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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Sunday, October 22, 2000 |
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Mopping up dollars at high cost
By C. R. L. Narasimhan
The India Millennium Deposits (IMD) Scheme operated by State Bank
of India and targeted at the overseas Indians is now under way.
Aiming for a collection target of at least $2 billion, the IMDs
have become as controversial as the Resurgent India Bonds (RIBs)
of August 1998 from which they derive all their characteristics.
The RIBs collected $4.17 billion and were hailed as a stupendous
marketing success. Valid criticism relating to their high cost,
the areas where these could be deployed, the almost certain
exchange rate fluctuation risk and many more were brushed aside.
The RIBs have completed two years and have almost three more
years to go. After claiming such success SBI and the Government
have not been quite forthcoming on the contentious issues.
How have the high cost funds been deployed and where? What has
been the extent of loss arising out the rupee's depreciation
against the dollar? And many more.
Surely at the time of another identical fund raising exercise
those questions become especially relevant and topical. By most
yardsticks the IMD has fewer points in its favour. The oil shock
and its effect on the country's reserves are cited as the prime
reason for the IMD while the sanctions in the wake of the Pokhran
blast had led to the RIB.
In the two years since the RIB issue there has been a marked
improvement in the external sector. The IMD will add to the
reserves but that in all probability will be its only positive
contribution.
On the contrary, it sends out several wrong signals. The
Government's insistence on the issue is a poor reflection on the
autonomy status of India's biggest commercial bank. Does SBI
derive any specific advantages from the funds mop up beyond the
all-too familiar hype?
The RBI is the dominant shareholder of SBI. The Government-RBI-
SBI equation has to be redefined in the reform era. SBI has other
shareholders too.
The Government says that in the next round of financial sector
reform, RBI's stake will be brought down to below 50 per cent.
Will the Government continue to have its way in future RIB/IMD
type issues ?
The RIB's marketing strategy came in for praise. The results
achieved in terms of volumes apparently justified the means. Not
many in SBI or Government seemed to be overtly concerned that the
RIB's success merely proved that it offered above the market
rates. In fact considering the short duration within which the
IMD has arrived ,these types of offerings - high cost and all -
might well become a regular feature. Curiously this time senior
SBI officials say that the IMD is in direct response to non-
residents' needs.
Could not those needs have been met through improvements and
better customer service in the existing non resident deposit
schemes that commercial banks in India have been operating? And
why should the domestic depositor not have his minimum needs - a
reasonable yield on bank deposits for instance - met when the
non-residents are pampered?
These questions have been asked many times. Nobody in position
has answers. The misleading sales pitch continues. SBI has to
undertake the unenviable task of ``defending'' the issue to the
domestic audience while simultaneously enticing the overseas
investor. In the former task it clearly falters. Opaque
calculations and inappropriate comparisons to sell the IMD
belittle the status of the country's number one bank. For
instance, the yield on IMD has been compared to the benchmark
LIBOR rates. The latter everyone knows is a floating rate,
meaning that it will change after three or six months. The IMD
like the RIB carries a fixed rate (8.50 per cent for the dollar
leg). It is therefore necessary to compare yields from similar
instruments such as a five year U.S. Treasury paper. It will be
of no comfort to know that both the RIB and the IMD are priced at
a high 3.15 per cent above the comparable U.S. treasury.
The spread which SBI and the other banks will earn in deploying
the rupee funds from the IMD is a matter of conjecture. But to
say that they will get a clear five per cent spread by funding
infrastructure and other ``critical'' projects is irresponsible.
There are not that many infrastructure projects that are waiting
to be so financed. Besides, the rupee cost of the IMD funds is
not expected to be below 10 per cent even conceding that the
Government is bearing most of the exchange risk.
An interest rate of 15 per cent on long-gestation infrastructure
projects is simply not on. Moreover, how will a five year IMD
fund a 15 year project without the project incurring what is
known as the mismatch risk?
Over enthusiasm in promoting a scheme thrust on them? Or simply a
desire to get into the record books? We may never get the answers
from SBI or the Government.
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