CBLO rates dip below 1%
MONEY MARKET ROUND-UP

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MONEY MARKET ROUND-UP

| On the other hand, call rates closed at 6 per cent after falling to an intra-day low of 4 per cent. Banks have to maintain certain percentage of deposits as a statutory requirement with RBI on a fortnightly basis. This is known as CRR or the cash reserve ratio. |
| While call rates remained firm at 6 per cent, non-banking entities in the collateralised borrowing and lending obligation (CBLO) market were flush with funds and even lent at rates below 1 per cent. |
| Mutual funds (MFs), one of the major lenders in the CBLO market, are flush with funds as most banks have parked surplus money with MFs. Banks have raised funds to meet demands for the financial year-end. |
| G-sec: Bearish mood The government securities (G-sec) market remained bearish and witnessed lacklustre trading interest. The prices remained flat and the yield on the ten-year benchmark paper closed flat at a 7.77 per cent. |
| Inflation remains a worry. Moreover, no bank want to take fresh positions ahead of the financial year-end. Most of the banks have already booked losses in portfolios that they had built ahead of the January monetary policy review anticipating interest rate cut, said a dealer. |
| Rupee: Ends flat The demand for oil by importers pulled down the spot rupee to open at 40.18-20 as against the Wednesday's close of 40.14. |
First Published: Mar 28 2008 | 12:00 AM IST