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The big bang RBI stimulus
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Top Stories |
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TAPONEEL MUKHERJEE | 31 Mar, 2020
The slew of announcements by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) to lower
the repo rate, reverse repo rate, cash reserve ratio and allowing
financial institutions the bandwidth to offer a three month EMI
moratorium are all much needed and welcome as India grapples with an
unprecedented but much-needed shut down due to the global coronavirus
pandemic. The RBI stimulus has hit at the most crucial issue at hand,
i.e. "lack of or in most cases absence of cashflows". Helping
individuals and businesses tide over temporary cash flow issues will be
critical to ensure that as and when the economy recovers and demand
picks up, businesses can move (if not bounce) back to normalcy.
The
biggest challenge is the stoppage in cash movement due to the shutdown.
As businesses stop selling and the wheels of the economic system stop
turning one gets a chain reaction through low to no sales, thereby
impacting a firm's capacity to invest, pay back debt and pay employees.
As both firms and individuals are hindered, excess liquidity in the
system due to the RBI policy changes allows lenders to both ease the
credit constraints as well as lower the cost of credit. Flexibility
around credit repayments and a lower price of credit through greater
liquidity in the financial system will boost the economy to cope with
the crisis and eventually recover.
We may underscore that the
issues faced by borrowers are more a liquidity issue and going forward
also an issue of lagged demand growth. The coronavirus driven shutdown
has led to a sudden stop in demand. A lot of even high-quality
businesses may be severely constrained. The vital aspect to note is that
those businesses which remain high-quality are negatively impacted by
an exogenous shock that has rendered their current cashflows
insufficient to cover their costs, debt servicing and employee payrolls.
The RBI policy changes carefully address this "liquidity issue" that is
at the forefront of the problems.
Additionally, the RBI policy
changes through increasing liquidity and providing banks with the option
of offering a moratorium on EMI payments, at once, recognises that
while demand drop was a "jump event" with a sudden drop in demand, the
recovery in demand will be more of a "trickle incremental event" once
the shutdown ends, and the pandemic subsides. The increase in demand may
be more gradual vis-�-vis a sudden drop. Policies that allow a lower
cost of credit, higher availability of credit and flexibility around
loan structuring will assist both lenders and borrowers better to match
their credit cashflows with the business cashflows.
The RBI
announcement on the targeted long term repo operation (LTRO) is one that
is also vital in high volatility and low liquidity situation. The RBI's
decision to offer banks capital provided the money is invested in
investment-grade corporate bonds will, to some extent, help ease the
pressure on the spread widening and low liquidity seen in the corporate
bond market. The LTRO announcement shows that there is a realisation
that all selling in the markets isn't necessarily a view on the
fundamental value of the asset under consideration but is also driven by
technical liquidity and portfolio allocation factors, especially in
times of crisis. Primarily, market participants sell since they need the
cash to tide over current issues as opposed to selling based on asset
value. The LTRO, if used by the banks, can, to some extent, help support
the corporate bond market.
At a broader level, the recent policy
changes of the RBI have created a framework for releasing liquidity
into the financial system to absorb the corona virus shocks better. The
ability of market participants to realise that while the current
problems are grave, the need to restructure credit agreements around
cashflows is critical for both lenders and borrowers. The RBI policy
announcements have provided the market with the tools with which to
manage the cash flow mismatches to tide over current issues to some
extent.
Essentially, while specific human behaviour patterns
might change, people will still fly on planes, eat out at restaurants
and stay at hotels. Short-term exogenous shocks, however large, won't
change the fundamental nature of businesses in the medium to long-run.
The RBI through both policy and signalling has shown the will to support
the markets quite actively to help move forward.
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Customs Exchange Rates |
Currency |
Import |
Export |
US Dollar
|
84.35
|
82.60 |
UK Pound
|
106.35
|
102.90 |
Euro
|
92.50
|
89.35 |
Japanese
Yen |
55.05 |
53.40 |
As on 12 Oct, 2024 |
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