Friday, March 28, 2014

[aaykarbhavan] Business standard updates



Preparing for mandate 2014, the Raghuram Rajan way


MANOJIT SAHA & NEELASRI BARMAN

Mumbai, 28 March

The rupee posted its biggest quarterly gain since the September quarter of 2012, breaching the 60a- dollar mark on Friday ( it ended at 59.94 a dollar). But analysts said further gains could be capped by the Reserve Bank of India ( RBI), which used the opportunity to buy dollars to boost its foreign exchange reserves.

According to estimates, RBI has, since mid- March, added about $5 billion to its foreign exchange reserves. The reserve building exercise is being seen by market experts as preparing for the worst: A sudden exit of hot money in case of a fractured mandate on May 16, when the results for the 2014 general elections will be announced. "As we expected, the RBI is rebuilding forex reserves to stabilise the rupee," economists at Bank of America- Merrill Lynch said in a note to clients. " It has bought $5 billion ( including maturity of FX swaps with oil companies) since mid- March. It should be able to contain 65/$ if a fragmented verdict leads to portfolio outflows." Under Raghuram Rajan, the central bank is adopting the strategy of boosting foreign exchange that was earlier seen when Bimal Jalan and Y V Reddy were heading it. This was seen as a key for rupee's stability. Rajan's predecessor, DSubbarao, was often criticised for not building forex reserves when the rupee was appreciating.

Jamal Mecklai, chief executive of Mecklai Financial Services, said: "RBI is building the reserves and has being doing this for some time. It is a prudent move because you never know what will happen. Besides, if the rupee appreciates too much and too fast, it might create trouble for exporters. It is a very good move on the part of RBI." India's forex reserves are close to $ 300 billion now. The latest RBI data show the reserves at $ 298.6 billion, up about $ 24 billion since early September last year — just before the central bank unveiled several steps to boost inflows.

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FINANCE 3 >

>Govt to borrow~ 3.68 lakh cr >External debt rises to $ 426 billion

MARKETS 8 >

>Market continues record rally BUILDING FIREPOWER

Forex reserves are close to $ 300 billion

FX STRATEGY UNDER VARIOUS GOVERNMENTS

Congress, 1991- 96

|Under C Rangarajan, RBI moved to a floating exchange rate regime in March 1993 and started building FX reserves to avoid a repeat of the 1991 crisis

United Front, 1996- 98

|Bimal Jalan battled the South Asian crisis with tightening

NDA, 1998- 2004

|Jalan built reserves, launched Resurgent India Bonds & India Millennium Deposit

UPA- I, 2004- 09

|Y V Reddy continued to build reserves, though he allowed appreciation due to strong capital inflows

UPA- II, 2009- 14

|A policy of appreciation, at the cost of buying FX, ended up halving import cover. From September 2013, under Raghuram Rajan, RBI started recouping FX reserves by the FCRN ( B)- cum- swap scheme

Source: Bank of America- Merill Lynch

FOREX RESERVES VS $ INTRA- DAY

Source: Bloomberg; Compiled by BS Research Bureau

RBI adds $ 5 bn to forex kitty since mid- March; rupee breaches 60- a- dollar mark but analysts say central bank will cap further gains

 


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Preparing for...


>FROM PAGE 1

The foreign exchange reserves are now at a 27- month high.

On Friday, the rupee saw stiff resistance around 60.4 levels, as government banks were seen buying dollars on the RBI's behalf. The domestic currency has appreciated about 13 per cent since it hit a nadir of 68.83 on August 28.

Foreign institutional investors have poured in more than $ 12 billion into Indian equities since September, while the debt segment received $ 2.5 billion. These helped the rupee strengthen.

Even if the elections bring in a stable government —which will boost foreign portfolio investment — RBI might not allow the rupee to appreciate beyond 58 a dollar and would continue to boost reserves. The country's foreign exchange reserves, which can cover imports for about eight months now, is still lower than the 10- month cover seen as key for currency stability. In addition, the US Federal Reserve has started tapering its bond- purchase programme, sucking out global liquidity and putting pressure on emerging market currencies.

Saugata Bhattacharya, chief economist, Axis Bank, said: " Given the prospects of volatility in the global market, RBI has been buying dollars to boost foreign exchange reserves. There are expectations of a rate hike in the US in quarter one or quarter two of 2015, which is likely to create volatility in the market. Bolstering reserves will help make our external balance sheet more robust in terms of covering imports and short- term external debt."

 

 

New Companies Act relaxes norms for related- party deals


BS REPORTER

New Delhi, 28 March

In what comes as a relief to companies, the coverage of related- party transactions and norms for inter- corporate loans and guarantees have been rationalised in the rules issued under the Companies Act 2013, which comes into effect from April 1.

The Ministry of Corporate Affairs has notified rules for 11 chapters of the new Companies Act of 2013, which will replace the Companies Act of 1956.

According to the new Act, defaulting companies are those that have defaulted on repayment of loans from banks and public financial institutions, on payment of statutory dues for employees, or on depositing money into the Investor Education and Protection Fund. These companies are prohibited from issuing any shares with differential voting rights, the rules say.

However, this might need further clarification from the ministry, as many companies might fall under this category if they have defaulted on any occasion in the past, says Sai Venkateshwaran, partner and head of accounting advisory services, KPMG in India.

Under the new rules, the definition of related party covers directors and key managerial personnel only in relation to the company concerned and its holding company; it excludes functional heads of subsidiaries and associate companies. In another departure, the definition of a relative under related- party transaction covers eight relationships, against 15 in the draft rules. These changes will reduce the volume of transactions under the related- party category.

Another issue that ruffled many feathers in corporate circles, restrictions on issue of loans and guarantees to wholly- owned subsidiaries, has been done away with. Rules relating to guarantees given by a holding company to a bank or financial institution for a loan taken by any subsidiary have been relaxed.

For preparing directors' reports, the scope of internal financial controls has been restricted to financial statements, against the earlier requirement of covering operational aspects. " This will reduce the responsibility of directors," says Dolphy D'souza, partner in a member firm of EY Global.

 


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