Hits 60% before closing at 17% as banks see outflows of Rs 40K cr towards tax payments. |
Money market rates today touched nine-year highs as the liquidity squeeze in the banking system worsened. The overnight call money rate touched 60 per cent intra-day and some banks, particularly foreign and private banks, used dollars to raise rupee resources for a day at a record rate of 105 per cent, dealers said. |
Banks chased rupee resources as they saw outflows of around Rs 40,000 crore towards tax payments. Government bond auctions further squeezed liquidity. A liquidity crunch in 1998 had seen the call rate touch 100 per cent. |
The swapping of dollars for a day, by banks which had exhausted their borrowing limits in the call money market, helped the rupee to appreciate 0.7 per cent and close at a 19-month high of Rs 43.74 per dollar. Dollar swapping involves exchanging dollars for rupees. Read more at Business Standard |
Wednesday, March 21, 2007
Intra-day call rate touches 9-year high
Labels: Banks, Call rate, Money market