RBI hikes CRR by 50 basis pts
INFLATION CONCERNS TRIGGER MULTI-FRONT RESPONSE
February 14, 2007: The apex
bank move will suck out liquidity to the tune
of Rs 14,000 crore from the system.
Banks are set to go in for another round of
across-the-board interest rate hikes, with
the Reserve Bank of India today increasing
the cash reserve ratio (CRR) by 50 basis points
to 6 per cent in two stages.
The first hike of 25 basis points will be
effective from February 17 and the second
from March 3.
The RBI’s “swift” move is
aimed at checking liquidity from fanning the
flames of inflation and comes less than a
fortnight after the central bank raised its
overnight lending (repo) rate on January 31.
Public sector banks, which had decided to
hold interest rates on already disbursed home
loans on a suggestion by Finance Minister
P Chidambaram, will now be compelled to raise
interest rates on both consumer and corporate
loans.
The CRR increase will drain Rs 14,000 crore
of liquidity from the banking system, on top
of Rs 13,500 crore drained in the last week
of December and the first week of January.
“Interest rates will harden. We will
take a call tomorrow. The CRR hike will have
some impact on lending rates across the board,”
PNB Executive Director K Raghuraman told Business
Standard.
M V Nair, chairman of Union Bank of India,
said, “The money supply has been running
high at above 20 per cent for a long time
plus inflation has remained over 6 per cent.
Interest rates (both deposit and lending)
are certainly going up further as banks bear
another dent in their profitability within
a short span,” he added.
State Bank of India’s Chief Financial
Officer A Shandilya said the CRR hike would
increase the cost of funds and also adversely
affect profitability. This could make banks
raise lending rates, he said.
V Vaidyanathan, executive director at ICICI
Bank, the country’s largest retail lender,
said another increase in interest rates would
lead to a greater dampening of demand for
credit.
The RBI said, “In view of the paramount
need to contain inflation expectations and
in light of current liquidity conditions,
it has been decided to increase the CRR.”
The RBI had last hiked CRR by 50 basis points
effective December 23, 2006, and January 6,
2007. It has hiked its overnight lending rate
by 100 basis points and overnight borrowing
(reverse repo) rate by 50 basis points since
April 2006.
The monetary tightening comes in the wake
of the banking system getting comfortable
with liquidity on continued foreign fund inflows,
which were reflected in call rates softening
and banks not tapping the central bank’s
repo window for liquidity support over the
last few days.
The central bank was concerned at the developments
since its monetary policy review on January
31. GDP has since been estimated to grow at
a higher 9.2 per cent in 2006-07, against
9 per cent in 2005-06.
Source: Business Standard