O superávit de liquidez bancária da Índia diminui para ₹75.483 crore

O superávit de liquidez do sistema bancário da Índia diminuiu para ₹75.483 crore em meio a saídas antecipadas de impostos de Rs 2 lakh crore e intervenções no mercado cambial. Como resultado, as taxas do mercado monetário subiram, levando o Reserve Bank of India a realizar uma operação de recompra. Os economistas estimam que o RBI vendeu mais de US$ 15 bilhões para sustentar a rúpia.

O sistema bancário da Índia sofreu uma redução no superávit de liquidez para ₹75.483 crore, principalmente devido a pagamentos antecipados de impostos no total de Rs 2 lakh crore e intervenções no mercado de câmbio. Esses fatores contribuíram para um aumento nas taxas do mercado monetário, o que levou o Reserve Bank of India (RBI) a realizar uma operação compromissada para injetar liquidez no sistema. Os economistas estimam que o RBI vendeu mais de US$ 15 bilhões em reservas para reforçar a rúpia em meio a essas pressões. A combinação de saídas de impostos e intervenções cambiais levou a um aperto temporário na liquidez bancária, destacando o papel ativo do RBI no gerenciamento das condições monetárias.

Artigos relacionados

RBI headquarters with repo rate display amid West Asia conflict indicators, for monetary policy news illustration.
Imagem gerada por IA

RBI holds repo rate at 5.25% amid West Asia conflict

Reportado por IA Imagem gerada por IA

The Reserve Bank of India's Monetary Policy Committee on Wednesday kept the key policy rate, the repo rate, unchanged at 5.25 per cent. Amid uncertainties from the West Asia conflict, the committee retained its neutral stance. It has lowered the GDP growth forecast to 6.9 per cent for FY27.

India's Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has limited banks' net open positions in rupee foreign exchange dealings to $100 million per day, aiming to curb speculation and stabilize the currency. The measures respond to rupee depreciation driven by the Iran war, depleting reserves, rising crude oil prices, and USD-INR fluctuations.

Reportado por IA

India's Reserve Bank of India has declined a request from banks to spread out provisions for expected mark-to-market losses in the March quarter. Banks sought this relief to mitigate pressures from rising government bond yields and a $100 million cap on net open positions. The decision adds to uncertainty in financial markets.

Foreign portfolio investors have pulled out rs 27,000 crore from indian markets during may. Total outflows for 2026 have now reached rs 2.2 lakh crore. Analysts link the trend to ongoing global uncertainties.

Reportado por IA

Foreign institutional investors sold domestic equities worth Rs 1,13,810 crore in March 2026, continuing their selling amid the Iran-Israel war. Year-to-date outflows for the year have reached Rs 1,27,157 crore.

Foreign institutional investors have sold Indian shares worth more than Rs 2 lakh crore so far in 2026, marking their third straight month as net sellers amid ongoing geopolitical tensions.

Reportado por IA

Crude oil prices surpassing $100 have erased Rs 20 lakh crore from Indian equity markets this week, amid escalating Iran conflict. The rupee hit a record low as foreign institutional investors continued selling, intensifying the downturn. Experts suggest the panic could present long-term buying opportunities.

 

 

 

Este site usa cookies

Usamos cookies para análise para melhorar nosso site. Leia nossa política de privacidade para mais informações.
Recusar