Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Banks can now open branches in Tier 2 cities without RBI nod

Mumbai: Reserve Bank Tuesday relaxed branch authorisation policy, allowing banks to open administrative office or service branch in cities with population of over 50,000 but less than 1 lakh without its approval. "Now that general permission to banks has been extended for opening of branches in Tier 2 centres, domestic scheduled commercial banks (other than RRBs) will be allowed to open administrative offices and central processing centres (CPCs) or service branches in Tier 2 centre (with population 50,000 to 99,999 as per Census 2001)," the RBI said in a notification. Thus, a bank can open such offices in the Tier II cities without permission from the central bank. The decision was taken as it was observed that branch expansion in Tier 2 centres has not taken place at the desired pace, it said. As per the existing regulation, such relaxation is already available to banks in case they want to expand their presence in Tier 3-6 cities.
Zee News

Cooperative banks in the city safe, now

NAGPUR: Depositors in urban cooperative banks (UCBs) in city may rest assured of the safety of their money - at least for now. After prolonged financial crisis resulted in three cooperative banks in city being shut down causing huge loss to depositors, Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has declared finally there is no cooperative in the city having a negative networth. This means no bank faces a fate similar to Nagpur Mahila, Samata Sahakari and Parmatma Ek Sevak, which have been de-licensed and facing RBI embargo on withdrawals for more than three years. Moreover, this situation is not because the weak banks have been wiped out. It is because banks have over time shown consistent improvement in financial parameters, said a source in apex bank. Negative networth means the banks' losses are more than its owned funds that include share capital and profit reserves. The situation has improved in banks within Nagpur RBI office jurisdiction that covers Vidarbha and Marathwada. There were 22 banks with negative networth in March 2009. The number was halved by March 2011. It came down to eight in October 2011. A couple more are likely to come out of the red soon, said a source. None of the eight banks still in the red is from Nagpur.
TOI

Saraswat Co-op ups savings bank rate to 6%

Urban co-operative banks could be spurred into action as the country's largest co-operative bank, the Saraswat Co-operative Bank, has taken the lead in announcing a hike in savings bank deposit rate from 4 per cent to 6 per cent. The effective annualised interest rate for Saraswat Bank's SB depositors will work out to 6.14 per cent as interest will be credited at quarterly intervals. Irrespective of the deposit amount, the UCB will pay 6 per cent interest on all SB deposits with effect from December 1. The bank may revise the interest rate on SB deposits once in six months. The increase in interest rate on SB deposits by the co-operative bank comes in the wake of Reserve Bank of India's notification (on November 25) allowing UCBs the freedom to set the interest rate on SB deposits. On October 25, the central bank had deregulated savings bank deposit interest rate for all commercial banks.  “In the current rising inflation rate environment, bank depositors are getting a raw deal. Hence, we decided to increase the interest rate on SB deposits. Our intention is not to wean away customers from other banks but to give a better deal to our existing customers,” said Mr Eknath K. Thakur, Chairman, Saraswat Co-operative Bank. According to Dr Vinayak Y. Tarale, Secretary, Maharashtra State Co-operative Banks' Association, following the increase in SB deposit rate by Saraswat Bank, other urban co-operative banks may not have much choice but to follow suit.
HBL 

Savings account freedom fails to excite most banks

In a month since the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) freed the interest rates on savings bank account, only a few small banks have been able to take advantage of the policy change. Most of the big banks have remained uneffected..........

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Govt launches 10-year NSC; to give 8.7 pc interest

...The decision to raise the maturity period of NSC has been taken on the basis of the recommendations of the Committee for Comprehensive Review of National Small Savings Fund (NSSF), headed by Shyamala Gopinath, the then Deputy Governor of Reserve Bank of India....

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Now, electronic transfer of grants and subsidies

........The implementation of the project was discussed by the Collector at a meeting on Thursday in which Reserve Bank of India (RBI) Assistant General Manager A.J. George, Lead District Manager KN. Subramanian and other senior officials took part.

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Experts see reversal of RBI rate-hike spree

...“If we do see inflation rates coming off as we expect, we could be looking at the peaking of the cycle,” said RBI deputy governor Subir Gokarn last fortnight, referring to the monetary authority’s policy outlook. “Let me emphasise it’s a guidance, not a commitment. There are many risks to that scenario.”.....

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RBI helped rein in inflation: FM

The Centre, on Tuesday, said it has pursued prudent fiscal measures to boost slowing Indian economy, but strongly defended Reserve Bank of India’s monetary stance to tame inflation, saying price rise would have been much higher if the rate hikes were not resorted to. The unfolding euro zone crisis and slowdown in US could be one of the reasons for India’s growth slowing, but economic fundamentals are strong…The government is keeping a close watch on the situation,” Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee told the Rajya Sabha in a written reply.India’s overall economic growth slowed to 7.7 per cent in the April-June quarter against 8.8 per cent in the same quarter last year. Economic experts have blamed persistent inflation, repeated monetary tightening, together with deceleration in of industrial production as the factors responsible for slower growth in the first quarter. They said the global economic environment, particularly the lingering euro zone crisis, has added uncertainties.The government, however, said that it was the monetary action by the RBI, which has have helped contain inflation and anchor inflationary expectations, although both remain at an elevated level. “In the absence of increase in Repo Rate by RBI, inflation would have been much higher and credit growth would have expanded much faster, thereby fuelling inflation,” Minister of State for Finance Namo Narain Meena said. The government’s defence for RBI has come at a time when the Central bank has almost been isolated in its fight against inflation, which hovered precariously close to 10 per cent, one of the highest among major economies in the world.  The RBI, which has raised key short term rates as many as 13 times in the past two years, has been facing stiff opposition from many quarters for its hawkish stance. The India Inc. has criticized the rate hike saying it is unlikely to tame rising inflation and could instead lead to further slowdown in investments and industrial growth. Some of the policymakers too have expressed their reservation towards further tightening of rates when the economy is facing global headwinds. 
DH

Tight liquidity limits RBI role in forex market

Market talk suggests that the Reserve Bank of India stepped into the foreign currency market on Monday to check a steep fall of the Indian currency, but it could not prevent it from closing at an all-time low. Executives manning some of the largest treasury operations in India said RBI has been intervening in the currency markets for the last few weeks, something it had refrained from doing for nearly a year when the rupee hovered in the 44-45 range to the greenback. Just like during the height of the global financial crisis in September-October 2008, RBI Governor D.Subbarao has limited ability to dictate how the rupee moves this time too. Whenever RBI asks banks to step in on its behalf, the public sector players supply more dollars into the market, hoping that they would stem a decline. During this exercise, they also buy rupees from the market and end up reducing the supply of the Indian currency. So, with less cash available in the system, there is every possibility that interest rates, even if it is in the short-run, rise. Given that liquidity is tight with banks borrowing over Rs 1.27 lakh crore through RBI's overnight lending window, the central bank would not like to drain more cash from the system. While RBI remained silent on Monday, the government acknowledged that the authorities had limited ability to intervene and stem the rupee's slide. "The rupee cannot slide beyond a point. Ability to intervene (in the forex market) is also limited," economic affairs secretary R Gopalan told reporters.
TOI

RBI to conduct another OMO of R10,000 cr to ease liquidity

...The OMO announcement came after the market trading hours. “Consistent with the stance of the monetary policy and based on the current assessment of prevailing and evolving liquidity conditions, the Reserve Bank of India has decided to conduct open market operations, ” the central bank said in a statement on Tuesday.....

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Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Use mobile telephony to expand banking in rural areas: Rangarajan


Dr C. Rangarajan, Chairman, Prime Minister’s Economic Advisory Council, flanked by Mr Anand Sinha (right), Deputy Governor, RBI, and Mr S. Sambamurthy, Director, Institute for Development and Research in Banking Technology, at the IDRBT Foundation Day in Hyderabad on Monday
Hyderabad, Nov. 28:  Banks should piggyback on the mobile telephony platform to provide banking services to rural households, said Dr C. Rangarajan, Chairman, Prime Minister's Economic Advisory Council. Delivering the Foundation Day lecture on role of technology in development of banking at the Institute for Development and Research in Banking Technology (IDRBT) here on Monday, he said over 700 million mobile connections could be used for authentication and conducting banking transactions. Mobile banking has huge potential and the stakeholders need to collaborate much more proactively for common benefit. Saying that technology provides the scope for affordable financial inclusion, Dr Rangarajan said: “The best way offered for inclusive banking would be through the twin-routes of mobile banking and the banking correspondent model.” The technology should also be harnessed to increase electronic transactions as against paper-based clearing. Banks should develop in-house IT skills and broaden the IT management to achieve consolidation and minimise costs, he said. To ensure continuity of services and safety of data in times of unexpected crises, banks should put an adequate business continuity plan for technology-related matters, Dr Rangarajan said. Mr Anand Sinha, Deputy Governor, Reserve Bank of India, and Chairman of IDRBT, said the institute was focussing on applied research and use of analytics and customer-relationship management in banking.  “IDRBT can function as a centre of excellence in developing cost-effective technology for banking and look for collaborative research projects,” Mr. Sinha said. The emerging technology such as cloud computing could be used by a group of smaller banks to reduce costs, he said. Mr B. Sambamurthy, Director of the Institute, said collaborative research with reputed institutes such as University of Hyderabad was one of the focus areas. IDRBT, which is celebrating its 15th anniversary, had developed many technology- based applications for banks, including the national financial switch, structured financial messaging system for communication between banks.
HBL 

Swaps Signal Subbarao Reversal as Slowdown Deepens: India Credit

Reserve Bank of India Governor Duvvuri Subbarao may reverse Asia’s steepest increase in interest rates in the coming year as the third-largest developing economy slows, money-market indicators show.....

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Check antecedents of business correspondents before hiring, RBI tells banks

Hubli, Nov. 28: Banks should ensure that business correspondents (BCs) be appointed after exercising due diligence regarding their antecedents and necessary training given to them, said Ms Uma Shankar, Regional Director, Reserve Bank of India. Addressing the regional heads of banks and bankers operating in north Karnataka, State Government officials and NGOs, Ms Shankar said the banks should monitor activities of BCs by conducting frequent visits and analysing audit trail.  Banks should also work on setting up some form of low-cost brick and mortar branches i.e., intermediary branches, between the base branch and BC locations.  She complemented the SLBC for setting up of the Karnataka State Farmers’ Resource Centre (KSFRC) with active co-operation and participation of 10 banks and other stakeholders, which include the State Government. Ms Shankar, later attending horticultural mela, organised by the Horticulture University, Bagalkot, told the audience on various initiatives taken by the RBI on financial inclusion front such as ‘Project financial literacy’ and release of comic book series such as ‘Raju and Money Kumar series’ to create awareness on financial literacy amongst the students and common people. She also attended a workshop of SHG members and small entrepreneurs, organised by Karnataka Vikas Gramin Bank (KVG Bank).
HBL

Govt banks' top deck reshuffles on the cards

Large public sector lenders like Bank of Baroda, Bank of India and Canara Bank and mid-sized lenders like Allahabad Bank and United Bank of India would see their chairmen and managing directors (CMDs) hanging up their boots in the next financial year. Along with the CMDs, five-six executive directors would also retire or be promoted as CMDs in the next financial year. The government has already initiated the process of filling up the top posts. The government has asked banks to furnish the details of general managers who would be eligible for promotions. A general manager who has held the post for three years and has two years of residual service would eligible for promotion. The government follows the process of lateral transfer for CMD appointments in large government banks, though there were exceptions in the past. This would mean current CMDs of smaller banks would be given charge of Bank of Baroda, Bank of India and Canara Bank. In the case of Allahabad Bank and United Bank of India's top jobs, executive directors would be promoted. Candidates who completed one year in a bank as an executive director, with two years of residual service, are eligible for promotion. Among current CMDs of smaller banks, Arun Kaul of UCO Bank, T M Bhasin of Indian Bank and M Narendra of Indian Overseas Bank would be eligible to take charge of a large bank. A candidate of a smaller bank needs to be a CMD for at least a year to be eligible for the CMD’s post of a large bank. The government would also conduct interviews for selecting a managing director for State Bank of India, which has a provision for four managing directors. It currently has three. Three deputy managing directors, Shyamal Acharya (associates and subsidiaries), Arundhati Bhattacharya (corporate development) and Santosh Nayar (corporate banking), would appear for interviews for the post of managing director, along with S Vishvanathan, managing director and chief executive officer of SBI Capital Markets. SBI sources said the selection of the fourth managing director was important, as the candidate would be a contender for the chairman's post once the term of current chairman P Chaudhuri ended in September 2013. The other three managing directors would not be eligible, since they would not have two years of residual service.
BS

VITALINFO - Extremely useful for retirees...........

 

VITALINFO - Sense of commitment..........

VITALINFO - Commendable efforts.............

 

PSU banks: Should govt set profit targets for them?

...The finance ministry wants banks to lift their return on assets (RoA) to 1.5 percent by 2015 from 0.96 at end of 2010-11. One way of improving the RoA is to reduce bad loans. However, the RBI wants banks to pass on the benefit of reduced bad loans in the form of lower interest rates for borrowers....

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RBI restraint on forex mkt was credit-positive

In the absence of interim dividend receipts, government has to look at alternatives to achieve 4.6% fiscal deficit. The Union finance ministry is banking on dividends from cash-rich central public sector units (PSUs), financial institutions and even the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) to prevent its finances from going awry. It is asking all these bodies to pay a higher dividend to tide over its lack of money. The move is in contrast to a trend in the private sector, as companies are likely to pay less dividend this financial year to shareholders than in 2010-11. The Budget estimate for revenue in 2011-12 from PSU dividends and financial institutions is Rs 42,623 crore, lower than the revised estimate of Rs 48,727 crore for 2010-11. However, the ministry is expecting a higher payout, especially from RBI. Of Rs 42,623 crore, Rs 23,494 is budgeted from PSUs and Rs 19,129 crore from RBI, nationalised banks and financial institutions. “We are talking to them to pay dividends on higher side. Ultimately, the decision will be taken by the boards of these institutions,” said a ministry official. As the government is a majority shareholder, it benefits when government institutions declare higher dividend. In June, the finance ministry had asked all these bodies to remit their dues correctly. It started monitoring the payouts well in advance, unlike earlier years, and asked them to strictly adhere to the prescribed guidelines on payment of dividends. These rules say all profit-making PSUs should declare a minimum dividend of 20 per cent of net profit or equity, whichever is higher. The minimum dividend payout for companies in oil, petroleum, chemical and other infrastructure sectors is 30 per cent. Many PSUs, however, deviate from the guidelines and pay less dividend. In the absence of interim dividend receipts, the government has to look at alternatives to augment tax revenue, other non-tax revenue and non-debt capital receipts, to achieve the fiscal deficit target. The government’s revenue under the ‘dividend and profits’ head was Rs 21,230 crore in 2002-03. It was Rs 38,607 crore in 2008-09 and Rs 50,248 crore in 2009-10, when the economy was slowing. The government had pinned hopes on dividend income, as it was facing a cash crunch due to the measures taken to come out of the slowdown. On the other hand, the aggregate dividend payout by corporate India may be lower in 2011-12 than in 2010-11. Only 75 companies had declared an interim dividend in the first half of the current financial year, as compared to 107 in 2010-11. Dividend payouts by PSUs and financial institutions could be a substantial source of non-tax revenue for the government, at a time when it is trying to restrict its fiscal deficit to 4.6 per cent of the GDP.
BS

Bad loans have seen a sharp rise over the last three years

... Studies have shown that NPA growth lags bank credit growth by two years as it takes time for the excesses during a credit boom to turn into bad loans. According to the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), if 25% of restructured advances turn into NPAs, the gross NPA ratio would be 3% and if 100% turn into NPAs, then the ratio would be 5%.....

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ED issues show-cause notices to BCCI, SBT

... ED found that BCCI did not receive RBI approval to transfer money to the account in South Africa though SBT. SBT did not follow the required due diligence process before executing the transfer when the lender was supposed to verify RBI clearance and the end use of funds, said the ED official cited earlier.....

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‘Bank on Wheels’ launched in Meghalaya

Shillong : The State Bank of India on Monday introduced “Bank on Wheels” in Meghalaya to provide banking facilities to its customers and especially to 4,500 unbanked villages in the State. The programme, as part of financial inclusion plans of the Central government and Reserve Bank of India, was launched by SBI managing director A Krishna Kumar at a function at SBI main branch premises here on Monday morning. Meghalaya Rural Development Society (MRDS) will operate the “Bank on Wheels” for SBI in implementing the project and motivate people in unbanked villages to open bank accounts. Established to oversee mobilization of Social capital, MRDS is implementing livelihoods programme in five districts of the state - Ri-Bhoi, East Khasi Hills, Jaiñtia Hills, East Garo Hills and South Garo Hills. “The bank on wheels will go to interiors with the help of MRDS to motivate people to open bank accounts. There’s no specific target, but will try to cover at least five villages in a week and try to contact as many people as possible,” SBI managing director A Krishna Kumar said. Kumar said a total number of 662 unbanked villages were allotted to SBI to be covered with March 31 next year and already 496 villages were covered. “Opening of bank accounts will be very simple for the customers (villagers) and they would only need to produce a certificate from the headman along with photographs,” he said  MRDS Chief Executive Officer Robert Garnet Lyngdoh said the banks on wheels will initially cover villages under Saipung block in Jaiñtia Hills and later the services will be replicated in other districts. “We will motivate villagers to open bank accounts with SBI at zero balance or no frills account. Kisan Credit Card will be provided to farmers who opened their account in order to avail small loan from the bank,” Lyngdoh said. The ‘Bank on Wheels’ will tour villages in the area and the main target to motivate villagers to open ‘no frills accounts’ is on market day, he added.
Nagaland Post

HC quashes case against retired judge

Chennai : The Madras High Court has quashed a case against a retired high court judge relating to alleged flouting of RBI guidelines by a finance firm in which he was a director after his retirement from judicial service. Allowing the petition by G Ramanujam seeking quashing of the case, Justice A Arumughaswamy said from a perusal of the records it was clear that the petitioner had resigned before the alleged violation of the RBI rules and the resignation had also been accepted by the Registrar of Companies. The judge was of the view that the petitioner was in no way concerned with the complaint and quashed the proceedings against the retired judge pending before the Additional Chief Metropolitan Magistrate, Economic Offences I. In his petition, Ramanujam submitted that he had a distinguished tenure as a judge of the court for 16 years from 1969 and after retirement in 1985 he was appointed a director of Viswapriya Financial Services and Securities Limited. Due to his failing health, he resigned from the company on December 25, 2008 which was accepted by the board. Charging five of the company's Directors, including the retired Judge, with offences under the RBI Act, the RBI in a complaint said the firm on February 5, 2009 had published an advertisement offering 'generous returns' on investments. The former judge contended he had submitted his resignation which had been accepted by the Registrar of Companies on January 30, 2009 itself before the advertisements were published.
HBL

Don't mess around with rupee: RBI tells banks

MUMBAI: Stop messing around with the rupee"- a message from the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) that's slowly but surely beginning to reach banks. At a weekend meeting in Kochi, senior RBI officials told leading banks to refrain from unbridled currency speculation and misusing open positions which can add more volatility in a choppy market.  Bankers fear that the RBI may tighten rules to curb speculation if banks don't fall in line. The regulator hinted that it was aware which banks were building what kind of trading positions and if necessary the RBI may take a relook at the net open positions that each bank is allowed to run. Trimming the net open position (NOP), or the net dollar position that a bank can hold overnight after obtaining  RBI's approval, can severely curb a bank's trading bets. "It's one thing for a bank to buy dollars today for a customer who needs it tomorrow morning. It's another thing to run long dollar simply to trade," said a banker present at the meeting. The rupee has fallen by more than 17% against the dollar since Standard & Poor's downgraded US credit rating in August.  But on Monday, the domestic currency gained from its Friday closing of 52.23 against the dollar to close the day at 51.96 -an exchange rate movement that can be partly attributed to the weekend meeting. Bankers admit that the rupee's fall against the dollar in the past few months has tempted quite a few treasuries to short the local currency.  Besides buying dollars under the NOP limits, some of the MNC banks have carried out arbitrage deals between the onshore market and the offshore dollar-rupee market, better known as the non-deliverable forward (NDF) market. In such trades, a bank may sell a month forward in the local market and buy onemonth forward in the NDF market to lock in the gain.  The RBI team, led by Deputy Governor H.R.Khan, indicated that the central bank may tweak its policy for arriving at the daily dollar-rupee reference rate. The proposed move may make it difficult for currency traders to make a killing in NDF trades which are settled against the reference rate.
ET

Rise of rupee unlikely to sustain, says Moody’s

...The inflation risk notwithstanding, the report appreciated the Reserve Bank of India's (RBI) restraint in its intervention in the foreign exchange markets. The analysts said, “The monetary authority’s decision not to spend large quantities of international reserves to support a higher rupee over the past three months is credit positive.”...

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Thank god the cool-headed RBI isn’t propping up the rupee

The rupee’s sharp fall of recent weeks against the US dollar has been arrested – and even marginally reversed — this morning by an improvement in risk sentiment. News of a likely loan lifeline from the IMF to Italy, and of a larger rescue mechanism, have buoyed up investor sentiment and the rupee, which had been battered by the avalanche of bad news out of Europe in recent days. The turnaround in sentiment has come not a day too soon, since the chorus of voices demanding an intervention by the RBI to prop up the rupee was becoming a little too loud and a little too shrill. In UBS economist Jonathan Anderson’s theatrical characterisation, the rupee is a “drama queen”, given to hysterical excesses and dramatic flailing of limbs. The RBI had indicated that while it would step in during periods of excessive currency volatility to smoothen things out, it wasn’t about to prop up the rupee. That principled position, based on pragmatic considerations of the market situation, wasn’t always appreciated. The rupee’s slide of recent days was, as Firstpost argued here, largely a function of the heightened risk aversion (and a flight to the relative safety the US dollar) although some elements of India’s deteriorating macro economy were also to blame. We had said then that once the hysteria over Europe abated, the rupee would turn around, even if it doesn’t quite leap back to its earlier values. That view, and the RBI mandarins’ cool head when all around them were losing theirs, has been borne out by today’s trend reversal. Rating agency Moody’s too has commended the RBI’s “restraint” – that is, its unwillingness to intervene in the currency market – as “credit-positive” for India. The agency’s chief India sovereign rating analyst Atsi Sheth notes that that the RBI had, rather than aggressively selling dollars to reverse the rupee’s depreciation, limited its intervention to periods of extreme volatility. For sure, a falling rupee brings bad news. “The immediate effect of a falling rupee is clearly negative for unhedged importers and borrowers in foreign currency,” points out Sheth. “Moreover, it raises the government’s petroleum products related subsidy burden, widening an already high fiscal deficit.” And the currency depreciation was also further adding to inflation, which was already above 9 percent. Yet, the RBI authorities’ decision “not to spend large quantities of international reserves to support a higher rupee over the past three months is credit positive for two reasons,” reckons Sheth. First, an intervention would have used up foreign exchange reserves — without meaningfully reversing the depreciation, since global risk aversion and India’s widening current account deficit would have forced the rupee to fall further against the dollar despite the intervention. Second, notes Sheth, effective globalisation requires market participants to adjust their investment, consumption and borrowing plans according to the availability of foreign capital and import costs. Over the past few years, external borrowing by Indian firms has risen significantly in response to the differential between higher domestic and lower foreign interest rates. Foreign borrowing has also funded rising imports. The recent currency depreciation highlights that exchange rate risk, along with interest rate differentials, ought to be incorporated into private sector decisions about external leverage. If the RBI had authorised the use of official foreign exchange reserves to maintain the exchange rate at a level higher than dictated by market forces, they would have assisted importers and foreign borrowers — at the expense of exporters and domestic producers competing with imports, reasons Sheth. This would have delayed or distorted private sector adjustment to global market signals. In her estimation, currency depreciation would ultimately force an adjustment by making imports more expensive and exports cheaper – and thus help narrow the current account deficit over the next few quarters. Of course, if inflation in India remains higher than in its trading partners, it would limit the extent to which a rupee depreciation would enhance Indian export competitiveness. In any case, the anaemic growth projections to the global economy paint a rather tepid outlook for export growth. The RBI’s other actions intended to arrest the steep decline in the rupee – such as the relaxation of capital controls, and the raising of caps on interest rates on non-resident Indian depots, on commercial borrowings and on foreign participation in domestic bond markets – would help support the rupee, or at any rate check its precipitous decline of recent days. Yet, it’s hard to see a sustained appreciation of the rupee so long as the current account deficit widens and global risk aversion remains high. There’s nothing to say that the rupee won’t slide back if eurozone panic is accentuated again in the event the the rescue plans don’t materialise in the manner that they’ve been announced. But today’s trend reversal in the rupee’s value, however minuscule, validates the RBI’s stand on the underlying reasons for the rupee’s slide, and the fact that panicky intervention — of the sorts that some commentators had sought -would have only compounded the problem. Perhaps it’s time for the back-seat drivers to mute their commentary — and allow RBI honchos to get on with what is decidedly a challenging task in a volatile environment… 
Firstpost

'World prices, not rupee to hit inflation'

Prime Minister's advisory panel chief C Rangarajan today said movement in global commodity prices, and not the declining value of rupee against dollar, will have bigger implications for the inflation, which is hovering near double-digit for the last 28 months..............

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The rupee, a mirror for india

....The weakness of the rupee is justified, unfortunately. In general, people hold a currency for its purchasing power. Inflation erodes that purchasing power. Persistently high inflation gives rise to expectations of depreciation of a currency that becomes self-fulfilling. The process by which this happens is beyond the scope of this 800-word column and can be found in elementary international economics textbook.....

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RBI rupee stance bags Moody's thumbs up

..."Had authorities used official reserves to maintain the exchange rate at a level higher than dictated by market forces, they would have assisted importers and foreign borrowers at the expense of exporters and import-competing domestic producers," Moody's noted.....
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Preventing volatility


RBI should adopt a more proactive stance in the currency market

... Should the RBI use the policy tools it commands, and revert to the dirty float by targeting a more predictable band around REER once again? As things stand, the advantages could outweigh the disadvantages.....

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Wanted: An interventionist RBI

...Going by the decades-long policy, RBI should have tacitly intervened at least through June and July to pull down the rupee, since in real terms the rupee wasn’t at 44 by July end but probably 42. The big September trade deficit in this ....

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Monday, November 28, 2011

Caught between a weak rupee and a system starved of cash

On 15 August 1997, then Reserve Bank of India (RBI) Deputy Governor Yaga Venugopal Reddy, at a foreign exchange dealers’ conference in Goa, had said: “As per the real effective exchange rate, it would certainly appear that the rupee is overvalued...” Reddy’s apparently innocuous statement pulled the local currency sharply down against the dollar. From 35.7 to a dollar, the rupee slipped to 40.7—more than 12%—in the next five months. Clearly, through Reddy the Indian central bank wanted to convey a message to the market. This was the first instance of RBI talking the rupee down. Many believe current RBI Deputy Governor Subir Gokarn was emulating Reddy when, on 17 November, he told a business channel that “…the use of reserves to defend an exchange rate, which may not be defensible beyond a point, means we end up with the same pressures and with a lower set of defence against it. So, you have to be very careful about how we use the reserves…”
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HDFC Bank, Vodafone India launch mobile banking product for rural coverage

...In the afternoon, Dr Chakrabarty launched HDFC Bank and Vodafone India's national initiative for financial inclusion through mobile banking from Chomu, a couple of km away.
He said, “It's the upper echelons of society who are using mobile banking now. We want the poor also to benefit, especially those in remote villages.” .....

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HDFC Bank-Vodafone venture: Who is to supervise?

Who will supervise the HDFC Bank Vodafone joint venture, asked a reporter? Mr Aditya Puri quipped that the RBI would supervise HDFC Bank and HDFC Bank would in turn supervise Vodafone. Dr Chakrabarty clarified that the RBI as the bank's supervisor would hold it responsible for Vodafone adhering to all the relevant guidelines of the RBI.
Sharing the cake!
What is the sharing of revenue/fees between Vodafone and HDFC Bank? Mr Puri's response: “We can't share the cake unless it is broken. So first, let us break-even and then we'll think of how to share the revenue.”
Alert to the threat from competition
When a reporter asked Mr Sood of Vodafone whether they had entered into a similar tie-up with another leading private sector bank, Mr Puri was quick to seize the opportunity. To everyone's amusement, he encouraged the reporter, “Ask him again. We also want to know!”
Location
The product for financial inclusion was launched at the historic Chomu Palace Hotel at Chomu, 45 km from Jaipur. Chomu Palace is a 300-year-old fort. But its claim to recent fame is as the main location for the shooting of the 2007 Bollywood hit Bhool Bhulaiya, described succinctly on Wikipedia as a ‘psychological thriller comedy horror film'! Apparently the actors in the film who shot in this place for a couple of weeks did see some apparitions. Newspersons were spared the spookiness since the press conference wound up before nightfall! Thankfully.
HBL

RBI cautioned on invest account fraud, banker jailed for 3 yrs

The Reserve Bank of India has been asked by a Delhi court to evolve a proper mechanism to ensure that bank employees do not siphon public money by manipulating customers'' stock investment accounts and other financial instruments. Special judge Anoop Kumar Mendiratta gave this direction while sentencing suspended Syndicate Bank clerk Praveen Kumar Gupta to three years in jail for diverting over Rs 37 lakh to his accounts by fudging various stock investment accounts and other security instruments with the bank over 12 years ago. The court issued directions to the RBI, terming the fact of the case, unearthed by investigative agency during its probe, as "tip of the iceberg". "The mode adopted by the accused for fraudulent multiple encashing of the same instrument despite maintenance of balancing book in the bank calls for deeper analysis as the same could not have been possible but for want of complete lack of supervision or abdication of duties by senior officials," said the court. "Appropriate guidelines need to be formulated by RBI Governor to be followed by all the banks which may work as benchmark to check the commission of frauds in similar schemes. It is necessary to ensure proper conciliation and accountability of banking transactions by the employees in such schemes," it added. The court also ordered for sending a copy of its judgement to the RBI Governor "for compliance". The court direction came in a case involving falsification, manipulation and tampering of stock investment accounts, ledgers and stock invest instruments by Gupta between 1992 and 1997 to siphon off over Rs 37 lakh.
MSN News

Indian Bank sets up self-employment training institute

.....Mr Bhasin said that the financial inclusion movement in the country was initiated by Indian Bank in Puducherry in December 2005, as the National Pilot Project on Financial Inclusion. (Incidentally, the then Chairman and Managing Director of the bank was Dr K.C. Chakraborty, who is today a Deputy Governor in the Reserve Bank of India.)......

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VITALINFO turns one...........

Hats off to VITALINFO ...........

VITALINFO rated AAA

Banks see decline in complaints

....Mumbai: The number of customers who have registered complaints of unsatisfactory service with the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has fallen in the year that ended 31 March after a sharp rise in the preceding fiscal............

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Be aware of new cheque norms lest it proves costly

The decision of the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) to restrict the time period for the validity of issued cheques and demand drafts will have a major impact on the manner in which people use these instruments. There are a lot of times when the life of the cheque comes to an end..........

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I don’t believe in policy paralysis business, it’s being overdone: Puri

CHOMU (RAJASTHAN): HDFC Bank managing director Aditya Puri is known to speak his mind. Unlike several of his colleagues in the corporate sector, who are bearish on the economy and are blaming government's inaction for moderation in growth, HDFC Bank chief says the fears are overdone. "I don't believe in this policy paralysis business in the sense you can't have 7.5% growth with policy paralysis. It is being overdone. Some industries which have had problems may have had some paralysis but that also if you are not in line with the laws and regulations," he told TOI in an interview on the outskirts of Jaipur. But he does agree with demands that the government needs to boost overall sentiments and suggests that tax policy can be used to contain inflation. "We need decisions on fiscal policy to control inflation, which the RBI has been saying for a while, because if you control only through monetary you are quite likely to bring growth below acceptable parameters. That has ramifications on tax collections, fiscal deficit, on the rupee and on business sentiments. And, it may not, as we have seen, in the full control of inflation."
TOI

India Post launches overseas money transfer

HYDERABAD: Transferring money to India from 190 countries across the world will now become easier through the MoneyGram service launched by India Post. The service will be available at 99 Head Post Offices and Mukhya Dak Ghar across Andhra Pradesh, according to a press release from the department. In India money can only be received from abroad through the service. For transferring the amount, the sender will have to fill up the ‘Send Form’ at the overseas MoneyGram counter and pay the principal amount apart from charges. A special 8-digit reference number will be given to the sender which will be conveyed by him to the payee. For receiving the money, the payee in India has to approach a post office offering the service and fill up the ‘Receive Form’ along with the reference number. To ensure that the amount reaches the right hands, the payee will have to carry a valid photo identification such as PAN card, driving licence, passport, voter ID, ration or Aadhaar card. For a foreign national to receive money in India, the original passport with valid Visa has to be presented at the time of collecting money. The limit on the amount sent through the transaction is US $ 2,500 and the payment will be made in Indian rupees at the prevailing exchange rates. Further, the transaction can be used only for personal remittances and towards remittances favouring foreign tourists visiting India. Trade-related transactions such as purchase of property, investments, donations or contributions to charitable organisations and credit to NRE accounts are not allowed under the scheme.The service operates as per the guidelines of RBI and all KYC/AML/CFT rules of RBI will be applicable. Also, not more than 12 remittances are allowed to be received by a single individual in one calendar year.
IBN Live

FinMin diktat sets stiff targets for PSU banks

.. Bankers say such a diktat is unprecedented and a departure from the practice of allowing banks to decide their own growth path.....

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Opportunities beckon for banks

...Extensive studies conducted by the RBI, using sophisticated techniques, reveal a high degree of interconnectedness among Indian banks. This can make the system vulnerable in the event of failure of one or more banks depending on the degree of interaction.........

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Small savings agents upset

...The government's decision to raise the interest rates and slash agents' commission on a range of popular post-office saving schemes beginning Thursday will make small savings more rewarding for millions, but it has also triggered howls of protest from lakhs of agents whose income depends on selling these products............

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Kerala govt's Shariah finance firm nears start

...The Kerala government-promoted Shariah-compliant Al Barakah Financial Services Ltd hopes to start operations from next fiscal, pending RBI licence for non-banking finance company (NBFC).....

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India urged to buy more gold as reserve value soars

... A working paper by the central bank had advised the Indian government to go in for more purchase of the precious metal……

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Islamic Banking Is the Need of the Hour: Experts

...Even as RBI and government aren't keen on allowing Islamic banking, experts from the world of Islamic finances today said it is a question of "how soon and not whether it will be allowed", as this mode of banking can greatly help a fund-starved country get long-term finances......

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RBI communicates dollar/rupee shift

...It is interesting that the RBI's communications about a somewhat hands-off approach or policy with respect to the dollar /rupee market has not been assimilated well. Be it as it may, it may well pay for the corporate sector to “listen” to RBI communications on this subject more closely in the future. Indeed, the RBI has been quite consistent in stating that it does not target any particular rate level or range for the rupee. This message has been particularly drilled through in the past couple of years at every available opportunity.....

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What ails my rupee

..The Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI) statements that it would not support any particular level of the rupee and will only intervene to stem the volatility in the market has significantly contributed to the depreciation of rupee........

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Sunday, November 27, 2011

23 per cent increase in credit needs expected



Collector U. Sagayam (left) releases the Potentially Linked Credit Plan at a bankers' meeting at the Madurai Collectorate on Thursday

The National Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development (NABARD) has projected the credit requirements of priority sectors in Madurai district to touch Rs. 3,489 crore in 2012-13, an increase of 23 per cent compared to the current fiscal in which Rs. 2,847-crore outlay has been prepared in the annual credit plan. The NABARD's potential-linked credit plan (PLCP) for the next fiscal was launched by Collector U. Sagayam at the District Level Review Committee meeting for bankers held at the Collectorate here on Thursday with A.J. George, Assistant General Manager of Reserve Bank of India (RBI), receiving the first copy. According to R. Shankar Narayan, NABARD's Assistant General Manager, the PLCP had taken into account the potential available for development in all sectors and also the infrastructure available for exploiting the potential. It projected that crop loans would increase from Rs. 1,232 crore in the preceding fiscal to Rs. 1,508 crore in 2012-13, which was in tune with the thrust of the Central government. Investment to the tune of Rs. 205 crore was expected to flow into the agro-processing sector. Allocation for non-farm sector has increased to Rs. 448 crore from Rs. 362 crore. Other Priority Sectors, which include transport, retail trade, self employment, housing and caution loan, were expected to require Rs. 1,408 crore against Rs. 852 crore in 2011-12. As per RBI guidelines, the PLCP would be the base document for preparing the Annual Credit Plan of the next fiscal. Addressing the bankers and officers, Mr. Sagayam said that all departments and banks must cooperate to ensure the targets laid out were achieved, and ensure that the credit potential identified in the PLCP was fulfilled. Emphasising on importance of credit to achieving integrated development of rural areas, the Collector also highlighted the need for timely purveying of agricultural credit to small and marginal farmers.
HBL 

RBI Governor to visit Dungabori

JAGIROAD, Nov 26: The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) Governer D Subbarao will visit Dungabori village in Morigaon district on November 30. Sources said that the RBI with an aim to uplift the rural banking and rural infrastructure had undertaken some economic schemes. Under such schemes, Regional Office of RBI, Guwahati has selected Dungabori village. The Governor will visit Dungabori and will announce a few financial packages with the banks here.
The Sentinel

'Active bank a/c to help get you Punjabi bride'

CHANDIGARH: If you're an eligible Punjabi bachelor without an active bank account, chances are you won't get a bride. Reserve Bank of India governor Dr Duvvuri Subbarao half-jokingly and half-seriously gave advice to parents of girls looking for grooms to check if the boy has an active bank account. If he doesn't have one, it is better not to marry your daughter to such a person. Subbarao came to the city to deliver the Haksar memorial lecture at the Centre for Research in Rural and Industrial Research (CRRID), a government-supported research institute of social sciences. Subbarao recalled his induction days in the Indian Administrative Service (IAS) in early 1970s. The RBI Governor said all his batch mates at Mussourie were sent on field investigations and one of his women colleagues was intrigued to find that parents of girls in Punjab and Haryana refused to marry their daughters to boys whose villages did not have drinking water. Subbarao said his colleague reported the matter while sharing her experiences. The parents of the girls thought their daughters will have to undertake drudgery every day just to arrange water. The RBI governor said it appears now parents of girls of these states don't encounter this problem. But, if they really want well-being of their daughters, they now have a new indicator - whether the groom has an active bank account or not. Is he financially included? Subbarao explained how a financially excluded person may find it difficult to get loans and government's help under social schemes. He said just 5% of Indians have bank accounts but most of them don't operate their accounts. Even commercial banks consider financial inclusion as an obligation, not an opportunity, he pointed out. Financial inclusion is going to help the poor, banks in terms of fund flow and economy that can take care of its poor people in a transparent manner, he added.
TOI

Vodafone, HDFC Bank launch mobile banking in Rajasthan

CHOMU (RAJASTHAN): Leading telecom service provider Vodafone India and private lender HDFC Bank Saturday launched "m-paisa", a mobile banking service in Rajasthan to enable millions of unbanked Indians perform basic banking transactions on their mobile phone.  "It is a great oppotunity for a country like India to improve financial inclusion through mobile banking. It is a pioneering initiative modeled on the lines of Vodafone's m-pesa product running in three different countries of Africa, offering to more than 17 million people basic financial services beyond the reach of traditional banking," said Sunil Sood, director, business operations, Vodafone India.  "With our reach and ability to connect customers, we expect many million people to come into the banking fold through this service," he added.  This initiative will allow Vodafone's select retailers to act as HDFC's sub-agents through which customers can deposit and withdraw cash through their mobile phone without having to go to bank branches.  In Rajasthan where this national partnership has been implemented, over 2,200 retailers across 320 villages and 54 towns are operational in opening HDFC Bank mobile bank accounts with Vodafone m-paisa.  "There are 6,00,000 habitations but only about 89,000 bank branches in the country, making access to banking services difficult in remote areas. We feel that Vodafone's significant distribution reach will provide customers the security of financial transaction offered by bank," said Rahul Bhagat, country head, retail liabilities, marketing and direct banking channels, HDFC Bank. The companies will expand the service pan-India in a phased manner by March-April next year and also have plans to deliver it in all the major languages gradually. Currently it is available only in English.  In order to open an account, a customer will have fill in a KYC (know your customer) form and submit it to the retail outlet authorised by Vodafone and then start availing service on fulfilment of the bank's formalities by dialing *135#.  Speaking about the security of the service, Reserve Bank of India Deputy Governor K.C. Chakrabarty, who launched the service, said: "We will be supervising HDFC Bank ... we have issued mobile banking guidelines. We want to ensure that efficient use of mobile technology takes place in financial inclusion."  
ET

Urbanization key to speedy growth: RBI Governor

CHANDIGARH: RBI Governor Dr Duvvuri Subbarao here on Friday re-enforced TOI's 'Sad cities' campaign saying development of urban areas and economic growth support each other. "We need Rs 40 trillion between 2012-2031 for development of urban areas to push economic growth," RBI Governor said delivering the Haksar memorial lecture at Centre for Research in Rural and Industrial Development (CRRID). Around $100 per capita funds are required for urbanization. TOI is already running a series ahead of elections to find out how urban voter feels apathetic due to lack of proper development of cities in Punjab, the fifth fastest urbanized state in the country. It is also the fastest urbanized state in northwest India growing at around 37%, much higher than the country's average of 31%. Subbarao revealed it has been found that growth may be higher at places where urbanization is faster and also urbanization can be faster where the growth is good. Comparing the growth rates of China and India, he said India's urbanization rose from 26% in 1991 to 31% on 2011 while that of China increased from 32% in 1997 to 50% in 2010. The slow pace of urbanization in India is intriguing as this is the period when liberalization was set in motion. Country's top financial planner said for urbanization to be supported, there is need for more effective tax collection, efficient project planning and implementation, innovative urban governance and much greater sensitivity to embracing migrants into the urban ecology. Haphazard growth and pressure of migration may lead to increase in crime and bottlenecks for economic growth. He said empirical studies show that middle income countries reach 50% urbanization and advanced economies reach 70% to 80% urbanization. The RBI Governor observed accelerating growth presents two tasks from the urbanization perspective - first the rate of urbanization has to pick up so as to move the people up the productivity ladder and second, pressures of the urbanization have to be managed proactively. 
TOI

FDI in multi-brand retail will cool inflation: RBI

JAIPUR: The Reserve Bank of India today said FDI in multi-brand retail, if implemented properly, will cool down inflation which has been hovering around the double-digit mark since December, 2010. "Globally, it is considered that if (FDI in multi-brand retail) effectively implemented then prices decline. So, if you are able to pass on the benefit to customer, then prices come down. And if prices fall, so will inflation," RBI Deputy Governor K C Chakrabarty said. He was talking to reporters on the sidelines of a function to launch 'm-paisa', an initiative by HDFC Bank and Vodafone, near here. "The difference in the price between producers and consumers gets narrowed, but only if it is implemented in a correct manner," Chakrabarty said.  He also said the central bank sticks to its projection of year-end inflation at 7 per cent.  The government on Thursday allowed 51 per cent FDI in the multi-brand retail sector. It maintains the move would help in lowering prices.  The guidelines for the foreign direct investment (FDI) in the sector are yet to be notified.  Both the government and RBI have maintained that in India constraints on supply side is a major reason for high inflation.   While allowing FDI in multi-brand, the government said the foreign players will have to invest 50 per cent of the funds in back-end infrastructure, like cold storages. India loses perishable goods worth Rs one lakh crore annually in want of proper infrastructure.
ET 

Database of Madurai farmers having loans to be created

A database of all farmers in the district who have availed bank loans is going to be created through special camps in December. Farmers who are yet to avail any loans would be registered and bank accounts opened for them to bring them into the formal banking system, according to Collector U. Sagayam. Addressing the District Level Review Committee meeting for bankers at the Collectorate here on Thursday, he told officials and bankers that this initiative would help increase agricultural production and prevent migration of people from villages to cities. Residents of rural areas who were not engaged in agriculture would be given credit of upto Rs. 10,000 for livelihood activities. Further, he said that the district administration had identified four villages in the district to be developed as ‘model villages' for all-round development. The bankers were told to ensure that banking services were extended to all households in those four villages. While farmers would be given crop loans, those aspiring for self-employment would also be given access to credit. The four villages were Kottanathampatti in Melur Taluk, Periyakattalai in Peraiyur Taluk, Karadikkal in Tirumangalam Taluk and Chellampatti in Usilampatti Taluk. The meeting also discussed implementation of Total Financial Inclusion scheme in the district, among other issues. As per Reserve Bank of India (RBI) instructions, banking services must be extended to all villages with a population of 2,000-plus by March 2012 and villages with a population of 1,000 to 2,000 by March 2013. Of the 160 villages in Madurai district that come in the first category, all but nine have been covered. In the second category, 170 villages have been identified and the bankers assured the Collector that they would be covered by December 2012, three months ahead of the deadline. Mr. Sagayam also instructed bankers to extend credit to Sri Lankan refugees and transgenders for whom Mahalir Thittam had already formed 70 groups self-help groups. The State government had announced economic assistance of upto Rs. 15 lakh with 25 per cent subsidy. M. Prabakar, Project Director, District Rural Development Agency (DRDA); S. Vijayakumar, Assistant General Manager of Canara Bank, the Lead Bank for Madurai district; N.P. Rajan, Deputy General Manager, Indian Bank; R. Shankar Narayan, Assistant General Manager, National Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development (NABARD); A.J. George, RBI Assistant General Manager; KN. Subramanian, Lead District Manager; and K.M. Kanagaraj, District Disabled Rehabilitation Officer; took part in the meeting.
HBL

Falling rupee, debt, dollars & deficit: Do we have enough forex reserves?

The RBI is taking no chances - get the dollars in as fast as possible, build up reserves while you can and prepare for the worst. Indeed, even the timing of this week's Cabinet approvals for foreign direct investment in retail, can be seen in the light of the need to bring dollars in at at a critical time...


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It's time to rejig the elephant's dance: Subbarao

...“India's growth story is still credible….As people, we are understandably eager for our economy to sprint like a tiger rather than amble like an elephant. Yet, few animals have an elephant's stamina. ....

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Finally, govt decides on bill for multi-level marketing firms

Jaipur: The state government has decided to come up with a bill against fraudulent multi-level marketing firms in the aftermath of multi-crore fraud by the Gold Sukh Trade India Ltd with thousands of people in Rajasthan. Sources said that chief minister Ashok Gehlot has asked the officials to prepare a draft of the bill in which separate legal provision against such fraudsters will be made. "We will start the process of preparing the draft on the lines of similar laws against multi-level marketing firms in several states of the country. The existent laws in these states will also be considered if they can included in the bill to be introduced in Rajasthan," a senior home department officer told TOI. The chief minister Gehlot had taken a meeting of senior police and administration official at CMO on Friday and asked them to prepare a special strategy to put a check on such frauds. Sources said that such firms are operational throughout the state. "Almost 99% multi-level marketing firms cheat the investors in one way or the other. Specific provisions regarding what kind of MLM companies are fraud will be made in the bill," said the officer. As per the existent law, if any company wants to engage in any business activity, it needs to register itself under the Indian Companies Act 1956. Once registered, they become incorporated under the act and termed as public limited company or private limited company. These companies are then regulated by a regulator enacted by Parliament or by the state government concerned.For banking and non banking financial services, RBI is the regulator and for stock markets, the regulator is Security Exchange Board of India (SEBI). However, there are certain companies which do not fall under purview of any of the regulators and that is where companies like Gold Sukh operates and takes advantage of the grey area.
TOI

Volatile times ahead for the rupee

....The RBI has some measure of control over the range it wants to target. But the RBI dare not try to rigidly control the rupee because it could rapidly exhaust the forex reserves if it attempted to do that in the face of a major market trend.......

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Staring down the barrel

...The rupee's downward spiral against the dollar held investors awestruck last week even as importers and exporters scrambled to protect their forex exposure. Rear-guard action by the RBI to stem the slide by announcing a slew of measures including increased FDI limit in retail salvaged sentiment in the later part of the week.....

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Tough task for Centre to raise funds for infra financing: RBI -

...“Both the government and RBI have taken a number of initiatives to develop corporate bond market and some further initiatives are in pipeline,” ....

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