Money market-volumes jump to record as bank lending booms
India's money markets are experiencing record activity. State-owned banks are borrowing more to fund strong credit demand. This surge in lending is happening despite global energy concerns. Banks are facing challenges attracting deposits as saving...

The value of trades in the so-called tri-party repurchase segment, which accounts for about 70% of the nation’s money markets, rose to an all-time high of 5.5 trillion rupees ($57.8 billion) on May 13 and has stayed elevated since, according to Bloomberg-compiled data.
Also read: Tokenisation could be the next big upgrade to India's market plumbing
India’s economic growth has held up well despite the energy crisis caused by the US-Iran war, preserving credit demand. State Bank of India is seeing strong loan uptake from sectors including power, renewables and data centers, Chairman CS Setty said Wednesday.
However, the funding rush had pushed up overnight borrowing costs and short-term bond yields in recent weeks, underscoring banks’ ongoing struggle to attract deposits as household savings flow into other investment products.

Bank lending expanded at 16.2% in the year through May 15, the fastest clip in two years, with credit demand exceeding deposit growth for the eighth straight month, according to the latest central bank data. The credit-deposit gap widened to about 400 basis points, the most in about two years, the data show.
Also read: Rupee@100? India’s Economists Weigh In
Adding to the money-market turnover, private banks traditionally net borrowers unusually pivoted to being lenders in May, according to an analysis by the Clearing Corp. of India.
The Economic Times Business News App for the Latest News in Business, Sensex, Stock Market Updates & More.
The Economic Times News App for Quarterly Results, Latest News in ITR, Business, Share Market, Live Sensex News & More.