The drop in banking system liquidity and the concurrent rise in demand for credit may result into tightening of credit in the financial system, a report said on Wednesday.
The liquidity condition is expected to become even more challenging over the coming months, owing to an expected seasonal pick-up in cash-in-circulation caused by the festive season, India Ratings and Research said in a report.
In addition, the net Balance of Payment (BoP) could remain in deficit during the same period, which will drain out more liquidity from the banking system, it said.
"The ongoing sharp drop in the banking system liquidity and the concurrent rise in the credit demand could lead to tightness in the financing system amid the prevailing uncertain business environment," the agency's director Soumyajit Niyogi said in the report.
Moreover, a sudden spike in the short-term interest rate cannot be ruled out, he said.
The report said that the demand for credit is expected to stay strong, driven by higher Working Capital Requirements (WCRs) as well as seasonal factors.
Banking system liquidity came down to Rs 50,500 crore on July 27, compared to the average of Rs 7 lakh crore in February 2022 and Rs 4.5 lakh crore in May 2022.
The reasons behind the precipitous drop in banking system liquidity are mainly the deficit in the BoP account, the rise in cash-in-circulation and the cash reserve ratio hike, the report said.
The agency expects the sharp deterioration in the current account deficit along with the capital account will likely translate into a 1.4 per cent deficit in BoP for FY23.
The deficit amount could go up further with a sustained high merchandise trade deficit and muted foreign portfolio flows.
"Therefore, the BoP account will continue to drain out a large amount of primary liquidity," it said.
Incremental Loan-to-Demand Ratio (LDR) surged to 125 per cent in the first quarter of FY23 compared to the average of 65 per cent in FY21 and FY23.
This means during Q1 of FY23, the net credit disbursement was higher than deposit accretion; therefore to meet the excess credit disbursement over demand, banks have to liquidate investments over and above the statutory limit, the report said.
The agency believes the system-level credit growth of 14 per cent year-on-year continues to outpace the deposit growth of 8.4 per cent year-on-year, thereby intensifying competition for deposits among banks.
The tightness in liquidity for banks is also visible in the sharp decline in liquidity coverage ratio across most large banks, both among public sector and private banks, the report said.
(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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