Exclusive - Foreign banks to provide upfront loans for Indian dollar deposits
Exclusive - Foreign banks to provide upfront loans for Indian dollar deposits
By Vidya Ranganathan
SINGAPORE |
Mon Sep 16, 2013 3:37pm IST
(Reuters) - Foreign banks will provide upfront financing for wealthy
non-resident Indian clients to entice them to place bulky dollar
deposits back home in response to India's drive for dollar funding to
defend its weak currency, sources told Reuters.
This would resurrect a practice
which proved successful in drawing in dollars from non-resident Indians
(NRIs) in 2000, when the rupee was also under pressure, and the sources
said banks could raise about $10 billion or more.
Foreign
banks will finance the bulk of these dollar deposits. This is likely to
be welcome news for Indian authorities because it could avoid the need
for a sovereign bond or special government-backed deposit schemes to
attract dollar inflows to support the rupee.
Banks including Citi (C.N), DBS (DBSM.SI) and Standard Chartered Bank (STAN.L) (2888.HK)
are offering the terms to the richest segment of their private banking
clients by providing roughly 90 percent of the foreign currency deposit
placed in India, four private banking sources said.
The banks will officially roll out the upfront loans this week, the sources said.
"Client
equity in these deposits is just 10 percent and the client effectively
makes between 18 and 21 percent on the dollars," said a private banker
with a European bank.
The scheme is
a variation of the foreign currency non-resident bank account (FCNR),
which are term deposits non-resident Indians can maintain in five
currencies, including U.S. dollars, euros and pounds, at banks onshore
and earn a fixed rate of interest.
As
part of efforts to rescue the rupee as it sank towards record lows near
69-per dollar in late August, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) freed
interest rates on FCNR deposits last month.
It
allowed banks to offer as much as 400 basis points over the London
interbank offered rate (LIBOR) for deposits with maturities between 3
years and 5 years. It exempted these deposits from statutory bank
reserves.
To incentivise banks, the
RBI also offered to swap FCNR deposits of maturities above 3 years into
rupees at a fixed rate of 3.5 percent, less than half the prevailing
market levels. That swap window is available until November 30.
LEVERAGE
Investors
need to have just 10 percent of the amount of deposit they intend to
place, and can earn nearly 20 percent on their dollars.
Foreign
banks can earn 3-4 percentage points over Libor for their dollars,
while local banks in India can swap those dollars into rupees more
cheaply than market rates using the central bank swap window.
Banks,
both foreign banks with presence in India and local ones, have made a
huge push to raise money from India's vast diaspora since the RBI
relaxed rules on FCNR deposits. The FCNR deposits can be used as
collateral to borrow overseas.
The
difference in the new upfront financing scheme is that the banks pool
their resources with non-residents and place deposits in India, thus
creating bigger deposits with each new account.
One
private banker with an American bank said the practice had been
prevalent in the 1980s and 1990s and widely used by banks in 2000, when
they raised $5.5 billion through an India Millennium Deposit scheme.
Indian
authorities discouraged the practice thereafter because they were
worried about hot money flows, he said. The Reserve Bank of India did
not immediately comment.
One source at a European bank said banks were cherry-picking clients for this product.
"For
every billion dollars I place in India, the bank has to fund $900
million," he said. "We can't allow just any customer to piggyback on us,
only a handpicked few."
Still, bankers said the scheme was not without hurdles.
For
one, the effective cost of the rupee funds would be about 8.5 to 9
percent, he said, which limited the investment options. Ten-year rupee
government bonds yield 8.5 percent.
Secondly,
there were unresolved issues of how much credit exposure foreign banks
wanted to take on their India branches, and who would place the
collateral for the loans and take the risk of premature withdrawal of
the deposit by the non-resident Indian.
Lastly,
investors placing millions of dollars would need assurance that their
money could eventually be repatriated, without the risk of capital
controls. One European bank was already offering insurance against this
risk, for a price, the private bankers said.
(Additional reporting by Sumeet Chatterjee and Suvashree Dey Choudhury; Editing Neil Fullick)
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