RBI may allow FIIs to buy more government bonds in two years

The Reserve Bank may look at lift­ing cap on for­eign hold­ing of gov­ern­ment debt in two years, once the econ­o­my has reached its poten­tial growth rate, Gov­er­nor Raghu­ram Rajan has said.

The RBI will remove lim­its on for­eign par­tic­i­pa­tion in the domes­tic bond mar­ket ‘once the world becomes excit­ed in a more sub­stan­tial way about the India sto­ry’,” Rajan told Euromoney mag­a­zine in an interview.

This could hap­pen once the econ­o­my reach­es poten­tial out­put over two con­sec­u­tive years and for­eign­ers organ­i­cal­ly move to long-end matu­ri­ties, giv­ing reg­u­la­tors a degree of con­fi­dence about the stick­i­ness of flows,” Rajan said.

We want a steady increase in lim­its — a mea­sured increase — so that we under­stand what is hap­pen­ing and we see the mar­ket devel­op­ing as these lim­its are increased. We do think FPIs (for­eign port­fo­lio investors) are extreme­ly impor­tant to mar­ket devel­op­ment,” Rajan had told ana­lysts dur­ing the post-pol­i­cy tele-con­fer­ence on Octo­ber 1.

Even though FIIs report­ed­ly exhaust over 95 per­cent of their USD 25 bil­lion invest­ment lim­it in gov­ern­ment debt, Rajan hint­ed that there is no need to increase the lim­it immediately.

As short term-debt rolls over, that frees up more space in gov­ern­ment bonds and so it is not as if that space is com­plete­ly shut out. Over time, we will reex­am­ine and see what we can do,” Rajan said.

Mean­while, cit­ing at least two inci­dents where the econ­o­my has stood out bet­ter as against its peers in the emerg­ing mar­kets, Rajan said the coun­try is bet­ter placed to face any even­tu­al­i­ty due to stronger macro­eco­nom­ic factors.

My sense is that we are in a much bet­ter sit­u­a­tion rel­a­tive to then (mid-2013) because there have been major changes in the coun­try’s macro sta­bil­i­ty. We have got low­er cur­rent account deficit and low­er fis­cal deficit,” Rajan told Amer­i­can busi­ness news tele­vi­sion chan­nel CNBC in the USA, on the side­lines of the World Bank Group annu­al summit.

Rajan said that the rupee, which had suf­fered in the wake of the “taper tantrums” last May through August, is sta­ble now and has bucked the trend at least twice in the last one year.

He elab­o­rat­ed say­ing the rupee did not suf­fer after prob­lems faced by the Argenti­na-led default for emerg­ing mar­ket cur­ren­cies this Jan­u­ary, while mar­kets main­tained their calm again in August when there were some issues.

Speak­ing about infla­tion, Rajan reit­er­at­ed that the RBI felt well posi­tioned to hit the six per cent mark by the tar­get­ed Jan­u­ary 2016 date and future mon­e­tary pol­i­cy would be com­plete­ly data-dependent.

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