RBI data shows banks' cash balances at ₹7.49 trillion on Dec 5, with government surplus cash for auction at nil. Refinancing hit ₹80.8 billion while MSF borrowings reached ₹13.51 billion, signaling persistent liquidity deficit ahead of advance tax deadlines despite recent policy injections.
Reserve Bank of India released Dec 5 liquidity metrics revealing banks holding ₹7.49 trillion in cash reserves, reflecting ample idle funds amid moderating credit demand. Notably, government's surplus cash balance with RBI available for auction stood at zero, indicating full absorption into banking channels for fiscal needs.
Refinancing operations disbursed ₹80.8 billion to ease short-term strains, while Marginal Standing Facility (MSF) borrowings climbed to ₹13.51 billion—RBI's penalty window at repo+0.25%—highlighting overnight liquidity gaps. This follows RBI's proactive measures like ₹1 lakh crore OMO purchases and $5B USD/INR swaps announced Dec 5 to counter advance tax outflows due Dec 15.
Average LAF net absorption persists around ₹1.9-2.6 lakh crore, underscoring structural tightness from currency circulation and forex dynamics. These figures align with neutral stance post-25bps repo cut to 5.25%, balancing growth support with inflation control.
Key Highlights
Banks' cash: ₹7.49 trillion; govt surplus auction: Nil
Refinancing: ₹80.8 billion provided Dec 5
MSF borrowings: ₹13.51 billion, up signaling deficit
Context: Pre-advance tax crunch; RBI injecting ₹1.45L cr via OMO/swaps
LAF trend: Net absorption ₹1.9-2.6L cr avg amid forex/credit pulls
Sources: Reuters (RTRS), Outlook Business, Upstox