With Consumer Price Index (CPI)-based inflation at 9.84 per cent in September (provisional data), the Reserve Bank of India (RBI)’s second quarter monetary policy review would provide cheer to investors in debt, primarily for three reasons: First, the RBI statement could goad banks to step up efforts to mobilise deposits.
Second, it indicated inflation-indexation bonds linked to consumer inflation would be launched in November-December. And third, lending rates are unlikely to rise in a hurry.
“Going forward, however, the more durable strategy for mitigating mismatches between the supply of, and demand for, funds is for banks to step up efforts to mobilise deposits,” RBI’s policy statement said on Tuesday.
To attract deposits, banks would have to increase rates. While bankers are tight-lipped on the quantum of the rise, there is a consensus deposit rates might be increased soon.
“The governor has asked banks to rely on deposits for funds. For that, we will have to work on getting more deposits into the system,” said K R Kamath, chairman and managing director of Punjab National Bank and chairman of Indian Banks’ Association.
This would only be possible if banks give more real returns on deposits. “If you look at it, today, deposits give negative returns compared to inflation. But the deposit rates would be a function of each bank’s liquidity position,” Kamath added.
More clarity on rates would emerge once banks’ asset-liability committees meet in a day or two.
A few banks have already scaled up rates. Last month, State Bank of India raised its retail term deposit rates (below Rs 1 crore or Rs 10 million) across tenures.
For seven-179 day tenures, the rate was raised from 6.5 to 7.5 per cent a year, for 180-to 210 days from 6.5 to 6.8 per cent and for a year-10 years from 8.75