NRB absorbs Rs 50bn from banking system
In a continued effort to manage the country’s financial system, Nepal Rastra Bank (NRB) absorbed
Rs 50bn from the market through a 21-day deposit collection auction on Sunday. This is the central bank’s second major liquidity absorption in recent weeks. The NRB mopped up Rs 100bn liquidity from the banking system on Nov 27.
According to bankers and the central bank data, the banking system currently holds an unprecedented Rs 760bn in investable funds. Investable funds of banks and financial institutions are expanding in recent months with deposit collection consistently outpacing credit disbursement.
Experts say this liquidity glut is symptomatic of broader economic challenges including weak economic activity that has significantly reduced demand for goods and services. The reduced economic activities have had cascading effects on the economy. Reduced consumer and business spending has led to decreased import volumes, which has directly impacted government revenue collection. This has forced the government to rely on public debt even to pay the salary of government employees.
Despite the central bank’s efforts to stimulate economic activity by easing monetary policy for the current fiscal year, credit demand has shown minimal improvement. As a result, the central bank kept policy rates unchanged in the first quarter review of the monetary policy for the current fiscal year on Friday. According to the central bank, the bank rate and policy rate have been maintained at 6.5 percent and five percent, respectively. The NRB has also kept the credit-deposit ratio, statutory liquidity ratio and cash reserve ratio unchanged.
The low demand for bank credit amid a slowdown in economic activities has driven interest rates to record lows. The average loan interest rate has dropped to 9.33 percent while the average deposit rate sits at 5.44 percent. Most commercial banks are now offering loans within an 8-9 percent interest rate range for the month of Mangsir (mid-November to mid-December).
The interbank lending rate has also declined to three percent. NRB starts mopping up liquidity from the market when interbank lending rate comes down to three percent, to prevent further rate erosion. The deposit collection auction is one of the important tools that the central bank has been deploying to absorb excess liquidity. Banks also have the option to park their surplus funds in the permanent deposit facility, which offers a fixed three percent interest rate.
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