Such an innovative mechanism to manage liquidity, which will require amendments to the Reserve Bank Act, will push down interest rates and increase bond prices, says a report by SBI Research.
"The RBI needs to avoid disruptive modes of liquidity absorption like CRR hike instead it should ensure that there is favourable demand-supply balance for government bonds or G-secs.
"This will have the desired objective of pushing down interest rates through an increase in bond prices which will help government save Rs 10,000 crore in interest payments alone," Ghosh said.
One of the ways to achieve this can be the standing deposit facility (SDF) recommended by the Urjit Patel panel, Ghosh said.
But to achieve these, the RBI Act needs to be amended so that the way repos and reverse repos are conducted now can be changed.
Secondly, there should be a cap on absorption of liquidity.
For instance, RBI can cap the combined limit of term reverse repo and reverse repo at 1 per cent of NDTL. Uncollateralised absorption by RBI will pave the way for government to suck out additional liquidity at lower cost through SDF through which it can set the SDF rate lower than reverse repo rate.
The RBI had put downward rigidity on overnight rates by reducing corridor between repo and reverse repo from 100 to 50 bps in the April 2016 policy. Though this helped stabilise the interest rates, it effectively created downward rigidity for lower part of the corridor.
"The changes in the RBI Act is also needed as our central bank is not permitted to float its own securities," the report notes, adding as RBI inventory of G-secs gets depleted and it is unable to increase the supply due to fiscal ramifications, this facility is a must.
Also, since securities obtained under reverse repo are eligible for SLR (statutory liquidity ratio), it will thus ensure an overall increase in the demand for bonds.
Also, if SDF and reverse repo are made collateral free this will lead to a lower SDF rate than the repo rate, which in turn ensure a lower supply of G-secs.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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