Currencies

Some Indian banks poised for interest margin gains as short-term funding costs fall


By Dharamraj Dhutia

MUMBAI, June 29 (Reuters) – Some Indian banks could see stronger interest margins in the July-September quarter as the central bank’s ‌measures boost rupee liquidity and reduce the cost of borrowing for funds ‌that mature within a year, four bankers said.

Certificates of deposit (CDs), which banks use to raise ​funds for up to one year, have seen rates plunge by up to 60 basis points over the past three weeks.

The Financial Benchmarks India Ltd three-month CD reference rate fell to 6.65% last Friday from 7.25% on June 4.

The Reserve Bank ‌of India’s moves to attract ⁠foreign currency inflows are expected to bring in billions of dollars, boosting liquidity, lowering funding costs and reducing reliance on ⁠CDs, a relatively expensive source of funding.

State-run Canara Bank, among the biggest issuers of CDs, expects the measures to help it refinance existing liabilities at much cheaper ​rates, said ​MD & CEO Brajesh Kumar Singh.

“It will help ​our net interest margins,” said ‌Singh.

At its June 5 policy, the RBI said it will bear hedging costs for non-resident foreign currency deposits of 3- to 5-year maturities raised by banks through September 30.

“The (RBI) measures strengthen the ability to mobilise stable, longer-tenor deposits,” said Ajay Kumar Srivastava, MD & CEO at Indian Overseas Bank.

MORE ROOM TO FALL

Abhishek Bisen, ‌head of fixed income at Kotak Mutual Fund, ​believes that CD rates could fall further.

“Current ​CD yields continue to price in ​a significant degree of monetary tightening and have room to ‌ease,” said Bisen.

The spread between the ​three-month treasury bill ​yield and a CD of similar maturity issued by state-run lenders was at 140 bps on Thursday, down from a six-year high of more ​than 200 bps three ‌months ago.

“Over the next three months, we see the spread normalising ​towards 100 bps, driven by lower CD issuance requirements,” Bisen added.

(Reporting ​by Dharamraj Dhutia; Editing by Harikrishnan Nair)



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