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RBI May Drain Rs 1.4 Lakh Crore as Inflows Add to Excess liquidity

RBI will likely have to drain up to Rs 1.4 lakh crore in excess liquidity currency.

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DQC Bureau
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RBI

RBI will likely have to drain up to Rs 1.4 lakh crore in excess liquidity from the financial system as surging foreign investments forces the central bank to absorb the dollar inflows and sell rupees to cap gains in the local currency.

Foreign investments into debt and shares have reached a net $31 billion this year, compared with $2.7 billion in sales last year, due to factors including India's low inflation and improving economic growth.

The strong inflows have sent the rupee up nearly 7 per cent against the dollar and forced the RBI to buy more than $10 billion in spot market and $10 billion in forwards this year - which has meant an equivalent infusion in rupees.

Those rupee sales have added liquidity into a financial system already flush with cash after a ban on higher-denomination currency in November sparked a surge in bank deposits.

Average daily liquidity has risen to around Rs 3 lakh crore, well above the RBI's goal of around Rs 1 lakh crore, according to traders.

That will force the RBI to step up debt sales to remove liquidity and avoid any inflationary impact.

Traders estimate the RBI will need to drain Rs 1 lakh crore to Rs 1.4 lakh crore ($15.7 billion to $22 billion) after taking into account factors such as festival-related consumer spending that naturally reduce cash in the system.

How the RBI drains the cash will thus become an impact factor for bond traders, who have benefitted from a rally in debt markets.

"I don't think the RBI's intent is to choke the system of liquidity but also at the same time they don't want to maintain excessive liquidity in the system which could obviously create a pain point from an inflation perspective," said Lakshmi Iyer, chief debt investment officer at Kotak Mahindra Mutual Fund.

The RBI has already drained about Rs 1 lakh crore via one-year bills under a special market stabilisation scheme (MSS), as well as Rs 30,000 crore in longer debt through open market sales.

 Traders said they hope that will continue, noting staggered sales in bills, combined with daily reverse repo operations and some long-end sales, would be easily absorbable in markets.
The most disruptive fashion would be stepping up open market sales, which tend to focus on longer-ended debt, traders said. That may send yields higher and blunt the impact of the central bank's 25 basis point rate cut in August.
"If RBI drains the cash largely through MSS bonds then markets wont get too much impacted," said Suyash Choudhary, head of fixed income investments at IDFCmutual fund.
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