RBI forex tightening could hurt banks; Jefferies expects some relief from central bank
New Delhi [India], March 31 (ANI): The Reserve Bank of India's recent move to tighten forex exposure norms for banks could lead to near-term earnings pressure, even as the Street expects some regulatory forbearance, according to a report by Jefferies.
The brokerage noted that "in a surprise move, RBI has capped banks' net open position (NOP) in onshore forex market to USD 100m vs. board-driven limit within 25% of capital," a step seen as a response to "sharp depreciation of INR & wider spread between offshore (NDF) & onshore mkt."
The tightening comes amid heightened volatility in currency markets, where spreads between onshore and offshore markets have widened sharply. Jefferies highlighted that spreads, which were "in the range of 5-15bps" during calm periods, have now expanded to "75-90bps (due to West Asia conflict and rise in oil & gas prices)."
Such moves may also impact profitability. Jefferies cautioned that every Rs 1/USD dual movement in INR on USD 30-40bn of book can lead to a one-time loss of Rs 30-40bn for the banking sector.
It added that regulators could also extend the compliance timeline beyond April 10 to ensure smoother forex movement & MTM impact on banks.
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