Tight liquidity conditions may continue to be tight for some more time, despite the cut in cash reserve ratio comes into effect from November 3.
According to bankers, this is because the currency demand during the festival season is expected to remain strong.
The Reserve Bank of India has reduced CRRÂ -- the proportion of deposits that banks need to keep with the RBI as cash -- by 25 basis points (bps) to 4.25 per cent to ease liquidity tightness in the system.
According to market participants, unless government spending starts, the deficit may continue above RBI's comfort zone of +/- 1 per cent of net demand and time liabilities.
During the last fortnight of October, banks' daily borrowing from the repo window of the central bank -- a measure of liquidity tightness -- was over Rs 1 lakh crore (Rs 1 trillion) on average.
Today, however, bank borrowing came down to Rs 75,000 crore (Rs 750 billion).
"After the CRR cut comes into effect from November 3, LAF (liquidity adjustment facility) borrowing will come down only to the extent of Rs 17,000-18,000 crore (Rs 170-180 billion).
It will not come down more than that. LAF borrowing will hover around Rs 50,000-60,000 crore (Rs 500-600 billion) even after the CRR cuts comes into effect.
The reason why borrowings are high is that currency in circulation has gone up and government spending has slowed down, due to which money is not coming back into the system," said Mohan Shenoi, president (group treasury and global markets)