
BoP Crisis of 1991
Sold $894 million in September 2001 and assured adequate liquidity, foreign exchange; relaxed FII investment limits; package for large exporters; cut rate for export credit
THE LEHMAN COLLAPSE AND THE GLOBAL FINANCIAL CRISIS
A rupee-dollar swap facility for Indian banks; Special Market Operations (SMO) to meet the forex requirements of oil companies; higher deposit rates for overseas Indians; relaxed ECB norms for companies Euro Zone Crisis of 2011-12
- The balance of payments crisis of 1991 led to Liberalised Exchange Rate Management System (LERMS) in 1992
- LERMS was abolished in March 1993 and the fl oating exchange rate regime was adopted
- Market-based exchange rate regime came into vogue in 1993; current account convertibility in 1994
- Interventions pulled reserves down to $15.9 billion in Feb '96 from $19 billion in August '95
- Interest rate surcharge on import finance raised from 15% to 25%
- Floated the Resurgent India Bonds (RIBs) for overseas Indians and received $4.2 billion
Sold $894 million in September 2001 and assured adequate liquidity, foreign exchange; relaxed FII investment limits; package for large exporters; cut rate for export credit
THE LEHMAN COLLAPSE AND THE GLOBAL FINANCIAL CRISIS
A rupee-dollar swap facility for Indian banks; Special Market Operations (SMO) to meet the forex requirements of oil companies; higher deposit rates for overseas Indians; relaxed ECB norms for companies Euro Zone Crisis of 2011-12
- Intervened to sell US dollars; deregulated interest rates on rupee-denominated NRI deposits and enhanced the all-in-cost ceiling for ECBs
- Raised FIIs’ investment ceiling in government and corporate bonds by $5 billion each to $15 billion and $45 billion
- Increased interest rate ceiling on FCNR(B) deposits
- Raised FII investment limit in G-secs by $5 billion to $20 billion
- Raised MSF rate to 300 basis points above the repo rate to 10.25%
- Cut funds under LAF to 1% of NDTL; OMO sale of G-Secs
- Banks ordered to maintain a minimum daily CRR balance of 99%
- RBI net sold $10.8 billion in the forex market between May and August 2013
- Banks barred from proprietary trading in currency derivatives
- Curbs on gold import only on consignment basis; a fifth of imported gold had to be exported
- RBI opened a special swap window for banks on 3-year FCNR deposits providing an incentive that cushioned currency risk. It raised $34.3 billion through the window
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