The RBI increased rates today. For the first time since Jan 2014 we have seen rates go up.
The repo rate (at which banks borrow) has gone up to 6.25%. The reverse repo rate is now up to 6%.
If you thought this was a crazy thing, the answer really is: no.
Because the rate hike was almost a done deal – in the debt markets, rates have already risen at the longer end of the curve – even for a year, a government bank like SIDBI was paying more than 8%!
But the important thing is: banks are FLUSH with liquidity even now. The banking system is parking over 130,000 cr. overnight with the RBI in reverse repo. And for repo, they were borrowing 50,000 cr. – so a net of Rs. 80,000 cr. is being parked as excess cash with the RBI. Effectively, banks will make 0.25% extra on this money, which is good for them.
(Of course, we have no idea why they would park so much money at around 6% when even government T-Bills for 91 days are offering 6.5%. Basically the situation is so ugly for some banks that instead of even thinking they prefer to park money with the RBI)
However the problem is that bond yields have gone up across the board. This has been happening and you can see how it has evolved:
Which tells you that both the longer end of the curve, and the shorter end of the curve have risen up considerably. Which means bond prices here have fallen, and most bond funds would have performed miserably in this last year, with yields having gone up 1%.
The Impact of the Rate Hike
There is no negative impact. As we said, the system is parking excess cash with the RBI so it benefits because the reverse repo rate increases.
For corporates and other borrowers, rates are going up already. The bond markets have hiked rates. Banks are also raising rates through the MCLR system.
That LCR Change….
However there is one impact on yields: A change in policy on the Liquidity Coverage Ratio. Banks need to maintain an LCR of 100% (meaning, they have to have stuff that’s LIQUID enough to cover all of their potential payments including redemptions for the next 30 days).
That LCR included partly what they had to keep as “SLR” securities. About 20% of the bank’s deposits have to be invested in govt. bonds. Part of this can be used for the LCR. How much? It used to be about 11%. (out of the 20% – so if a bank had Rs. 100 in deposit, Rs. 20 went to govt bonds. If it needs an LCR of Rs. 15, then it could have taken Rs. 11 from the SLR)
But now the 11% has been increased to 13%. Effectively now more of the LCR is met with the SLR. For banks there was a problem. If you needed to maintain, say, 15% LCR, you would do this:
- Take 11% from the SLR since you’ve got that in govt bonds anyhow.
- Buy other govt bonds with 4% since you somehow need to make the 15%
- You need to fund this 4% somewhere so borrow from the short term or money markets
Now, banks can do with buying only what’s more than 13% – in this example, they now only need to buy 2% more of government bonds for the LCR. Means their borrowing comes down at least in the short term.
And whoosh, we have a fall in short term CD rates in the money market. That will take a few days to settle, perhaps, but this means a dip in liquid fund returns, and a fall in near term yields. (But anything above 3 months to maturity should still remain elevated)
The RBI policy hasn’t thrown any major surprises. But at this point the important thing is: for the market, interest rates have risen. Let’s leave it at that.