Anjali Kumari
Anjali Kumari
In the second quarter of the current financial year, the RBI purchased a net total of $1.9 billion of foreign currency, against $33.7 billion in the second quarter of the previous financial year
Foreign inflows expected after index inclusion; rate cuts on the horizon
On a month-on-month basis, the issuances fell by around 38 per cent
Absence of RBI support might have pulled down rupee, say market experts
Domestic bond yields were relatively less volatile compared to the US treasury bond yields, as the market was driven by investors rather than traders
The yield on the 5-year government bond closed the day at 7.27 per cent.
Patra further said that central banks and financial institutions must actively address climate change, as it impacts their mandates of price and financial stability
The majority of the subscribers were large insurance companies, and pension funds, market participants said
Yields on AAA rated corporate bonds fell by 7 basis points across tenures in the first week of November
The government plans to borrow Rs. 20,000 crore through green bonds in the current financial year
The Reserve Bank of India set the cut-off yield on 91-day, 182-day, and 364-day T-bill at 6.92 per cent, 7.11 per cent, and 7.15 per cent respectively
The central bank had not given any timeline for OMO sales and said it will depend on the ongoing liquidity situation
Market participants said that India's bond inclusion in J P Morgan index further aided inflows in the domestic debt market
The state-owned bank experienced a 6 per cent decline in net profit on a sequential basis
Bids worth Rs 40.2K cr vs target to raise Rs 10K cr
Rupee and bond gain post dovish stance by FOMC
As the Executive Director, Mishra's duties will include looking after Enforcement Department, Risk Monitoring Department, Department of External Investments & Operations
The previous all-time closing low for the rupee was 83.28 on October 16
Inflation is priority at the moment; India well placed compared to other countries to deal with global risks, says Reserve Bank of India Governor Shaktikanta Das
'Fintechs using new and cost-effective technology, which incumbent banks are unable to compete with'