Fresh Reserve Bank of India data show the central government sitting on a surplus cash balance of about 1.13 trillion rupees as on December 23, even as banks’ cash balances stood around 7.31 trillion rupees. On the same date, the RBI provided 104.34 billion rupees of refinance, signalling active liquidity management.
India’s short-term liquidity landscape continues to look comfortable, with the latest central bank numbers revealing a sizeable surplus on the government’s cash books and hefty cash balances across the banking system. The data, released by the Reserve Bank of India for December 23, indicate that New Delhi held roughly 1.13 trillion rupees as surplus cash for auction with the monetary authority.
At the same time, scheduled commercial banks maintained cash balances of around 7.31 trillion rupees, underlining ample system liquidity. To fine tune conditions, the RBI also extended refinance support of about 104.34 billion rupees, a move that helps smooth day-to-day funding needs and maintain orderly money-market rates. Dealers say these metrics together suggest that, for now, liquidity risks remain contained despite ongoing government borrowing and year-end balance-sheet demands.
Key Takeaways
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Government surplus cash balance with the central bank around 1.13 trillion rupees as of December 23.
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Banks’ cash balances reported near 7.31 trillion rupees on the same date, pointing to abundant system liquidity.
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RBI provided refinance of roughly 104.34 billion rupees, illustrating its continued use of liquidity operations to stabilise short-term rates.
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Overall picture indicates a well supplied money market, giving policymakers room to focus on growth and inflation without immediate funding stress.
Sources: Reserve Bank of India daily liquidity and cash-balance disclosures, December 23 data; contemporaneous money-market reportage from real-time financial news wires.