter of 2011-12," said the RBI report, which reiterated the Reserve Bank's inflation forecast of 7 percent by the end of March 2012. When asked on the possible impact of a likely third round of quantitative easing (QE3) by the US Fed, (which is meeting tomorrow), Gokarn said, it may boost commodity prices and fan inflation in the country and noted that already crude prices have started going up. "Given the fiscal limitations and growing signs of weakness in the US, the Fed has already indicated that it will pursue its near-zero rate policy at least till mid-2013. It has also hinted at another dose of quantitative easing. This policy stance may keep the commodity prices elevated," the RBI said in its annual report. The upside risks to inflation are more pressing concerns for the short-term, and it is too early to change the central bank's anti-inflationary policy stance, added the report. On the fiscal measures to contain inflation, Gokarn said the government needs to raise fuel prices further, to contain the burden of subsidies if global oil prices stay at current levels, which if rises further would burden the fiscal target. Despite the rising threat to GDP growth, the report said, it doesn't not see any major pressure on the current account deficit front, which stood at 2.6 percent of GDP last fiscal. "The quality of foreign capital inflows into the country this fiscal has vastly improved as the first quarter has seen strong FDI inflows, unlike last year, and so we are of the view that the CAD position should be comfortable. But if the robust exports growth gets impacted very badly due to the slowing global growth, it may pose some challenges," Executive Director Deepak Mohanty said. The current account deficit(CAD) improved to 2.6 percent in 2010/11 from 2.8 percent the previous year and is expected to be within 3 percent this fiscal.
The Outlook

RBI annual report hawkish: Does it indicate a rate hike?

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) annual report which takes a comprehensive look at the economy has warned of a tough 2011-12. It remains hawkish on inflation and worried about growth. In the near term it asks the government to qualitatively improve fiscal consolidation. In the long term it questions the 12th plan’s 9% GDP target and says much will have to be done to improve the economy potential growth. CNBC-TV18's Latha Venkatesh reports on what this means for the rate scenario going ahead? Going by the hawkish overtones, it is quite possible that the Reserve Bank of India will hike rates. It says that in FY11 fiscal deficit came down to 4.7% from 6.5% in the earlier year only because of one of reasons and a cyclical upturn in the economy created by fiscal stimulus, without that they would not have been able to achieve it.  It points out that the level of expenditure by the government actually created aggregate demand and made monetary policy’s task of bringing down inflation much more difficult.  Going from current assessment it also points out that capital outlay of the government is coming down. “Even at a time when the expenditure was way up high and fiscal deficit was high, capital outlay as a percentage of GDP in FY11 actually declined to 12.9% from the earlier years’ 13.8%,” the report said. It says that any enthusiasm of 9-9.5% brought about by the 12th plan’s targets needs to be smothered as already there is a global growth scare. If you want 9-9.5% growth the current 33-33.5% savings rate should increase to 38% or thereabouts, so increase by 5% points and the investment rate should go to 40.5% only then that is achievable.  So, at the moment potential of the economy needs to improve before you get such dreams.
Moneycontrol

Scope to simplify forex norms

The Report of the Committee to Review the Facilities for Individuals under FEMA, 1999 (August 2011) was submitted to the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) within the stipulated period of three months. In a milieu where committees/working groups invariably violate the stipulated timeframe, the Chairman of the Committee, Ms. K. J. Udeshi, deserves kudos for strictly adhering to the time limit.........

RBI’s earnings on forex hit another low; gold is the savior

The Reserve Bank of India’s hoard of foreign exchange is increasingly a losing proposition. If, in 2009-10 the central bank earned a meagre return of 2.09 percent on its average foreign currency assets, in 2010-11, it was down to an even more abysmal 1.74 percent. In actual terms, the earnings fell from Rs 25,103 crore to Rs 21,150 crore – a fall of Rs 3,953 crore on average foreign currency assets of over Rs 12 lack crore in both years. This sorry state of fund management is the result of holding huge exchange assets in US dollars – which is, in turn, the result of the Federal Reserve’s deliberate policy of keeping interest rates at near-zero levels in view of weak growth. The only bright spot in the RBI’s external fund management was its gold reserves. Thanks to an inspired decision to purchase 200 tonnes of gold in November 2009 from the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the RBI made a huge valuation gain of Rs 17,613 crore in its gold reserves, which went up from Rs 92,704 crore as on 30 June 2010 to Rs 1,10,317 crore a year later. The RBI’s financial year runs from 1 July to 30 June.
Firstpost

Nabard refinancing rates won’t come easy, results count

....The Reserve Bank of India (RBI), of late, has been asking banks to step up their priority sector lending. Under current regulations, banks are required to lend 40 percent of their loans to agriculture, exports and other sections recognised as priority sectors.......

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Madhavpura Bank gets life, conditions apply

Infamous for Ketan Parekh scam and several other crisis plaguing it, Madhavpura Mercantile Cooperative Bank (MMCB) has got yet another lease of life. Regulator of banks, Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has reappointed the same board at the bank to be chaired by Radha Singh, retired IAS officer and ex-secretary to government of India in department of Agriculture and Cooperation. The board received an indefinite extension from RBI On Tuesday, the board has got indefinite extension from RBI with a motive of not leaving culprits including Ketan Parekh, free. But simultaneously, RBI has restricted the bank by imposing Article 35 A on MMCB. By putting Article 35 A on bank, MMCB can not accept new deposits as well as the account holders can not withdraw more than Rs1,000 in six months. Hardly 100 people have invested Rs60 lakh in MMCB in last 10 years, on whom the restriction is imposed. Rest, the Article 35 A will not be barrier to bank either for revival or for reconstruction. But by getting extension to board of MMCB, the hopes of investors getting their money back is alive again. As many as 10,400 account holders have been waiting for their Rs100 crore for past 10 years. "It is good news for investors that they can still get their money back. RBI has reappointed the same board and now the co-operative bank can once again put pressure on Ketan Parekh for recovery," said Jyotindra Mehta, chairman of Gujarat Urban Cooperative Banks Federation (GUCBF). So far, Ketan Parekh has already paid around Rs400 crore in installments in last three years but the remaining amount of around Rs800 crore is yet to be recovered. In the Ketan Parekh scam, MMCB is supposed to recover around Rs1,200 crore which includes interest. Bank is yet to pay around Rs100 crore to around 10,400 account holders in Gujarat. 
DNA

Speak Asia COO fears re-arrest by police from other states may petition SC

... Speak Asia had asked for an appointment with the RBI and accordingly the central bank had fixed a meeting for 24th August, in the second half of the day. However, on the morning of 24th August, Speak Asia sent an email to the RBI saying that since its officials were in jail, the meeting be postponed to another date. Speak Asia had to get an order from the Bombay High Court to fix an appointment with the RBI. ....

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