RBI has more room for bond buys as India’s banks return cash
While direct open market operations end up adding cash to the banking system, twist operations are typically liquidity neutral as they involve simultaneous buying and selling.

Indian banks are returning money they borrowed from the central bank earlier this year, boosting the monetary authority’s capacity to make more direct purchases of government bonds.
The Reserve Bank of India on Thursday said it would buy 100 billion rupees ($1.4 billion) of bonds from the secondary market on Sept. 24 in the first such direct purchase in six months. This marks a departure from its preference so far this year for Federal Reserve-like Operation Twists.
While direct open market operations end up adding cash to the banking system, twist operations are typically liquidity neutral as they involve simultaneous buying and selling.
Sovereign bonds gained on Friday, with the 10-year yield down 2 basis points to 6.01 per cent.
Traders said there is more scope for direct OMOs now because banks are taking the option to return about 1.25 trillion rupees they borrowed from the RBI in February and March.
These funds were borrowed when the repurchase rate was at 5.15 per cent, making it more attractive for banks to return it now and look to borrow again at a lower rate. So far, about 989 billion rupees has been repaid in four tranches and the remaining money is expected to be repaid Friday.

The RBI has to keep an eye on how much surplus banking liquidity it wants amid rising inflation. Consumer prices rose 6.7 per cent in August, exceeding RBI’s upper limit of 6 per cent for a fifth month.
The central bank has been largely trying to keep yields anchored around 6 per cent via its Operation Twists, discreet purchases and auction signaling, traders say.
Download ET Markets APP