Villagers perform a dance while welcoming RBI Governor in Khurda village |
Friday, July 12, 2013
RBI cautions public against investing in illegal schemes
Welcome to bank licensing Derby - S.S.Tarapore
..........Given the impending change of guard at the RBI, it would not be desirable to constitute the Committee before early September 2013. In any case, the internal scrutiny will go on until October 2013. Furthermore, discussion with other regulators and agencies concerned would take some time. It would be desirable to have the external committee headed by a former Governor with members having experience in central banking, commercial banking, administration, legal and economics. The Committee should have the opportunity to examine each of the applications before them. It will take at least till March 2014 for the External Committee to tender its advice and the RBI top management to complete its assessment. Political economy compulsions would warrant that in the best interests of transparency of operations, final decisions are taken after due deliberation, say, in June-July 2014....................
Notes for Our Next Guv
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...............You may even earn kudos from people who perceive that you stick to your guns (even if they aren't loaded), never fished for another term (even if it wasn't on offer) and cussedly take on politicians — a clan whose credibility has hit a new low. Such are the times we live in. Duvvuri Subbarao fitted into these times, as Wodehouse would have said, like a map on the wall................ |
Obituary
I am sorry to inform about the sad demise of ex-RBI colleague Mr. M. Y. Rizvi (64) Retd. Assistant Manager, Foreign Exchange Department, Mumbai on 9th July 2013 after a long illness. May his soul rest in peace.
- A U Shaikh
Venkit's exit - a personal loss..........
I was extremely sorry to hear about the sad demise of Shri S.K.Venkitachalam.He was immaculate in his work , totally reliable and dedicated to his work. He was a man of great patience and remained unruffled even when faced with difficult situations. I will greatly miss him.
- S.S.Tarapore
If I remember right, Mr.Venkit was also PS to Mr.SS Tarapore when he was Deputy Governor. While he was always a good friend of mine, I had an opportunity of working closely with him in the IMF. While he was brought to IMF by Dr YV Reddy, after one year Dr Reddy came back to RBI as Governor. Knowing his nature and sincere work, Dr.Reddy's successor Mr.Misra continued to keep him as his administrative assistant. He retired from RBI while he was still working in IMF. Till his last days he was keeping good health. As per his wishes, he was cremated without any formal rituals. I was told that he conveyed to his family members that they should not weep that he lived his full life and he had done every thing to his satisfaction and death to him is as normal as to everybody else. To me, it is a personal loss of a lovely friend. May his soul rest in peace.
- K Kanagasabapathy
Very sad to hear the news of Venkat's sad demise. No words can mitigate the
sorrow which the family is undergoing today but we can all pray to God that
he gives them strength to bear this great loss. Venkat was a friend and an
excellent PS and a good soul , we will all miss him.
- Sandip Ghose
- Sandip Ghose
I just read the obituary on Mr S. K. Venkitachalam the former
PPS of the Governor’s secretariat. I am really at a loss, literally, because he
has been one of the persons in the Bank I have always remembered with a lot of
respect. I got acquainted with him only over the interview interaction at the
time of selecting him for the post of PPS. Till then I had only heard of him as
a very reliable and efficient officer in the Secretarial cadre. I personally owe
him gratitude as I later learnt that he had taken up an issue with his boss
while in ACD to get justice for me who at that time was a very new direct
recruit in my first posting in the Bank. He had personally never discussed it
with me. I had heard about it from a third person. I was very happy to hear
about his posting in Washington as I felt that his efficiency and sound
character were being validated and recognised. Though I have not been in touch
with him it always gave me a warm feeling to think about him. I will continue to
feel that but also sorry that he has passed on from amongst us in this world.
But I am sure he has moved on to a better place. My condolences to his family
who must be feeling the loss of such a good human being so much more deeply.
- Kamala Rajan
- Kamala Rajan
I was deeply saddened by the death of Shri S.Venkitachalamji. I remember his helpful advice to me while working with him.I want to offer my deepest condolences.
- M.N.Sawardekar
- M.N.Sawardekar
Compliance course to be started
.....Reserve Bank of India Deputy Governor K.C. Chakrabarty will launch this course in Mumbai in the presence of S.N. Ananthasubramanian, ICSI President and R. Bhaskaran, CEO, IIBF...........
Banks 10th Bipartite Settlement: UFBU Demands early wage settlement
.........UFBU has noted with serious concern the delay in wage revision negotiations in10th Bipartite Settlement. UFBU also concerned about the lack of seriousness on the part of Indian Banks’ Association (IBA) in taking up the issues raised by the Unions in the Common Charter of Demands.........
Sycophancy and Opaque Promotion Policies Are Biggest Risk for PS Banks
.......It will
not be wrong to say that present high level of NPAs is mainly due to sycophant
and dishonest promoted officers who have reached the top of the ladder. Although,
at this stage, CMDs, MoF officials, RBI officials are in a denial mode as
they are enjoying the cream, but they will realise soon when financial
crisis over takes these banks. (RBI has started realising the flouting of
KYC norms of banks ONLY after Cobrapost expose !). At the end
of every quarter CMDs of different banks announce that things will improve from
next quarter on NPA front, but it is going from BAD to WORSE with each passing
quarter. Our PM, FM and bank CMDs keep on blaming the global
scenario (SBI Chiarman is in the habit of putting all blames on RBI Governor
and non reduction of CRR / non payment of interest on CRR) for all the
ills of NPAs........
Vitamin G
..............In other words, there's nothing substantive the government or the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) can do about the rupee. It is currently (July 8) resting on a pivotal support and may take a breather, perhaps even recovering a (very) little bit of ground. But with global markets seemingly stuck in perma-hurricane season, any respite would likely be short-lived. What they can - and should - do is infuse some strong vitamins into the country's economy. Vitamin S (for sentiment) is critical but, with credibility extremely low, stocks are near zero - the good news is that Vitamin S quickly regenerates itself once it finds the right trigger. The only other treatment - the silver bullet - is Vitamin G (for growth). The RBI should immediately cut interest rates by one per cent, with perhaps a booster dose in a few weeks.
Making bankers pay for failed gambles
........Several commissions have gone into the financial crisis and proposed reforms. These relate mostly to issues of capital, scope and size in banking. It has taken a parliamentary commission to look into the inner workings of banks and focus resolutely on the accountability of bankers and bank boards. The Commission’s report goes to show that banking reform is too important to be left to regulators and bankers and that parliament, as the representative of the wider interests of society at large, has a great deal to contribute. The RBI should consider taking many of these proposals on board. Indian banking has been dominated thus far by public sector banks, which are intrinsically risk averse and more amenable to direction by government and the regulator. This has made for a certain stability in Indian banking.............
Bankers demand interest on CRR
Indian Banks Association (IBA) today demanded a cut in cash reserve ratio (CRR) and repo rate in pre monetary policy consultations with Deputy Governors of Reserve Bank of India. K R Kamath, chairman, IBA and chairman and managing director, Punjab National Bank said, “we have requested that if RBI can give some interest on CRR, it will be most welcome.” RBI will announce its first quarter monetary policy review on 30 July...........
Banks seek lower tenure for non-resident deposits
...............“We have requested that if the minimum investment period on FCNR and NRE deposits can be reduced to at least six months, it will help us bring some more dollars into the country,”.......
Difficult to predict rupee fall reversal: Subbarao
......."The rupee depreciation over the last six weeks has been because of global factors .... It is difficult to say how long that effect will persist because it is factors beyond our control,"............
A rate surprise?
The Reserve Bank of India is to announce its monetary policy on 30 July, a good cue to look at what other central banks in the developing world are up to.........
RBI's cosmetic measures fail to stem rupee fall
..........What these moves suggests is that RBI is running out of options in controlling the currency. Its tightening of controls are seen as signs of the central bank trying to hold the reigns tightly. An economy that has managed to control its current account deficit by inflow of ‘hot money’ in equity and debt market is now paying the price when the reverse flow has started. .........
The taming of the rupee...
......While the RBI notification states “risk management” as the subject of the regulation, the Sebi circular mentions no reason for carrying out the measures. Apart from these formal notifications, there have been some other eclectic interventions in the markets by RBI. State-run oil companies have been asked to meet their dollar requirements from a single bank (July 9). It seems banks were asked not to make predictions about the rupee in their forecasts to the public. The harsh reality is that these actions will not help stem the fall of the rupee; in all probability, they make things worse................
Small steps
........... The rupee’s vulnerability to a range of market and generic fiscal imbalances need tougher policy measures. Currency and markets cannot be kept buoyant solely on RBI and SEBI support.
The rupee tempest scuttles fiscal math
It was going well for the government to keep the fiscal math in order. Inflation levels were easing to less than 5 per cent and tax collections were expected to rise. But the near 12 per cent depreciation in rupee against the dollar since the end of April has spoiled the party..........
Another sorry quarter for public sector banks
.......As has been the norm in the past few quarters, public sector banks, struggling with their legacy non-performing assets, burdened under political compulsions to lend to the priority sector and pressured by the diktats of the finance ministry to cut lending rates, are left holding the wooden spoon...........
Food Bill — not what the stomach ordered - Charan Singh
.........So, there may be a need to evaluate the segments of the incremental population to be covered by the Food Security Bill and undertake a survey of tax payers whose money will be used for providing such food security. This exercise is feasible given the Internet penetration, and support of on-line voting services available with most media channels. Once the mood of the general public is gauged, such schemes in a democracy can be justified and successfully pursued........
Are Banks Responsive to Credit Demand Shocks in Rural Economies?
......... Undoubtedly, poor rainfall causes idiosyncratic shocks to income and consumption of the households in the rural sector of India and in other emerging economies, which in turn creates shocks to credit demand. It results in a high cost of credit and pervasive rural indebtedness, notes Rakesh Mohan, an erstwhile Deputy Governor of the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), in an RBI paper in 2006. His observation suggests lack of responsiveness of the commercial banking system to credit demand shocks. However, it is a commonsense observation based perhaps on his experience, but not on an empirical analysis of extensive rainfall and farm credit data. From time to time, the financial press and other media outlets in India have also reported isolated instances of the effect of poor rainfall on bank credit availability. But so far there has been no systematic study................
No room for rate cut on Jul 30 due to Re plunge: Crisil
The rupee depreciation is likely to hurt the inflation fight and restrict the Reserve Bank from cutting its policy rates at the forthcoming monetary policy review by month end, says ratings agency Crisil. "If the rupee averages at 58 to the dollar this fiscal, average headline inflation could rise to 6% compared to our baseline call of 5.3%. This leaves little room for monetary easing despite the sharp slowdown in GDP growth," Crisil said in a report today..............
Dealers can exploit holes in trading curbs
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) and Sebi's moves to curb speculation in the currency derivatives market have left several loopholes that traders can still exploit, raising demands for further checks. To begin with, exchanges are interpreting the rules differently even when the norms are applicable................
RBI may revise WPI inflation estimate upwards: Economists
..........But according to economists the RBI's projection for WPI may be revised upwards soon. “Upward revision of WPI numbers from RBI is on cards. Whether they will do it immediately or after monsoon assessment, that depends,” said Rupa Rege Nitsure, chief economist, Bank of Baroda. Nitsure's projection for WPI inflation for 2013-14 is a tad above 6%. Earlier she was expecting it to be 5.3%............
RBI may ask banks to classify floating provisions as NDTL
.....Sources from the banking circle said that RBI is likely to ask banks to treat floating provisions as a part of net demand and time liability - on which banks are mandated to maintain cash reserve ratio and statutory liquidity ratio.............
NBFCs want status quo over private placement norms
........NBFCs are lobbying with RBI to lift maximum investor cap as well as minimum investment amount. They say if someone has done something wrong, why should someone who is doing business genuinely should suffer? The reference was towards Sahara Group and Saradha Group. While Sahara has been ordered to refund the depositors money, Saradha investors’ money is as good as lost and there is bleak possibility of recovery...............
Rajan may meet global banks on possible foreign debt sale
The government plans to meet as many as eight banks as it weighs selling debt abroad to raise dollars and help steady the rupee, according to finance ministry officials. The meeting, which could be held as soon as Friday, is a brainstorming session to assess the feasibility of such sales, the officials said, asking not to be identified as the move is confidential...........
Why you shouldn’t position portfolios based on central bank policies
................RBI has time and again acted against market expectations. India’s central bank has either raised rates sharply or cut rates sharply even as markets were expecting moderation. RBI’s focus has shifted continuously with the Rupee (INR) being the primary focus now while growth and inflation have taken a back seat. The INR trading at all time lows has prompted the RBI to curb speculation and put on hold monetary easing that is necessary for the country’s growth. RBI’s focus could change suddenly if the threat to growth is high. Bond markets in India have always lost when trying to double guess RBI’s policy moves.............
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