India relaxes collateral rules for foreign investors

India relaxes collateral rules for foreign investors
Updated 15 March 2013
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India relaxes collateral rules for foreign investors

India relaxes collateral rules for foreign investors

MUMBAI: India's central bank opened the door yesterday to foreign institutional investors (FIIs) using investments in corporate and government bonds as collateral in the futures and options segment of stock exchanges.
The move announced by the bank is expected to improve liquidity in the derivatives market, one foreign bank dealer said.
The Reserve Bank of India also said it was permitting FIIs to use their investments in corporate bonds as collateral in the cash segment of the stock market.
The RBI also mandated banks to report all over-the-counter currency derivative deals with clients on the central bank promoted reporting platform known as the Clearing Corp. of India Ltd. (CCIL) from April 2, it said in a separate circular.
This will improve transparency and provide a better guage to the central bank on the extent of derivative exposure that corporates have, a senior official at CCIL said.
Meanwhile, the Indian rupee fell yesterday, dragged by a late fall in the euro, giving up gains accrued after data showed core inflation eased and the central bank governor was seen by investors as endorsing the government's 2013/14 budget.
The euro fell to a three-month low against a broadly buoyant dollar as economic and political concerns in the euro zone contrasted a string of positive data from the United States.
Earlier, Reserve Bank of India chief's comments on the budget and a drop in core inflation raised hopes that the central bank will cut interest rates next week.
The currency made gains after non-food manufacturing inflation, which the central bank uses to gauge demand-driven price pressures, slowed to 3.8 percent in February, the weakest pace since March 2010.
That helped offset initial concerns after data showed headline inflation had risen more than expected.
Sentiment improved after RBI Gov. Duvvuri Subbarao, speaking in London on Wednesday, called the federal budget "responsible," a comment that buoyed markets given that the central bank had expressed concerns about fiscal deficit earlier.
"USD/INR sold off after the inflation data. The market took solace from lower core inflation number," said Hari Chandramgethen, head of forex trading at South Indian Bank.
The partially convertible rupee closed at 54.355/365 per dollar versus its previous close of 54.30/31. The local unit traded in a 54.17-54.5325 band in the session.
The rupee was also helped by gains in Indian shares, with the benchmark BSE index ending up 1.1 percent on the inflation data.
With the inflation data out, the focus will shift to the RBI's policy review on March 19. A rate cut, the central bank's second easing this year, would help improve confidence about economic growth, potentially sparking gains in the rupee.
In the offshore non-deliverable forwards PNDF, the one-month contract was at 54.77, while the three-month was at 55.38.