- Whether the market liquidity is a deficit or surplus depends on demand supply conditions of the money/credit markets and the economy, the CB’s OMO for maintenance of policy interest rates corridor and the CB’s holding of Treasury bills for lending to the government (Rs. 2.7 trillion at present).
- At present, there is a banking sector liquidity deficit due to two major reasons. First is the inactive money market due to banking vulnerabilities and inter-bank trust issues. Second is the restriction of the CB’s overnight lending facility (standing lending facility) to banks only up to 90% of the SRR. Therefore, overnight lending and liquidity will further reduce due to the reduction in the SRR.
- However, the CB regularly injects new liquidity through money printing based on overnight and term reverse repo auctions to finance the deficit so that policy rates corridor is maintained. Today, the CB offered Rs. 170 bn and injected Rs. 116.7 bn. Therefore, the market liquidity is a matter to be handled by the CB’s policy rates based OMO and not by the SRR.
- Market lending rates are largely determined by credit risks of borrowers and credit demand conditions depending on the real economy. Banks create credit and money through book entries depending on liquidity and risks and, therefore, the cost of funds is not a direct component in determining bank lending rates.
- In view of the present macroeconomic contraction caused by the CB’s super tight cycle of the monetary policy for more than one year, the default of public debt and resulting real business risks, lending rates cannot be expected to fall and recommence the flow of credit until the economy recovers from the currency debt and foreign currency crisis.
- Unlike in the recent past, interest rates at today’s Treasury bill auctions and inter-bank market have not felt any sentiments of such a material SRR cut yesterday.
- Further, the impact of the SRR on bank cost of funds is not measured by the CB.
- As shown above, reduction of lending rates and and increase in the supply of credit to borrowing customers cannot be expected.
- During the policy rates cutting cycle, banks will not raise interest rates to deposit customers even if the SRR is reduced to zero.
- Contents of the press release are only what the CB habitually states when the SRR is reduced. It does not provide any factual evidence to establish its benefits to the economy and general public.
- The SRR is a tribal monetary policy instrument which is dead in modern monetary policy models.
- Therefore, other than the monetary policy rhetoric by the CB and its media network to deceive political leaders, nobody can expect any macroeconomic benefits from the SRR cut together with policy rates cut to the current status of the crisis-hit/bankrupt economy as they are not divine-proven monetary tools.