
RBI accepts lower bond purchase amount in first FY26 OMO auction
"It appears most stock from HTM that could be sold in OMOs has reached a limit or is near it. Most banks don't have excess and they are selective..." said Ritesh Bhusari, joint GM, South Indian Bank.
Synopsis RBI accepted bids worth ₹19,203 crore at this OMO, lower compared to the notified amount of ₹25,000 crore. RBI had received bids worth ₹50,369 crore. This is first FY26 OMO auction where RBI accepted a lower amount. Mumbai: The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) accepted a lower-than-notified amount at its open market operations to purchase bonds on Monday even as market participants sought to sell securities worth twice the announced offer on the table. This probably indicates the central bank is comfortable with the current liquidity.
ADVERTISEMENT RBI accepted bids worth ₹19,203 crore at this OMO, lower compared to the notified amount of ₹25,000 crore. RBI had received bids worth ₹50,369 crore. This is first FY26 OMO auction where RBI accepted a lower amount. RBI's steps have helped lift system liquidity. Government bonds maturing in 2029, 2032, 2033, 2034 and 2036 were part of Monday's auction. The 10-year benchmark yield closed at 6.24% on Monday. "The auction cut-off prices were almost in line with market levels, for the semi-liquid 2029 and 2033 maturities. Since 2025, banks have offloaded ₹5 lakh crore of bonds. Following this liquidation, their willingness to sell has diminished," said VRC Reddy, head of treasury at Karur Vysya Bank.
"It appears most stock from HTM that could be sold in OMOs has reached a limit or is near it. Most banks don't have excess and they are selective..." said Ritesh Bhusari, joint GM, South Indian Bank.
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Starr, at UltraSource, orders equipment that has a lead time measured in months. Because those products are made to each customer's specifications, Starr can't resell them if clients refuse to eat the cost of the tariff. 'I have to take action now," Starr said. 'We're going to be very careful about any cash expenditure just because we need that cash to pay the tariff." White House officials have said they are confident the president's approach will lead to better trading relationships. 'In order to get another country to eat the burden of the tariffs, we have to have a credible threat to move our supply chains across the border…It can take some time to make that threat credible," Stephen Miran, chairman of the president's Council of Economic Advisers, said in an interview. Miran said he couldn't produce a forecast for inflation this year because 'we're still waiting for policy details to be fully fleshed out right now." 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'Nobody—neither us, nor our customers, nor our overseas supplier—is in any position to do any long-term thinking." The Fed aggressively raised rates in 2022 and 2023 to combat inflation. But the U.S. economy was insulated because many households and businesses had already refinanced at ultralow rates during the pandemic. Later, the economy benefited from an unexpected boom in capital spending on artificial intelligence. Any pullback could be abrupt. 'It's very rare that you have a technology shock of this sort that doesn't lead to overbuilding," said Jason Thomas, chief economist at private-equity manager Carlyle Group. Some companies have held back from raising prices now until they can see how tariffs settle out. 'They just said, 'We cannot take the risk of souring relations with our customers, with our suppliers, over a policy that in two months' time may not even be in place,'" Thomas said. 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