Image Source : Moneycontrol
Indian banks borrowed 3.14 billion rupees from the Reserve Bank of India’s Marginal Standing Facility (MSF) on December 19, indicating limited but tactical liquidity needs. On the same day, banks’ aggregate cash balances stood at 8.03 trillion rupees, while RBI refinance operations totalled 104.06 billion rupees, reflecting an overall orderly liquidity environment.
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The Reserve Bank of India’s latest liquidity data for December 19 point to a banking system that remains broadly comfortable, with pockets of short-term funding demand. Indian banks tapped 3.14 billion rupees through the Marginal Standing Facility, the RBI’s overnight emergency window that allows banks to borrow against approved securities at a penal rate when they face very short-term mismatches. The modest MSF usage suggests operational liquidity fine‑tuning rather than stress.
On the same date, banks’ cash balances with the RBI were reported at 8.03 trillion rupees, highlighting strong primary liquidity, partly supported by government spending and deposit growth. In addition, the RBI’s refinance operations totalled 104.06 billion rupees, indicating targeted support to specific sectors and institutions via standing liquidity and refinance facilities. Together, these numbers underline that the central bank is actively calibrating liquidity to keep money-market rates aligned with the policy corridor while preventing undue volatility.
Key highlights
MSF usage: Banks borrowed 3.14 billion rupees via the Marginal Standing Facility on December 19, pointing to limited overnight liquidity needs.
Cash balances: Aggregate banks’ cash balances with RBI at 8.03 trillion rupees, signalling a broadly comfortable liquidity position.
Refinance amount: RBI refinance on December 19 stood at 104.06 billion rupees across eligible facilities.
Policy context: Data reinforce RBI’s stance of maintaining adequate liquidity while ensuring overnight rates remain near the policy repo rate.
Market takeaway: No signs of systemic stress; liquidity actions viewed as routine management of short-term flows and sectoral credit support.
Sources: RBI daily liquidity and refinance statistics; central bank release for December 19.
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