RBI Slashes Repo Rate: Boost for Growth and Liquidity
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The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) Monetary Policy Committee under Sanjay Malhotra cut the repo rate by 25 basis points to 6.25 percent .This is the first rate cut initiated by the RBI in five years, the last one being in May 2020.
CPI inflation for the financial year 2025-26 is projected at 4.2%, with Q1 at 4.5%, Q2 at 4%, Q3 at 3.8% and Q4 at 4.2%.
Mintain the monetary policy stance ‘Neutral’.
The RBI estimates real GDP growth for 2025-26 to be about 6.7% for the first quarter, 6.7% for the second quarter, 7% for the third quarter, and 6.5% for the fourth quarter.
Repo rate at 6.25%
Cash Reserve Ratio is 4%,
Standing Deposit Facility Rate at 6%; while Marginal Standing Facility Rate and Bank Rate also at 6.5%.
Repo Rate: 6.25 %.
The reverse repo rate: 3.35%
The Marginal Standing Facility (MSF): 6.5%
The Bank Rate: 6.75 %
The Standing Deposit Facility rate: 6 %
Cash Reserve Ratio: 4.%
Statutory Liquidity Ratio: 18.00%
LEARNING FROM HOME/WITHOUT CLASSES/BASICS
The Reserve Bank of India is the supreme monetary and banking authority in the country. it is called a Reserve Bank because it keeps the cash reserve of all scheduled banks.
It was established on April 1, 1935. since its nationalization in 1949, the Reserve Bank is fully owned by the Government of India
The Reserve Bank of India’s main function includes; formulating, implementing, and monitoring the monetary policy, prescribing broad parameters of banking operations within which the country’s banking and financial system functions, Managing the Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999, Issues and exchanges or destroying
currency and coins not fit for circulation, Banker to the Government: performs merchant banking function for the central and the state governments; also acts as their banker.
Reserve Bank of India Governor Sanjay Malhotra
BANK RATE: It is a rate of interest at which the central bank lends money to the lower bank. It is a quantitative method of credit control.
REPO RATE: Also known as repurchased auction. The government repurchases government securities when there is a liquidity shortage. It adds liquidity to the market. It simply means the repo rate is the rate at which RBI lends money to commercial banks against the pledge of government securities whenever the banks need funds to meet their day-to-day obligations.
REVERSE REPO RATE
When the government sells dated government securities to banks to suck considerable liquidity in the market. Both repo and reverse repo rates are liquidity Adjustment Ratios (LAR).
MONETARY POLICY
Monetary policy is the macroeconomic policy laid down by the central bank. It involves the management of money supply and interest rate and is used by the government of a country to achieve macroeconomic objectives like inflation, consumption, growth and liquidity. Monetary policy can be expansionary and contractionary. Increasing the money supply and reducing interest rates indicate an expansionary policy. The reverse of this is a contractionary monetary policy.
MONETARY POLICY TOOLS
To control inflation, the Reserve Bank of India needs to decrease the supply of money or increase the cost of funds to keep the demand for goods and services in control.
QUANTITATIVE TOOLS
The tools applied by the policy impact the money supply in the entire economy, including sectors such as manufacturing, agriculture, automobile, housing, etc.
Reserve Ratio
Banks must keep aside a set percentage of cash reserves or RBI-approved assets
Reserve ratio is of two types:
Cash Reserve Ratio (CRR);
Statutory Liquidity Ratio (SLR). Banks are required to set aside this portion in liquid assets such as gold. Or RBI-approved securities such as government securities.
Open Market Operations (OMO):
In order to control the money supply, RBI buys and sells government securities in the open market.
The Central Bank refers to these operations conducted in the open market as Open Market Operations.
The objective of OMOs are to keep a check on temporary liquidity mismatches in the market, owing to foreign capital flow.
QUALITATIVE TOOLS
Unlike quantitative tools which have a direct effect on the entire economy’s money supply, qualitative tools are selective tools that have an effect in the money supply of a specific sector of the economy.
Margin requirements – RBI prescribes a certain margin against collateral, which in turn impacts the borrowing habit of customers.
Moral suasion – By way of persuasion, RBI convinces banks to keep money in government securities, rather than certain sectors.
Selective credit control – Controlling credit by not lending to selective industries or speculative businesses.
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