<p>India’s unexpected move to buy back bonds signals the central bank is getting proactive in easing liquidity and may switch to a neutral interest-rate stance in its June policy, according to Citigroup Inc.</p><p>The Reserve Bank of India on Friday said it would buy back 400 billion rupees ($4.8 billion) of bonds — all maturing in the current fiscal year ending March — on May 9. The announcement, indicating a shift from the RBI’s earlier strategy of keeping liquidity tight, comes as a surprise as cash conditions slightly improved in April.</p><p>It “is a clear signal that the RBI has moved away from the approach of keeping the overnight rates closer to the Marginal Standing Facility rate,” economists including Samiran Chakraborty and Baqar M Zaidi wrote in a note. “On the margin, this buttresses our view of a possible move to ‘neutral’ in June.”</p>.RBI allows standalone primary dealers to borrow in foreign currency.<p>India bonds rallied in early trade Monday, with the 10-year yields falling to the lowest level in about four weeks.</p><p>The MSF is a rate at which banks can obtain emergency funds from the central bank to tide over gaps in liquidity. As the central bank eases liquidity, markets will be watching for a possible change in its monetary policy stance, which remains ‘withdrawal of accommodation’ to keep inflation in check. </p>.RBI's forex market intervention eases as conditions turn favourable for rupee.<p>The banking system was in a marginal liquidity deficit of 828 billion rupees as of May 3, according to a <em>Bloomberg Economics</em> index. That’s an improvement from a gap of 1.6 trillion rupees seen in late April. </p><p>While liquidity tightness was not acute in April and overnight rates had not hit the MSF ceiling, the RBI probably anticipated election-related constraints on government spending could tighten the liquidity, the Citi analysts wrote.</p><p>RBI has been very proactive in announcing variable repo auctions and shorter rates could have been managed by it without the buybacks, they said. “This also suggests a higher hurdle for open-market operations sales announcement even if index inclusion flows further improve liquidity.”</p>
<p>India’s unexpected move to buy back bonds signals the central bank is getting proactive in easing liquidity and may switch to a neutral interest-rate stance in its June policy, according to Citigroup Inc.</p><p>The Reserve Bank of India on Friday said it would buy back 400 billion rupees ($4.8 billion) of bonds — all maturing in the current fiscal year ending March — on May 9. The announcement, indicating a shift from the RBI’s earlier strategy of keeping liquidity tight, comes as a surprise as cash conditions slightly improved in April.</p><p>It “is a clear signal that the RBI has moved away from the approach of keeping the overnight rates closer to the Marginal Standing Facility rate,” economists including Samiran Chakraborty and Baqar M Zaidi wrote in a note. “On the margin, this buttresses our view of a possible move to ‘neutral’ in June.”</p>.RBI allows standalone primary dealers to borrow in foreign currency.<p>India bonds rallied in early trade Monday, with the 10-year yields falling to the lowest level in about four weeks.</p><p>The MSF is a rate at which banks can obtain emergency funds from the central bank to tide over gaps in liquidity. As the central bank eases liquidity, markets will be watching for a possible change in its monetary policy stance, which remains ‘withdrawal of accommodation’ to keep inflation in check. </p>.RBI's forex market intervention eases as conditions turn favourable for rupee.<p>The banking system was in a marginal liquidity deficit of 828 billion rupees as of May 3, according to a <em>Bloomberg Economics</em> index. That’s an improvement from a gap of 1.6 trillion rupees seen in late April. </p><p>While liquidity tightness was not acute in April and overnight rates had not hit the MSF ceiling, the RBI probably anticipated election-related constraints on government spending could tighten the liquidity, the Citi analysts wrote.</p><p>RBI has been very proactive in announcing variable repo auctions and shorter rates could have been managed by it without the buybacks, they said. “This also suggests a higher hurdle for open-market operations sales announcement even if index inclusion flows further improve liquidity.”</p>