
〽arket 〽⭕⭕D & Sunday Ki Pathashala
February 7, 2025 at 06:51 PM
Here’s a look at latest RBI policy rates:
Repo rate at 6.25%
Standing Deposit Facility (SDF) at 6%
Marginal Standing Facility (MSF) at 6.5%
Bank Rate at 6.5%
Reverse repo rate at 3.35%
CRR at 4%
India- Credit growth is falling.
Is RBI’s High SDF Discouraging Bank Lending?
The RBI has kept the Standing Deposit Facility (SDF) at 6%, while the Reverse Repo remains at 3.35%—creating an unusually wide gap.
Ideally, the SDF should be closer to the Reverse Repo, with a slightly wider LAF corridor to encourage banks to lend rather than park funds with the RBI.
Why is RBI Keeping SDF High?
Bank Liquidity Management – A high SDF rate (6%) makes it attractive for banks to park excess funds with RBI rather than lending. This could slow credit growth.
Inflation Control Over Growth – A narrower LAF corridor (SDF at 6%, MSF at 6.5%) signals RBI’s preference for tight liquidity and inflation control over aggressive credit expansion.
What Could Have Been Better?
Had RBI kept the SDF closer to Reverse Repo and allowed a wider corridor, banks would have been nudged to lend more rather than parking funds with RBI.
But global currency pressures may have forced RBI’s hand. Rupee vs. Dollar Factor – A higher SDF indirectly keeps short-term rates elevated, maintaining the gap between Indian and US bond yields. With the rupee weakening, RBI may be ensuring that capital outflows are minimized.
👉What do you think—should RBI tweak its corridor to boost lending, or is this the right move for macro stability?
*~ Krushna Sharma*
#rbipolicy #monetarypolicy #liquidity
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