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IV. Monetary Conditions

During the first half of 2009-10, growth in both broad money (M3) and non-food credit decelerated. This reversed course during the second half reflecting the pull of economic recovery. While non-food credit, which had been decelerating since October 2008 reached its inflexion point in November 2009, money growth turned around in March 2010. By the end of the financial year, growth in both M3 and non-food credit exceeded the Reserve Bank’s indicative projections of growth of 16.5 per cent and 16.0 per cent, respectively. During the year, there was a slowdown in the pace of deposit mobilisation by the banking system, mainly due to the gradual decline in interest rates on time deposits in lagged response to the lower policy rates. With the increasing demand for credit from the banking system, deposit mobilisation has begun to gain strength, and deposit rates have also moved up in the recent period. Even after the absorption of Rs.36,000 crore through the 75 basis points hike in CRR effected in February 2010, liquidity conditions have remained comfortable, as evident from the reverse repo operations under the LAF in the recent weeks.

IV.1 During the crisis, maintenance of ample liquidity and lower policy rates were used by the Reserve Bank as the key channels to stimulate private demand and thereby contain the pace of slowdown in economic activity. The interest rate transmission through lower lending rates started becoming visible with a lag. When the private demand for credit remained depressed and decelerated till the middle of Q3 of 2009-10, the flow of resources from the non-banking sources to the commercial sector increased. The recent upturn in monetary and credit aggregates provides additional evidence that the recovery is taking hold.

IV.2 In 2009-10, growth in reserve money decelerated up to October and thereafter gradually rose back to the growth rate prevailing in September 2008, i.e., before the onset of the global financial crisis. In contrast, reserve money adjusted for the first round impact of CRR change, exhibited less volatility and followed a mildly decelerating trend for the year.

IV.3 Growth in broad money (M3) showed deceleration throughout the year, with a moderate turnaround seen in March 2010 (Chart IV.1 and Table IV.1). This was on account of deceleration in aggregate deposits on the components side of M3. On the sources side of M3, the deceleration was driven by the relatively weak demand for credit from the commercial sector during the first half of 2009-10, combined with moderation in banking system’s credit to the Government during the second half of 2009-10. After a phase of deceleration, there has been a revival in the flow of bank credit since November 2009, as a result of which the Reserve Bank’s indicative target of 16.0 per cent credit growth for the year was exceeded by mid-March 2010. The improved flow of credit from the banking sector in conjunction with higher availability of resources from the nonbanking sources (both domestic as well as foreign) led to a significant increase in total flow of financial resources to the commercial sector, thereby financing the activities underpinning the economic recovery that is underway.

1

Reserve Money

IV.4 In 2008-09, the deceleration in the growth rate of reserve money was primarily on account of decline in bankers’ deposits with the Reserve Bank on the components side of reserve money (due to a net reduction in CRR by 250 basis points during the year) and decline in foreign currency assets (on account of capital outflows) on the sources side of reserve money. During 2009-10, the deceleration continued up to October. This was mainly due to decline in bankers’ deposits (since growth in banks’ aggregate deposits decelerated even as the CRR stayed unchanged at 5.0 per cent) on the components side of reserve money and decline in Reserve Bank’s credit to the Centre, reflecting increased reverse repo operations1 and increase in Centre’s surplus on the sources side of reserve money. As the outstanding reverse repo balances and open market operations declined October 2009 onwards, net Reserve Bank credit to the Centre became the important driver of acceleration in reserve money growth.

Table IV.1: Monetary Indicators

(Amount in Rupees crore)

 

Outstanding as on March 31, 2010

Variation (y-o-y)

2008-09

2009-10

Absolute

Per cent

Absolute

Per cent

1

2

3

4

5

6

I.

Reserve Money

11,55,281

59,698

6.4

1,67,281

16.9

 

(Reserve Money adjusted for CRR changes)

   

(19.0)

 

(12.9)

II.

Broad Money (M3)

55,79,567

7,59,186

18.9

8,02,498

16.8

III.

Components of M3 (a + b + c)

         
 

a) Currency with the Public

7,68,048

97,866

17.2

1,01,722

15.3

 

b) Aggregate Deposits (i+ii)

48,07,734

6,64,802

19.3

7,02,514

17.1

 

i) Demand Deposits

7,14,157

3,143

0.5

1,32,643

22.8

 

ii) Time Deposits

40,93,577

6,61,660

23.1

5,69,872

16.2

 

c) Other Deposits with RBI

3,785

-3,482

-38.5

-1,788

-32.1

IV.

Sources of M3 (a + b + c + d - e)

         

a) Net Bank Credit to the Government (i+ii)

16,68,258

3,78,207

42.0

3,90,534

30.6

i) Net Reserve Bank Credit to the Government

2,20,218

1,74,789

1,58,638

of which: to the Centre

2,19,836

1,76,397

1,58,074

ii) Other Banks’ Credit to the Government

14,48,041

2,03,418

20.1

2,31,897

19.1

b) Bank Credit to the Commercial Sector

34,83,253

4,41,526

17.1

4,62,737

15.3

c) Net Foreign Exchange Assets of the Banking Sector

12,75,039

57,053

4.4

-77,145

-5.7

d) Government’s Currency Liabilities to the Public

10,919

831

9.0

865

8.6

e) Net Non-Monetary Liabilities of the Banking Sector

8,57,902

1,18,430

15.5

-25,508

-2.9

Note: Data are provisional.

IV.5 For the entire financial year 2009- 10, the decline in MSS balances by Rs.85,340 crore (through unwinding and de-sequestering of balances to the Government) was the largest source of increase in reserve money, accounting for more than 50 per cent of the Rs.1,67,281 crore increase in reserve money. The other major source was open market purchases. LAF operations and Centre’s surplus with the Reserve Bank played a significant role in quarter to quarter movements in net Reserve Bank credit to the Centre and hence in reserve money.

IV.6 The foreign currency assets of the Reserve Bank (adjusted for valuation) were the dominant source of variations in reserve money in the past five years. During 2009- 10, net accretion to foreign currency assets was the highest during the second quarter (Chart IV.2). In the last two quarters of 2009-10, however, the expansion in reserve money was not affected much by the moderate contraction and the subsequent expansion in foreign currency assets of the Reserve Bank. The significant movement in the net non-monetary liabilities of the Reserve Bank was mainly on account of the movement in the valuation of foreign exchange assets of the Reserve Bank.

2

IV.7 During the fourth quarter of 2009- 10, reserve money growth on the components side was led by the increase in bankers’ deposits with the Reserve Bank. This was on account of the increase in CRR by 75 basis points in February 2010. Currency in circulation also increased in line with the increased economic activity in the country (Table IV.2). On the sources side, net Reserve Bank credit to the Centre accounted for nearly the entire increase in reserve money (Chart IV.2). The increase in net Reserve Bank credit to the Centre was mainly due to the reduction in the Government’s cash surplus with the Reserve Bank. The other factor contributing to increase in net Reserve Bank credit to the Centre was decline in outstanding reverse repo balances2, which reflected the impact of the absorption of part of the excess liquidity in the system by the hike in the CRR as well as some tightening of the overall liquidity conditions resulting from the advance tax payments during the first fortnight of March 2010. There was also a reduction in MSS balances with the Reserve Bank due to unwinding (Rs.11,036 crore in the first week of January 2010) and de-sequestering (Rs.5,000 crore on March 11, 2010).

Table IV.2: Reserve Money - Variations

Item

2008-09

2009-10

Q1

Q2

Q3

Q4

Q1

Q2

Q3

Q4

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

Reserve Money

3,416

25,218

-70,454

1,01,519

-38,932

16,219

51,786

1,38,208

Components (1+2+3)

               

1. Currency in Circulation

36,859

-14,516

38,277

39,733

29,692

1,081

45,351

31,921

2. Bankers’ Deposits with RBI

-29,333

39,219

-1,15,773

68,714

-72,664

20,680

5,456

1,07,552

3. ‘Other’ Deposits with the RBI

-4,110

514

7,042

-6,928

4,040

-5,542

980

-1,266

Sources (4+5+6+7-8)

               

4. RBI’s Net Credit to Government

-13

51,360

30,230

93,212

-11,145

-14,953

51,428

1,33,308

of which: to Centre

1,430

51,379

29,932

93,657

-11,497

-14,968

51,597

1,32,943

5. RBI’s Credit to Banks and Commercial Sector

-3,358

4,963

5,032

11,163

-9,623

-3,747

-5,926

-2,384

6. Net Foreign Assets of RBI

1,03,932

10,336

-1,56,330

86,048

-16,750

50,120

-15,108

-66,428

of which: Foreign Currency Assets, adjusted for valuation

15,535

-31,641

-92,102

7,900

-6,245

33,441

-18,985

11,390

7. Governments’ Currency Liabilities to the Public

225

206

186

213

254

302

218

91

8. Net Non-Monetary Liabilities of RBI

97,369

41,648

-50,428

89,117

1,668

15,503

-21,175

-73,621

Memo:

LAF -Repo (+)/Reverse Repo(-)

-45,350

51,480

-62,170

4,205

-1,32,800

28,170

67,765

37,360

Net Open Market Sales *

-8,696

-10,535

-7,669

-67,649

-42,001

-31,591

-1,894

17

Centre’s Surplus

-42,427

6,199

-32,830

8,691

-13,156

77,713

17,519

-80,112

MSS Balances

6,040

-628

-53,754

-31,973

-65,187

-4,117

0

-16,036

*: Excludes Treasury Bills.
Note: 1. The sum of the memo items will not add up to the net Reserve Bank credit to the Centre as LAF and OMO transactions are at face value and also due to margin adjustment for LAF operations.
2. Data are based on March 31 for Q4 and last reporting Friday for all other quarters.
3. Data are provisional.

IV.8 Since bankers’ deposits with the Reserve Bank, a key determinant of reserve money on the components side, change in response to variations in CRR effected by the Reserve Bank as part of its monetary policy actions, it is often useful to analyse the behaviour of reserve money adjusted for the policy induced part of the change in base money. Adjusting the reserve money series for injection/absorption through CRR changes gives the adjusted reserve money series. The reserve money growth for the last few fortnights of 2009-10 exceeds the adjusted reserve money growth, reflecting the impact of the hike in CRR in February 2010 that led to absorption of about Rs.36,000 crore of surplus liquidity from the system (Chart IV.3).

Money Supply

IV.9 Broad money growth followed the growth pattern of its largest component – aggregate deposits. Since there was gradual deceleration in aggregate deposits, led primarily by time deposits, money growth decelerated during the year (Table IV.3). Due to the softening of interest rates, there was deceleration in the growth of time deposits through the year, with an erratic pattern in the closing fortnights of 2009-10 (Chart IV.4 a). Since April 2009, returns on small savings have remained higher than that of time deposits, leading to rising inflows since August 2009, after a period of 20 consecutive months of outflows. As the interest differentials over time deposits became more attractive, the rate of accretion into the small savings schemes increased in each successive month up to February 2010, i.e., the latest period for which data are available (Chart IV.4 b).

3

Table IV.3: Monetary Aggregates - Variations

Item

2008-09

2009-10

Q1

Q2

Q3

Q4

Q1

Q2

Q3

Q4

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

M3 (1+2+3 = 4+5+6+7-8)

89,283

1,76,379

1,60,486

3,33,039

1,81,527

1,49,994

1,19,907

3,51,070

Components

               

1. Currency with the Public

35,772

-18,037

40,405

39,726

24,086

2,910

44,994

29,782

2. Aggregate Deposits with Banks

57,621

1,93,902

1,13,039

3,00,241

1,53,401

1,52,626

73,933

3,22,554

2.1 Demand Deposits with Banks

-79,325

52,771

-62,157

91,854

-33,738

65,288

-27,888

1,28,980

2.2 Time Deposits with Banks

1,36,946

1,41,131

1,75,195

2,08,389

1,87,139

87,339

1,01,821

1,93,573

3. ‘Other’ Deposits with RBI

-4,110

514

7,042

-6,928

4,040

-5,542

980

-1,266

Sources

               

4. Net Bank Credit to Government

36,124

31,654

1,29,335

1,81,093

1,20,425

71,011

33,105

1,65,994

4.1 RBI’s Net Credit to Government

-13

51,360

30,230

93,212

-11,145

-14,953

51,428

1,33,308

4.2 Other Banks’ Credit to Government

36,137

-19,706

99,106

87,881

1,31,570

85,963

-18,323

32,686

5. Bank Credit to the Commercial Sector

30,811

1,63,138

90,616

1,56,962

-12,855

1,13,963

60,825

3,00,804

6. NFA of Banking Sector

66,858

7,271

-1,32,461

1,15,385

-37,923

47,908

-20,701

-66,428

7. Government’s Currency Liabilities to the Public

225

206

186

213

254

302

218

91

8 Net Non-Monetary Liabilities of the Banking Sector

44,735

25,890

-72,809

1,20,614

-1,11,627

83,188

-46,460

49,390

Note: Data are provisional.

IV.10 On the sources side, the main driver of M3 has been the banking system’s credit to the Government, while credit to the commercial sector also showed revival in the last quarter of 2009-10. A quarter-wise analysis reveals that incremental credit extended by scheduled commercial banks (SCBs) in absolute terms in the fourth quarter of 2009-10 was the highest in last two years (Chart IV.5). After showing an absolute decline in the third quarter of 2009-10, SCBs’ credit to the Government increased during the fourth quarter, when the Government’s borrowing programme was completed.

4
5

IV.11 Reflecting the revival in flow of credit from the SCBs, the non-food credit growth was 16.9 per cent by end-March 2010 as against the Reserve Bank’s indicative trajectory of growth of 16 per cent (Chart IV.6 a). In the year up to October 2009, deceleration in non-food credit had continued and reached the low of 10.3 per cent. As the economic recovery is increasingly becoming more broad-based, with industrial output exhibiting particularly strong acceleration in recent months, there is a significant revival in credit demand since end-November 2009 and the incremental credit deposit ratio has also risen steadily in the second half of 2009-10 (Chart IV.6 b).

6

IV.12 Due to the revival in credit demand for the banking system as a whole, the credit extended by private banks at end-March 2010 showed some improvement over last year. The loan portfolio of foreign banks, however, contracted (Table IV.4).

IV.13 Reflecting the revival in credit demand from the private sector, SCBs’ investment in SLR securities increased at a lower rate of 18.5 per cent (y-o-y) as on March 26, 2010 as compared with 20.0 per cent a year ago. Commercial banks’ holdings of such securities at 28.8 per cent of their net demand and time liabilities (NDTL) were only marginally higher than 28.1 per cent at end-March 2009. Adjusted for LAF collateral securities on an outstanding basis, SCBs’ holding of SLR securities amounted to 28.4 per cent of NDTL as on March 26, 2010. SCBs reduced their overseas foreign currency borrowings as well as their holding of foreign currency assets during the year (Table IV.5).

IV.14 Disaggregated data on sectoral deployment of gross bank credit show improvement in credit growth (y-o-y) to all major sectors such as agriculture, industry, services and personal loans from November 2009 onwards. Industry absorbed 52.6 per cent of incremental non-food credit (yo- y) in February 2010 as compared with 55.8 per cent in the corresponding month of the previous year. This expansion was led by infrastructure and basic metals and metal products. The share of incremental non-food credit to services sector was 22.6 per cent in February 2010. Within services sector, credit growth (y-o-y) for transport operators, computer software, tourism, hotels and restaurants and trade accelerated in February 2010. Also, the share of incremental nonfood credit to micro and small enterprises (industry as well as services) increased to 16.4 per cent in February 2010 as compared with 12.4 per cent in February 2009. Credit to real estate decelerated sharply mainly on account of the definitional change to the concept of “lending to real estate sector” effected in September 2009. The agricultural sector absorbed 18.3 per cent of the incremental non-food bank credit in February 2010 (12.7 per cent last year). Share of personal loans in incremental nonfood credit increased markedly to 6.5 per cent by February 2010, from (-) 0.2 per cent in October 2009. Within personal loans, while education loan and housing loan continued to grow over 30 per cent and 8 per cent, respectively, the contraction in credit to some sub-sectors such as consumer durables and advances against shares, bonds, etc., moderated (Table IV.6).

Table IV.4: Credit Flow from Scheduled Commercial Banks

(Amount in Rupees crore)

Item

Outstanding as on Mar. 26, 2010

Variation (Y-on-Y)

As on Mar. 27, 2009

As on Mar. 26, 2010

Amount

Per cent

Amount

Per cent

1

2

3

4

5

6

1. Public Sector Banks

24,12,508

3,48,562

20.9

3,93,797

19.5

2. Foreign Banks

1,66,839

6,467

4.0

-2,496

-1.5

3. Private Banks

5,84,703

52,013

11.0

61,211

11.7

4. All Scheduled Commercial Banks*

32,40,399

4,13,636

17.5

4,64,849

16.7

*: including Regional Rural Banks.
Note:
Data are provisional.


Table IV.5.: Scheduled Commercial Banks - Sources and Uses of Funds

(Amount in Rupees crore)

Item

Outstanding as on March 26, 2010

Variation (year-on-year)

As on March 27,2009

As on March 26, 2010

Amount

Per cent

Amount

Per cent

1

2

3

4

5

6

Sources of Funds

         

1. Aggregate Deposits

44,21,639

6,26,838

20.0

6,54,798

17.4

2. Call/Term Funding from Financial Institutions

1,04,501

7,432

7.0

-9,435

-8.3

3. Overseas Foreign Currency Borrowings

35,217

-3,047

-6.9

-6,187

-14.9

4. Capital

59,486

3,601

8.2

12,115

25.6

5. Reserves

3,26,870

56,221

24.6

41,797

14.7

Uses of Funds

         

1. Bank Credit

32,40,399

4,13,636

17.5

4,64,849

16.7

of which: Non-food Credit

31,91,909

4,11,824

17.8

4,62,571

16.9

2. Investments in Government and Other Approved Securities

13,82,684

1,94,695

20.0

2,16,273

18.5

a) Investments in Government Securities

13,75,704

1,97,124

20.6

2,19,918

19.0

b) Investments in Other Approved Securities

6,980

-2,429

-18.6

-3,645

-34.3

3. Investments in non-SLR Securities

2,34,114

36,907

21.6

26,597

12.8

4. Foreign Currency Assets

43,788

24,123

77.3

-11,524

-20.8

5. Balances with the RBI

2,81,390

-18,927

-7.4

43,195

18.1

Note: Data are provisional.

IV.15 In 2009-10, part of the impact of the deceleration in credit to the private sector was offset by higher availability of resources from non-banking sources, particularly in the first three quarters. While non-banking domestic sources such as issuance of commercial papers (CPs), private placements and initial public offerings (IPOs) have shown significant increase; financing from foreign sources in the form of FDI and issuance of American Depository Receipts (ADRs)/Global Depository Receipts (GDRs) also improved (Table IV.7).

Table IV.6: Deployment of Gross Bank Credit by Major Sectors

(Amount in Rupees crore)

Sector

Outstanding as on February 26, 2010

Variation (year-on-year)

February 27, 2009

February 26, 2010

Absolute

Per cent

Absolute

Per cent

1

2

3

4

5

6

Non-Food Gross Bank Credit (1 to 4)

28,89,737

4,09,191

19.6

3,97,052

15.9

1. Agriculture and Allied Activities

3,70,407

52,126

21.2

72,654

24.4

2. Industry

12,48,507

2,28,286

28.1

2,08,686

20.1

3. Personal Loans

5,81,357

34,218

6.6

25,965

4.7

Housing

2,97,203

16,431

6.4

22,880

8.3

Advances against Fixed Deposits

46,529

2,927

6.8

750

1.6

Credit Card Outstanding

20,737

2,122

7.9

-8,189

-28.3

Education

36,522

7,033

33.8

8,690

31.2

Consumer Durables

8,102

-2,399

-22.6

-109

-1.3

4. Services

6,89,466

94,561

18.7

89,747

15.0

Transport Operators

46,165

5,616

17.0

7,527

19.5

Professional Services

12,599

1,686

22.4

3,399

36.9

Trade

1,65,046

17,379

14.4

26,859

19.4

Real Estate Loans

91,607

33,617

58.8

842

0.9

Non-Banking Financial Companies

1,13,834

24,469

37.0

23,313

25.8

Memo:

         

Priority Sector

10,32,454

1,34,477

18.9

1,87,879

22.2

Small Enterprises

3,60,859

50,932

20.8

65,033

22.0

Industry

12,48,507

2,28,286

28.1

2,08,686

20.1

Food Processing

60,489

6,622

14.0

6,634

12.3

Textiles

1,16,926

11,555

12.5

13,194

12.7

Paper and Paper Products

18,626

3,295

25.0

2,135

12.9

Petroleum, Coal Products and Nuclear Fuels

65,626

31,739

77.4

-7,136

-9.8

Chemicals and Chemical Products

79,543

13,391

22.4

6,274

8.6

Rubber, Plastic and their Products

14,977

2,814

26.9

1,708

12.9

Iron and Steel

1,24,367

25,774

34.5

23,984

23.9

Other Metals and Metal Products

34,238

6,129

25.6

4,127

13.7

Engineering

71,637

14,614

28.0

4,769

7.1

Vehicles, Vehicle Parts and Transport Equipments

37,724

7,018

24.6

2,219

6.2

Gems and Jewellery

30,135

2,618

10.6

2,893

10.6

Construction

41,294

14,637

62.1

3,087

8.1

Infrastructure

3,65,617

65,711

34.4

1,08,757

42.3

Note: Data are provisional and relate to select banks. Data also include the effects of mergers of Bharat Overseas Bank with Indian Overseas Bank, American Express Bank with Standard Chartered Bank and State Bank of Saurashtra with State Bank of India.


Table IV.7: Flow of Financial Resources to the Commercial Sector

(Rupees crore)

Item

April-March

2008-09

2009-10

1

2

3

A. Adjusted Non-food Bank Credit

4,21,091

4,73,819

i) Non-food Credit

4,11,824

4,62,571

ii) Non-SLR Investment by SCBs

9,267

11,248

B. Flow from Non-banks (B1+B2)

4,12,864

4,96,937

B1. Domestic Sources

2,28,491

2,93,142

1. Public issues by non-financial entities

13,583

27,165 #

2. Gross private placements by non-financial entities

66,980

1,10,404 ^

3. Net issuance of CPs subscribed by non-banks

10,718

41,667 $

4. Net credit from housing finance companies

17,627

16,051 #

5. Total gross accommodation by the four RBI regulated all India financial
institutions - NABARD, NHB, SIDBI and EXIM bank

16,502

13,260 #

6. Systemically important non-deposit taking NBFCs
(net of bank credit)

28,858

37,962 #

7. LIC’s gross investment in corporate debt, infrastructure and social sector

74,223

46,633 #

 B2. Foreign Sources

1,84,373

2,03,795

1. External commercial borrowings/foreign currency convertible bonds

35,277

12,699 #

2. ADR/GDR issues excluding banks and financial institutions

4,686

14,669 #

3. Short-term credit from abroad

-927

15,921 ##

4. FDI in India

1,45,337

1,60,506 ##

C. Total Flow of Resources (A+B)

8,33,955

9,70,756

Memo Item:

Net resource mobilisation by mutual funds through debt (non-Gilt) schemes

30,214

2,61,065 #

$ : Up to March 15. # : April-February. ## : April-January. ^ : April-December.

IV.16 The emerging trends in monetary and credit aggregates in recent months, thus, corroborate the momentum seen in real activities. While elevated headline inflation and the recovery in growth could increase the demand for money, policy driven increase in CRR could contribute to containing the growth in broad money. Given the size of the Government’s borrowing programme for 2010-11, if the recovery in demand for credit from the private sector firms up further and capital flows also increase, then monetary expansion could be driven by all three main factors on the sources side, i.e., banking system’s credit to the Government, credit to the commercial sector and increase in net foreign assets.


1 The increased recourse to reverse repo offset to a large extent the increase in Reserve Bank credit to the Central Government stemming from unwinding of MSS balances and open market purchases during the first half of the year.

2 The Reserve Bank’s credit to the Centre is affected by LAF operations, OMO, MSS balances and Government’s cash surplus with the Reserve Bank. Increase in repo/OMO purchases and decline in reverse repo/MSS balances/Government’s surplus balances with Reserve Bank lead to increase in net Reserve Bank credit to the Centre, and vice versa.

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