indian money market b.v.raghunandan

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Indian Money Market B.V.Raghunandan, SVS College, Bantwal PG Department of Economics, St.Aloysius College, Mangalore. October 4, 2010

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explains the various segments of Indian Money market including the money market instruments and their features

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Page 1: Indian money market b.v.raghunandan

Indian Money MarketB.V.Raghunandan, SVS College, Bantwal

PG Department of Economics,

St.Aloysius College,

Mangalore.

October 4, 2010

Page 2: Indian money market b.v.raghunandan

Financial Market

• A market where the funds are borrowed and lent

• Two Components: Money Market and Capital Market

• Money Market: Market where funds are borrowed for 364 days and less

• Capital Market: Market where funds are borrowed for a period of one year and more

Page 3: Indian money market b.v.raghunandan

Study of a Market

• Players in the market• Institutions involved• Intermediaries• Instruments• Mechanism• Role and its importance• Basic Terminology

Page 4: Indian money market b.v.raghunandan

Basic Terminology

• Instrument: A loan document executed by a single borrower simultaneously to thousands or lakhs of lenders

• Security: When the instrument has a ready market. it is called a security

• Primary Market: A market where the funds are borrowed directly from the lender

• Secondary Market: A market where the securities are traded among investors

Page 5: Indian money market b.v.raghunandan

Money Market: Definition

• Praveen N. Shroff ,

”institutions such as discount houses, merchant banks, and sometimes even the government’s central bank , which deal in very short-term loans, such as treasury bills, bills of exchange, commercial paper, certificates of deposits etc.,”.

Page 6: Indian money market b.v.raghunandan

Money Market: Features

• Market for Short-term Funds

• Tenure of Instruments• Wholesale Market• Direct Market• Daily Settlement• Huge Volumes

• Large Size Transaction

• RBI Regulation• Administered Interest

Rates• Credit Control

Measures• Telephone Market• Many Players

Page 7: Indian money market b.v.raghunandan

Players in the Money Market

• Central Government• Public Sector Undertakings• Insurance Companies• Mutual Funds• Banks• Corporates• Others: PFs, Pension Funds, NBFCs,

Primary Dealers, Discount Houses etc

Page 8: Indian money market b.v.raghunandan

Money Market Instruments

• Treasury Bill• Liquidity Adjustment Facility: Repurchase

Option (Repo) & Reverse Repo• Call Money• Collateralised Borrowing & Lending

Obligation(CBLO)• Certificate of Deposit• Commercial Paper• Commercial Bills (Bill Market)

Page 9: Indian money market b.v.raghunandan

Treasury Bill

• Borrower: the central government. The RBI issues the TBs

• Investors: banks, insurance companies like LIC, GIC etc., NABARD and UTI, corporates and (FII).

• Tenure: 14 days, 91 days, 182 days or 364 days.

• Mode of sale: The RBI sells the TBs by auction to banks and others.

 

Page 10: Indian money market b.v.raghunandan

Mode of Operation

Banks maintain two types of accounts with the RBI: Current a/c for cash operations and Subsidiary General Ledger A/c (SGL) for securities. While selling securities to banks, RBI debits the current a/c of the concerned bank and credits its SGL A/c. While buying the securities, the RBI credits the current A/c of the bank and debits the SGL A/c.

Page 11: Indian money market b.v.raghunandan

Importance of TBs

• eligible securities for maintenance of Statutory Liquidity Ratio of banks.

• used for the Repo operation of the central bank. • Corporates also park their funds in TBs because there is

no risk of default • a high level of liquidity in terms of refinance from SBI-

DFHI • a ready market in National Stock Exchange.• discount rate on 91-Day TB is the benchmark interest

rate for money market, risk-free interest rate for investment analysis and pricing of futures contract

Page 12: Indian money market b.v.raghunandan

Liquidity Adjustment Facility

• Introduced in 2000, it brought under its fold the already existing two instruments

• The instruments are:

-Repurchase Option (REPO)

-Reverse REPO• Rates on these instruments were intended

to form the interest rate corridor for the short-term funds

Page 13: Indian money market b.v.raghunandan

REPO

• An instrument to increase the liquidity of a day• For simplicity, lending by RBI to banks• In reality, buying securities from the banks and

squaring up the transaction by selling the securities back to them

• In 1992, one-day and two-day repo• In 1993, 14-day repo• Participants are commercial banks, financial

institutions, primary dealers, SBI-DFHI and Securities Trading Corporation

Page 14: Indian money market b.v.raghunandan

Reverse Repo

• For draining the liquidity from the market• Simple meaning, borrowing by RBI from

banks• In reality, selling securities to banks and

buying them back from them subsequently• Introduced in 1994-95• Increased the profitability of bankers by

borrowing from CBLO and lending in Reverse Repo

Page 15: Indian money market b.v.raghunandan

Call Money

• money lent for an extremely short-period, generally not exceeding one day.

• In India, money borrowed by one bank from another for a day

• Banks have to maintain the cash reserve ratio. When they run short of cash, they borrow from other banks. When they have surplus, they lend

Page 16: Indian money market b.v.raghunandan

Participating Institutions in Call Money Market

• Commercial Banks• Co-operative Banks• Foreign Banks• SBI-DFHI• Securities Trading Corporation of India• Primary Dealers• In addition to the above, UTI, LIC, GIC,

IDBI, NABARD etc., are allowed to lend in the call money market.

Page 17: Indian money market b.v.raghunandan

Lending Mechanism

-Conveying the Intention to SBI-DFH

intention to lend or borrow.

-Acceptance by SBI-DFHI

- minimum amount to be lent per transaction is Rs. 3 crore.

-Call Deposit Receipt issued to the lender on receiving the cheque

-Next day, the lender gets the money back by surrendering the Call Deposit Receipt

Page 18: Indian money market b.v.raghunandan

Collateralised Borrowing & Lending Obligation (CBLO)

• Introduced by Clearing Corporation of India Ltd (CCIL) in 2003

• CBLO is a money market instrument of borrowing against securities held in custody by the CCIL.

• The tenure is generally one day, but can go upto 364 days.

• For CBLO, borrower should deposit Treasury bill or Govt. Securities with CCIL.

• participants can be banks, financial institutions, insurance companies, mutual funds, Primary Dealers, Non-Banking Finance Companies, and corporates.

Page 19: Indian money market b.v.raghunandan

Certificate of Deposit

• Certificate of Deposit (CD) is a negotiable certificate issued by a bank on the receipt of a large deposit. CD is a negotiable certificate payable to bearer. CDs appeared in the U.S.A., in 1961.

• In India, the RBI permitted banks to issue CDs from June 1989.

Page 20: Indian money market b.v.raghunandan

Features of CDs

• Borrower: Borrower is any scheduled bank other than RRBs

• Lenders: corporates, institutions, HNI, trust funds or NRIs

• Tenure: three months to one year. The common tenure is three months.

• Denomination: Rs. 25 lakh and in multiples of Rs. 5 lakh thereafter.

Page 21: Indian money market b.v.raghunandan

Commercial Paper

• Commercial Paper (CP) is a short-term unsecured promissory note issued by well established corporates with the requisite credit rating.

• CP has been in existence in the US for more than 100 years

• In India, CP made its appearance from January 1990

Page 22: Indian money market b.v.raghunandan

Features of Commercial Paper

Borrower: joint stock companies whose shares are listed on a recognized stock

exchange. • Lenders: other joint stock companies, public sector companies or corporations,

banks etc. Insurance Companies and Term-Lending institutions I• Networth of Issuing Company: The networth of the company (Capital+reserves)

should not be less than Rs. 4 crore. The working capital limit of the company should also be not less than Rs. 4 Crore.

• 4) Denomination of CPs: The minimum denomination for a single investor is Rs. 25 lakh. Thereafter, it should be in multiples of Rs 5 lakhs

• Tenure: CPs are issued for periods ranging between 15 days to 1 year. CPs of 3 months maturity are popular. CPs of 30 days are also gaining popularity.

• 7) Negotiability: CP is a negotiable instrument. It is freely transferable and payable to bearer. This feature is the added advantage of CP to the investor.

• 8) Credit Rating: Credit Rating from any of the credit rating agencies lmat: CPs can be issued in the form of a promissory note. It can also be issued in the dematerialized form. The demat form is convenient, when a large number of CPs are issued to many investors.

•  

Page 23: Indian money market b.v.raghunandan

Commercial Bills Market

• Arising out of trade• Most of them are documentary bills• Acceptance function has not become

popular• Only discounting• Secondary market is not developed• Mainly SBI-DFHI

Page 24: Indian money market b.v.raghunandan

THANK YOU