City
Epaper

RBI issues new LCR guidelines for banks

By IANS | Updated: April 22, 2025 15:17 IST

Mumbai, April 22 The RBI has issued new Liquidity Coverage Ratio (LCR) guidelines which will require a bank ...

Open in App

Mumbai, April 22 The RBI has issued new Liquidity Coverage Ratio (LCR) guidelines which will require a bank to assign additional run-off rates of 2.5 per cent to internet and mobile banking-enabled retail and small business customer deposits with effect from April 1, 2026.

Banks will also have to adjust the market value of Government Securities (Level 1 HQLA) with haircuts in line with margin requirements under the Liquidity Adjustment Facility (LAF) and Marginal Standing Facility (MSF).

In addition, the final guidelines also rationalise the composition of wholesale funding from "other legal entities". Consequently, funding from non-financial entities like trusts (educational, charitable and religious), partnerships, LLPs, etc., shall attract a lower run-off rate of 40 per cent as against 100 per cent currently.

"To give the banks adequate time to transition their systems to the new standards for LCR computation, the revised instructions shall become applicable with effect from April 1, 2026," the RBI statement said.

The Reserve Bank has undertaken an impact analysis of the above measures based on data submitted by banks, as on December 31, 2024. It is estimated that the net impact of these measures will improve the LCR of banks, at the aggregate level, by around 6 percentage points as on that date. Further, all the banks would continue to meet the minimum regulatory LCR requirements comfortably. The RBI is sanguine that these measures will enhance the liquidity resilience of banks in India, and further align the guidelines with the global standards in a non-disruptive manner, according to an RBI statement.

The Reserve Bank had issued a draft circular on July 25, 2024, on "Basel III Framework on Liquidity Standards – Liquidity Coverage Ratio (LCR) – Review of Haircuts on High Quality Liquid Assets (HQLA) and Run-off Rates on Certain Categories of Deposits". The draft circular proposed certain amendments to the LCR framework and invited comments from banks and stakeholders.

The final LCR guidelines have been issued after carefully examining this feedback, the RBI statement added.

The Liquidity Coverage Ratio is a regulatory standard developed by the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision. It requires banks to hold a buffer of High Quality Liquid Assets (HQLA) that can cover expected net cash outflows over a 30-day stress scenario.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

TechnologyAyushman Bharat foundation for healthy and fit India: Ministers

HealthAyushman Bharat foundation for healthy and fit India: Ministers

InternationalTaiwan slams China for pressuring Belgium to remove flag, cancel book fair honour

NationalAfter politics, Navjot Singh Sidhu now a motivational speaker

InternationalRussia-Ukraine War: At Least 600 North Korean Soldiers Killed While Fighting for Russia

Business Realted Stories

BusinessManage Your Expenses with a Bajaj Finserv Personal Loan of up to Rs. 55 Lakh

BusinessMumbai property market registers best April in 13 years with over 12,000 deals

BusinessRajasthan's Young Talent Jagdish Bemali Brings Folk Devotion to the Digital Age

BusinessIndia’s commercial real estate resilient despite global trade tensions: Report

BusinessHCL Launches ClimaForce Fund to Power India's Climate Innovators